Outline of drawing and drawings
The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to drawing and drawings:
- Drawing – activity of making marks on a surface so as to create an image, form or shape.
- A drawing – product of that activity.
What types of things are drawing and drawings?
- Drawing is a type of:
- A drawing is a type of:
- Art –
Types of drawing and drawings
Story telling
Non - story telling
- Academy figure –
- Caricature – pictorial representation of someone in which distinguishing features are exaggerated for comic effect.
- Fashion illustration –
- Figure drawing –
- Gesture drawing –
- Line art – images that consist of distinct straight and curved lines placed against a (usually plain) background, without gradations in shade (darkness) or hue (color).
- Portrait –
- Scratchboard –
- Silhouette –
- Silverpoint –
- Sketch –
- Courtroom sketch –
- Croquis –
- Doodle –
- Multi-Sketch –
- Study –
- Scribble –
- Stick figure –
- Technical drawing/technical illustration –
- Architectural drawing –
- Electrical drawing –
- Engineering drawing –
- Plumbing drawing –
- Structural drawing –
- Scientific illustration (in natural sciences, also referred to biologic, zoologic, or botanical illustration)
- Mechanical systems drawing–
- Working drawing–
- Archaeological illustration–
Drawing techniques
- Automatic drawing –
- Blind contour drawing –
- Contour drawing –
- Chiaroscuro – using strong contrasts between light and dark to achieve a sense of volume in modeling three-dimensional objects such as the human body.
- Grisaille –
- Hatching –
- Masking –
- Mass drawing –
- Screentone –
- Scribble –
- Stippling –
- Trois crayons – using three colors, typically black, white and sanguine chalks
- Drybrush –
Types of draughtsman
Draughtsman or draftsman –
- Cartoonist –
- Drafter –
Drawing media and equipment
A medium (plural: media) is a material used by an artist to create a work.
Common drawing media
- Pastel –
- Charcoal –
- Colored pencil –
- Conté –
- Crayon –
- Graphite – can be pencils which are small or large sticks similar to charcoal
- Marker –
- Pen and Ink –
- Sanguine –
Common bases for drawing
- Canvas –
- Paper – most common base for drawing.
- Plaster –
- Metal –
- Walls – typically for murals.
- Wood –
Other drawing equipment
- Compass –
- Eraser –
- Drawing board –
- Fixative –
- French curve –
- Protractor –
- Ruler –
- Stencil –
- Stump –
Principles and elements of drawing
- Composition –
- Elements of art – group of aspects of a work of art used in teaching and analysis, in combination with the principles of art. They are texture, form, line, color, value, and shape.
- Perspective –
- Principles of art – set of guidelines of art to be considered concerning the impact of a piece of artwork, in combination with the elements of art.[1][2] They are movement, unity,harmony, variety, balance, emphasis, contrast, proportion, and pattern.
Drawing education
- Atelier –
- Art school –
- Life class – Observational drawing from a real life model, usually a nude model.
Awards
Organizations
- Association of American Editorial Cartoonists
- Cartoonists Rights Network, International
- Centre for Recent Drawing
- Drawing Center
- National Cartoonists Society
- Royal Drawing Society
- Seattle Cartoonists' Club
History of drawing
Some notable draftsmen and drawings
- Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519) – Focus' on human anatomy and life forms.
- Vitruvian Man (c. 1487) –
- Albrecht Dürer (1471–1528) –
- Betende Hände ("Praying Hands", c. 1508) –
- Michelangelo (1475–1564) –
- Epifania –
- Hans Holbein the Younger (c. 1498 - 1543) –
- Peter Paul Rubens (1577–1640) –
- Isabella Brant (c. 1621) –
- Jean de Beaugrand (1584–1640) –
- Aubrey Beardsley –
- Jacques-Louis David –
- Pierre-Paul Prud'hon –
- Edgar Degas –
- Théodore Géricault –
- Francisco Goya –
- Jean Ingres –
- Odilon Redon –
- Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec –
- Honoré Daumier –
- Vincent van Gogh –
- Käthe Kollwitz –
- Max Beckmann –
- Jean Dubuffet –
- Egon Schiele –
- Arshile Gorky –
- Paul Klee –
- Oscar Kokoschka –
- Alphonse Mucha –
- Gustave Doré (1832–1883 – )
- Edward Linley Sambourne (1844–1910) –
- The Rhodes Colossus (1892) –
- M. C. Escher (1898–1972) –
- Metamorphosis I (1937) –
- Metamorphosis II (1940) –
- Reptiles (1943) –
- Drawing Hands (1948) –
- Relativity (1953) –
- Ascending and Descending (1960) –
- Waterfall (1961) –
- Metamorphosis III (1968) –
- André Masson (1896–1987) –
- Jules Pascin (1885–1930) –
- Pablo Picasso (1881–1973) –
- Don Quixote (1955) –
- Jorge Melício (1957- ) –
- Erotic Feelings (series) –
See also
References
External links
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