Drawing From Life: The Journal as Art
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Average customer review:Product Description
Who hasn't, at one time or other, kept a journal? The impulse to record our daily lives on paper is nothing if not universal. Still, only a few of us have the discipline to make it past the first few entries, and fewer still manage to create diaries whose insight and visual beauty can inspire anyone but their authors. Drawing from Life: The Journal as Art is an exploration of these exceptions—books of obsessive wonder filled to their borders with drawings, sketches, watercolors, graphs, charts, lists, collages, portraits, and photographs. Jennifer New takes readers on a spirited tour into the private worlds of journal keepers—an architect, a traveler, a film director, an archeologist, a cancer patient, a songwriter, a quiltmaker, a gardener, an artist, a cyclist, and a scientist, to name just a few—illustrating a broad range of journaling styles and techniques that in the end show how each of us can go about documenting our everyday lives. Excerpts from journals by such artists as Maira Kalman, Steven Holl, David Byrne, and Mike Figgis give us a peek at how creative souls observe, reflect, and explore. For those who already keep a journal, Drawing from Life will be an inspiration. For those who have always wanted to—or tried and failed—it might just be the motivation needed to get past that first week.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #40579 in Books
- Published on: 2005-06-02
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 192 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9781568984452
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
- Click here to view our Condition Guide and Shipping Prices
Editorial Reviews
Review
"Refreshes the power, beauty and possibility of knowing ourselves through daily chronicle and tactile sensation." -- Santa Fe Reporter, September 7, 2005
"A most imaginative collection of work from artists journals, the book features the creative work of dozens of creators. Included are personal, imaginative sketches, photographs, full-color illustrations and prose examples of their work." -- Fred Klien --Santa Barbra News Press, January 1, 2008
"Divided into four categories-observation, reflection, exploration and creation-these are the kind of rough drafts that beg for public viewing. " --Book Stuff, July 25, 2005
"In Drawing From Life, New interviews 31 journal-keepers on how they use their notebooks to observe, explore, reflect, and create their worldsand then she lets their words and images speak. The faithful scribes and artists behind this collection of journal excerpts unlock the secrets of their lives and hearts. The result, bound in a journal-like book with rounded corners and a graph paper background, is visually stirring." --Iowa Alumni Magazine, October, 2006
"Jennifer New offers a compelling examination of the limitless methods of journal-keeping. . . . With contributors ranging from a musician, to a medical illustrator, to an architect, the book documents a whole series of everyday career-people with unusual ways of cataologing the world. " --Resonance, November/December 2005
"Journals kept by 31 creative types, from cartoonist Lynda Barry and cognitve scientist/engineer Erwin Boer to painter Julie Baugnet, who teaches graphic design at Minnesotas St. Cloud State University, and sketches from a project journal kept by Mineapolis landscape architect Thomas Oslund." -- Mary Abbe --Virginia Pilot, September 25, 2005
"Painters, photographers, a psychiatrist, a gardener, a songwriter and assorted travelers chart their journeys. The book breaks down the 31 journal keepers based on how they work: observation, reflection, exploration, and creation." -- Linda Brazill --Capital Times, December 10, 2005
"Picasso left nearly 100 little sketchbooks filled with doodles and drawings that, to the delight of scholars, trace the evolution of his artistic styles." -- Mary Abbe --Brunswick Times - Record, November 3, 2005
"Presents sample pages from dozens of peoples journals, all with images as well as writing. " -- Maura C. Flannery --The American Biology Teacher, May, 2006
"Short engaging essays introduce excerpts reproduced from the visual journals of the 31 artists, cartoonists, mapmaker, scientists, travelers and other creative types, including Minnesotans Julie Baugnet, associate professor of design at St. Cloud University, and Tom Oslund, landscape architect." --Star Tribune, August, 2005
"This book is a must have" --Viewpoint, Spring, 2006
"Visual diaries, as New notes in her preface, are more pragmatic, less confessional, and better fit for public viewing than written diaries.Pouring over the books vivid and arresting pages, it seemed to me visual diaries might also be more useful to the diarist. " -- Kate Bolick --Boston Sunday Globe, July 17, 2005
"Words alone can't describe the richness of the experiences captured in these pages by people like musician David Byrne, film director Mike Figgis, cartoonist Lynda Barry, and artist Gary Brown." --Portsmouth Herald Sunday, August 14, 2005
"there is something romantic about this journal..." -- Stephanie Rosenbloom, --The New York Times, September 8, 2005
A richly illustrated exploration of 31 list-, chart-, and sketch-filled journals by painters, filmakers, engineers, designers, and other visual thinkers. -- The Boston Globe, August 2005
A window into the creative minds of people from all walks of life. -- Anthem, May 2005
Shows how various talented people use their journals as a record and rough draft for their lives and work. -- Metro New York, July 2005
About the Author
Jennifer New is author of the best selling Dan Eldon: The Art of Life. She teaches at the University of Iowa School of Education and lives with her husband and children in Iowa City.
Customer Reviews
Great inspiration!
This book is really inspiring! Its subject is the visual journal or notebook, but this isn't limited to just artists. An anthology of several pages out of people's journals, each accompanied by a brief backstory, it's about a diversity of techniques, mainly visual, that a whole variety of people use to record their reflections on the world around them. It includes travel journals, a songwriter's notebook, architect's sketchbooks, naturalists, even a volcanologist.
What pulls them all together is the fearlessness with which each uses the journal -- each entry is a compelling illustration of the idea of the journal as a tool for discovery. It's not that the drawings or collages in a particular journal are necessarily works of art in themselves, but that all are visual spaces for the mind to explore ideas out loud.
As a final point, I find the excellence of all the examples to be encouraging rather than intimidating. It's the kind of thing that makes you want to run out and by a new sketch book to scribble in.
It'll have you reaching for some art supplies
As an avid journaler, I'm always intrigued to see what other people write about, draw about or observe in their own journals. There's nothing quite so personal as seeing what someone else has created at their most free - there's a certain kind of vulnerability and exposure on display that you don't get to see in a piece of artwork that has been created with the hope that it will have an audience.
Jennifer New has assembled an interesting and inspired collection of journals by people from all walks of life. Only a few of them are artists by profession, but this book demonstrates how many people keep an art journal, and how different their purposes are for doing so. Most of the journals feature sketching, sometimes with the addition of watercolour, although there are also collages, photo montages and pages comprised of found items and ephemera.
I like the way the author has grouped the journals by how she sees their primary function: observation, reflection, exploration or creation. Among the 'observation' journalers are an illustrator who works alongside a marine biologist, a vulcanologist, and a man who embarked on a self-portrait photographic project he called "I Learn Something New Every Single Day" in which he took a daily photo of himself and annotated it with one thing he learned that day, whether it was something important, or trivia about the lives of his friends. In the 'creation' category the author has put those who use their journals primarily for developing their ideas into larger creative projects, including an architect, a quilter, and someone remodeling their garden. The categories in between include travel journals, dream journals, and all sorts of books filled with random collections of thoughts and materials.
I think anyone who keeps a journal (or would like to) will be inspired by this book, not just by the images but also by the introduction to each theme and artist. There's a great balance of text and photographs, and I enjoyed reading each person's thoughts on the part that journalling plays in their lives.
For Your Inspiration-no technique included but visually very pleasing
This book is a great glimpse into how people from different fields treat their journals. From putting them up on a pedestal to utilitarian jotting down of memos and thoughts.
If you are looking for techniques this book does not have them. If you are looking for inspiration-this book certainly has it. The dimensions of the book is also quite nice as is the weight of the papers within. Includes a great variety of contributors-now I just want to see the rest of their personal journals.
I received this as a gift for Christmas and I think I have looked at it every day since. I would recommend this for a gift for yourself or family and friends.
If you love love looking at journal arts this is a book worth putting in your rotation.




