Burne Hogarth (1911–1996)
Auteur de Le dessin de nus facile
A propos de l'auteur
The great comic strip artist Burne Hogarth was born in New York in 1911. Best known as the illustrator of the long-running Tarzan comics, Hogarth was honored as the "Michelangelo of the comics" by the Society for the Study of the Comic Strip in France. Hogarth began drawing Tarzan in 1937, basing afficher plus the strip on stories by Edgar Rice Burroughs. Many of the strips were published in 1977 under the title The Golden Age of Tarzan, 1939-42. In 1950, Hogarth retired Tarzan and spent the next seventeen years teaching. He helped found a number of art schools, including the School of Visual Arts and the Parsons School of Design, both in New York City. He published several instructional texts, including Dynamic Anatomy, Drawing the Human Head, and Dynamic Figure Drawing, and a sketchbook, Arcane Eye of Hogarth, in 1992. Hogarth died of a heart attack in Paris in 1996. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins
Crédit image: Photo (cropped) by Alan Light 1982. SDCC.
Séries
Œuvres de Burne Hogarth
Tarzan - In The City of Gold (Vol. 1): The Complete Burne Hogarth Sundays and Dailies Library (2014) 18 exemplaires
Tarzan - and the Lost Tribes (Vol. 4) (The Complete Burne Hogarth Comic Strip Library) (2017) 7 exemplaires
TARZAN, APINAIN KUNINGAS 2 exemplaires
Tarzan and the Peoples of the Sea and the Fire = Tarzán y los pueblos del mar y del fuego 2 exemplaires
Tarz?n N? 8 2 exemplaires
Tarz?n N? 11 2 exemplaires
Burne HOGARTH / Tarzan of the Apes 1st Edition 1972 1 exemplaire
Luz e sombra sem dificuldade 1 exemplaire
Burne Hogarth's King Arthur Portfolio (01) 1 exemplaire
Tarzan and the Pygmies (Tarzán y los Pigmeos) ; Tarzan and the Amazons = (Tarzán y las Amazonas) 1 exemplaire
Oeuvres associées
The Comics Journal Library, Vol. 5: The Great Comics Illustrators (2005) — Illustrateur — 30 exemplaires
Étiqueté
Partage des connaissances
- Nom légal
- Hogarth, Burne
- Date de naissance
- 1911-12-25
- Date de décès
- 1996-1-28
- Sexe
- male
- Nationalité
- USA
- Cause du décès
- heart attack
- Études
- Art Center of Chicago
Crane College
Northwestern University in Chicago
Columbia University in New York City - Professions
- cartoonist
illustrator
educator
author
theoretician - Organisations
- Manhattan Academy of Newspaper Art
Cartoonists and Illustrators School
School of Visual Arts (SVA) - Prix et distinctions
- National Cartoonist Society Advertising and Illustration Award (1975)
Magazine and Book Illustration Award (1992)
Special Features Award (1974)
Membres
Critiques
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Auteurs associés
Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 54
- Aussi par
- 4
- Membres
- 1,888
- Popularité
- #13,620
- Évaluation
- 3.8
- Critiques
- 26
- ISBN
- 94
- Langues
- 5
- Favoris
- 1
This book introduces the author's own revolutionary system of figure drawing-a system which makes it possible to visualize the forms of the human body from every conceivable point of view as they interlock in deep space. With this system you will be able to draw an incredible variety of poses, actions, and gestures without a model, and with the correct relationships between forms.
Burne Hogarth was a founder of the School of Visual Arts in New York Citiy, where he served as Coordinator of Curriclum, Design, and Art History. His famed lecture demonstrations of anatomy and drawing provided the material for Dynamic Anatomy, Drawing the Human Head, Dynamic Figure Drawing, Drawing Dynamic Hands, and Dynamic Light and Shade.
Mr. Hogarth received his education and art background in Chicago, where he started a diversified professional career that embraced some forty years of experience in art education, fine art, illustration, advertising, and newspaper art. He achieved worldwwide recognition with his illustrations for the Sunday newspaper illustrated 'Tarzan' and has since published Tarzan of the Apes and Jungle Tales of Tarzan in book form. His cartoons, drawings, prints, and paintings have been exhibited at the Musee des Arts at Decoratifs of the Louvre in Paris.
Contents
Introdcution
1 The definitive body forms
Shape-masses of the figure
Shape-masses of the head: Ball and wedge
Barrel shaped rib cage
The wedge box of the pelvis
Column forms of the arms and legs
Wedge masses of hand and foot
2 Figure notation in deep space
The torso is primary
The legs are secondary
The arms are third in importance
The head is last
Exercises in notation
3 Figure unity in deep space: Interconnection of forms
Overlapping forms
Form flow and form unity
Interconnection lines
Outline and contour
Tone gradation
4 Figure invention: Controlling size in foreshortened forms
Cylindrical and barrel forms
The cylinder as a rational form
Finding constant factors
Width of form as a constant factor
The arms
The hands
The joints
5 Figure invention: Controlling length in foreshortened forms
The circle in space: the ellipse
The joint as pivot; The member as radius
The isosceles triangle measuring device
6 Figure projection in deep space
Parallel projection of solid forms
Deep space projection of the figure in action
Figure invention by reversible projection
Perspecitve projection of the figure
Phase-sequence projections: the multiple action figure
Chin thrust leads body action
The hand in phase-sequence projection
Conclusion
Index… (plus d'informations)