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You are here: Home / Archives for art

Children’s illustrators show heart – Telegraph

August 5, 2013 By achuka Leave a Comment

Children’s illustrators show heart

from the Telegraph

Some of the most celebrated names in children’s book illustration have specially donated artwork to help raise funds for children’s charity, the International Children’s Heart Foundation. The illustrators, including Cressida Cowell and Quentin Blake, gave artwork showing their best-loved characters.

A private silent charity auction of the donated artwork will be held on 6 August, 5.30pm-7pm at the Illustration Cupboard in London to mark the publication of The BIG-Hearted Book by Nicholas Allan, published by Hodder Children’s Books.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/culturepicturegalleries/10191723/Childrens-illustrators-show-heart.html?frame=2622639

Filed Under: Blog, Books Tagged With: art, auction, charity, illustrations, illustrators

Barnett Freedman, Artist | Spitalfields Life

June 2, 2013 By achuka Leave a Comment

An excellent feature by David Buckman (author of From Bow to Biennale) about the London artist, illustrator and designer Barnett Freedman (1901–1958) who was born in Stepney. An equally talented yet less-well-known contemporary of Edward Bawden and Eric Ravilious, his work deserves to be enjoyed by a wider audience.

Includes many examples of Freedman’s work…

via Barnett Freedman, Artist | Spitalfields Life.

with thanks to Peter Bailey for bringing this to my attention, via Facebook

Filed Under: Blog, Photography/Art Tagged With: art, East End, Freddman, illustration, London, Spitalfields, Stepney

My hero: Félix Nadar by Richard Holmes | Books | The Guardian

April 27, 2013 By achuka Leave a Comment

Richard Holmes chooses French portrait photographer Félix Nadar as his ‘Hero’ in The Guardian’s weekly Review feature:

Nadar

Nadar was the man who introduced me to Paris, and to romanticism. He was the first great French portrait photographer of the 19th century, and a master of visual biography. His Panthéon Nadar of 1854 was originally a collection of nearly 300 literary and artistic caricatures, drawn in an arch, psychologically penetrating style later inherited by the American cartoonist David Levine. By 1870, it had become a fantastic photographic archive, in which every writer, painter, musician, dancer, singer and actor of note in the second empire – from Victor Hugo to Édouard Manet, Hector Berlioz to Sarah Bernhardt – was not merely recorded, but shrewdly observed. His sequence of photographs of his friend Charles Baudelaire, for example, is in effect a life study of the poet…

Despite his rackety life, he lived to be 89. He was in some ways his own best creation, and “Nadar” was both an artistic signature and a shrewd commercial logo. His real name was Gaspard-Félix Tournachon: a tall, exuberant man with a vibrant circle of friends and a beloved wife. Jules Verne called him “an Icarus with replaceable wings”. So this brooding self-portrait, taken in 1854, is a typical Nadar paradox. Never trust a biographer on the subject of himself. I shall always be grateful to him.

via My hero: Félix Nadar by Richard Holmes | Books | The Guardian.

Filed Under: Blog, Photography/Art Tagged With: art, French, Paris, photography, portrait, portraiture, Romanticism

Snapshots of inspiration

April 20, 2013 By achuka Leave a Comment

Capturing the Light: The Birth of Photography, by Roger Watson and Helen Rappaport – reviewed by Francis Hodgson (photography critic for the FT)

This is not a book for specialist historians – who will find little that is new – but rather a lively introduction to the subject, illustrated with vivid examples of the early photographers’ art, including a striking 1839 picture of an American named Robert Cornelius; “probably the world’s first successful photographic portrait – of himself – an astonishing image full of life and character”.

via Snapshots of inspiration – FT.com.

Filed Under: Photography/Art Tagged With: art, history, light, origins, photography

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