Books, Arts & Photography, Painting, Portraits

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Mark Simon
Facial Expressions: A Visual Reference for Artists
by Watson-Guptill (Paperback)
Facial Expressions: A Visual Reference for Artists
All artists are tired of persuading their nearest and dearest to look sad…look glad…look mad…madder…no, even madder…okay, hold it. For those artists (and their long-suffering friends), here is the best book ever. Facial Expressions includes more than 2,500 photographs of 50 faces—men and women of a variety of ages, shapes, sizes, and ethnicities—each demonstrating a wide range of emotions and shown from multiple angles. Who can use this book? Oh, only every artist on the planet, including art students, illustrators, fine artists, animators, storyboarders, and comic book artists. But wait, there’s more! Additional photos focus on people wearing hats and couples kissing, while illustrations show skull anatomy and facial musculature. Still not enough? How about a one-of-a-kind series of photos of lips pronouncing the phonemes used in human speech? Animators will swoon—and artists will show a range of facial expressions from happy to happiest to ecstatic.

Facial Expressions: A Visual Reference for Artists

William F. Powell
Color Mixing Recipes for Portraits: More than 500 Color Combinations for skin, eyes, lips & hair
by Walter Foster (Spiral-bound)
Color Mixing Recipes for Portraits: More than 500 Color Combinations for skin, eyes, lips & hair
From Caucasian to Latino and East Indian hues, this convenient book features master mixes for an arry of skin colors, plus recipes for hair, eye, and lip colors. The concealed wire-o bound book also includes a plastic color-mixing grid for measuring out paints, as well as a handy conversion chart for finding acrylic equivalents of oil paints and vice versa.

Color Mixing Recipes for Portraits: More than 500 Color Combinations for skin, eyes, lips & hair

Painting People: Figure Painting Today
by Distributed Art Publishers (DAP) (Paperback)
Painting People: Figure Painting Today
From CHOICE: London art historian and critic Mullins has brought together a study of contemporary artists who paint the human figure. Included are 200 color reproductions by 85 artists from around the world. Some artists, such as Lucien Freud and Chuck Close, are well known, but many are still developing their reputations. Mullins chose artists who paint people interacting with the world and, in doing so, explore themes of modern times. Her chapters are arranged by these themes: ""The Figure Unravelled,"" ""The Urban Condition,"" ""Other Worlds"" (which explores themes of romanticism), ""Folk Tales"" (the telling of unique and well-known stories), and ""Past Deconstructed"" (focusing on the use of photography by these artists). Many of the works reflect on the isolation of the people portrayed, some are disturbing, and some emphasize the newest technology that these artists employ, including the use of photography in their work. This valuable ...

Painting People: Figure Painting Today

John Singer Sargent
Sargent Portrait Drawings: 42 Works by John Singer Sargent (Dover Art Library)
by Dover Publications (Paperback)
Sargent Portrait Drawings: 42 Works by John Singer Sargent (Dover Art Library)
Collection of portraits, selected from public and private holdings by art historian Trevor J. Fairbrother, reveal the technical skill and intuitive eye for which American portrait painter John Singer Sargent is renowned. Drawings in pencil, pastels and charcoal—a lesser-known aspect of Sargent’s oeuvre—are shown. List of Plates. Introduction. Captions.

Sargent Portrait Drawings: 42 Works by John Singer Sargent (Dover Art Library)

Fronia E. Wissman, Adolphe-William Bouguereau
Bouguereau
by Pomegranate Communications (Paperback)
Bouguereau

Bouguereau

Chris Saper
Painting Beautiful Skin Tones with Color & Light
by David & Charles Publishers (Hardcover)
Painting Beautiful Skin Tones with Color & Light
This volume aims to set out the fundermental but easy-to-follow principles that you can apply to all painting and drawing mediums to create skin tones. It breaks human skin colours down into four main groups, and explains the tonal and colour variations you might expect within each group.

Painting Beautiful Skin Tones with Color & Light

Richard Ormond, Elaine Kilmurray, Warren Adelson
John Singer Sargent: Figures and Landscapes, 1874-1882; Complete Paintings: Volume IV
by Paul Mellon Centre BA (Hardcover)
John Singer Sargent: Figures and Landscapes, 1874-1882; Complete Paintings: Volume IV
From 1874 to 1882, John Singer Sargent (1856–1925) produced more than 200 paintings and water-colors aside from portraiture, including figures in landscape settings, architectural studies, seascapes, subject paintings, and studies after old masters. From powerful studies of models in Paris in the mid-1870s to compelling paintings set in Venice in the early 1880s, the works published in this volume of the catalogue raisonné show the variety of his aesthetic responses. He worked in the studio and en plein air, travelling widely during the eight years covered in this volume and painting in Paris, Brittany, Capri, Spain, North Africa, and Venice.This is the first time that Sargent’s early work has been mapped so comprehensively. With very few exceptions, this beautifully produced book illustrates all the pictures under discussion in color. Each painting, including several which have never been published before, is documented in depth with full provenance, exhibition history, ...

John Singer Sargent: Figures and Landscapes, 1874-1882; Complete Paintings: Volume IV

Deborah Davis
Strapless: John Singer Sargent and the Fall of Madame X
by Tarcher (Hardcover) (Release Date: 2003-07-24)
Strapless: John Singer Sargent and the Fall of Madame X
The story behind the legendary John Singer Sargent painting that propelled the artist to international renown but condemned his subject to a life of public ridicule. John Singer Sargent's Madame X is one of the world's best-known portraits. As the Metropolitan's most frequently requested painting for loans, it travels to museums around the globe. The image of "Madame X" decorates book and magazine covers, greeting cards and screen savers. She's even been immortalized as a Madame Alexander doll. Few people, though, know the fascinating story behind the painting. "Madame X" was actually a twenty-three-year-old New Orleans Creole, Virginie Gautreau, who moved to Paris and quickly became the "it girl" of her day. All the leading artists wanted to paint her, but it was Sargent, a relative nobody, who won the commission. Gautreau and Sargent must have recognized in each other a like-minded hunger for fame. Unveiled at the 1884 Paris Salon, Gautreau's portrait did generate the ...

Strapless: John Singer Sargent and the Fall of Madame X

Ronald Jones, Elizabeth Peyton
Elizabeth Peyton
by Hatje Cantz Publishers (Hardcover) (Release Date: 2002-08-02)
Elizabeth Peyton
Elizabeth Peyton paints portraits of people who matter to her. Be they the iconic faces of Princess Diana, Andy Warhol, Liam Gallagher, and Leonardo DiCaprio or the unfamiliar visages of her friends, lovers, and acquaintances, all appear delicate and painterly, glossy and jewel-like, small in format, and distinctly intimate--as if Peyton knew and loved them all equally. Titles, which reveal only the models' first names, likewise suggest a closeness between the artist and her subject. Working with public photographs borrowed from books and pop magazines, and private photographs shot by herself, the media experience and mediated personality is questioned, transformed, and absorbed into her personal world via the process of painting. Her subjects, fragily beautiful and forever young, are glossed over with a melancholy that recognizes the high price paid for eternal youth. Edited by Zdenek Felix.Essay by Ronald Jones. Hardcover, 112 pages, 55 color and 15 b&w images.

Elizabeth Peyton

Edward Sorel
The Mural at the Waverly Inn: A Portrait of Greenwich Village Bohemians
by Pantheon (Hardcover) (Release Date: 2008-10-28)
The Mural at the Waverly Inn: A Portrait of Greenwich Village Bohemians
The Waverly Inn has been a landmark in New York’s Greenwich Village since the 1920’s. But since 2006, when Vanity Fair editor Graydon Carter bought and refurbished the restaurant, it has also been one of the most sought after destinations in the city. And while we can’t guarantee you a reservation there, we can bring you the wonderful, witty mural by Edward Sorel that graces its walls. Sorel--whose caricatures and drawings regularly appear in The New Yorker and on its cover--chose forty Greenwich Village greats from the past 150 years to cavort in bacchanalian splendor. Each of the 40 makes a solo appearance in these pages alongside a charming, telling vignette of his or her life by Dorothy Gallagher, then appears in a foldout of the entire mural at the back of the book. Here you will find Walt Whitman being attacked by a ferocious Truman Capote butterfly; Jane Jacobs, Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney and Willa Cather playing ring-around the rosy; those famous denizens of the ...

The Mural at the Waverly Inn: A Portrait of Greenwich Village Bohemians

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