Drawing: Difference between revisions
imported>Robert W King No edit summary |
imported>Howard C. Berkowitz (Multiple media) |
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'''Drawing''' is the act of creating an image, idea, or theme through illustration or a picture. Drawing is usually performed with a pencil, pen, crayon, or other tool that leaves behind an amount of itself or that which it contains on the surface it is being applied to: a [[pencil]] will deposit amounts of [[graphite]] onto paper; a [[pen]] will leave [[ink]]; a [[crayon]] will leave [[wax]]; a [[marker]] will leave a [[pigment]] or [[dye]]. | '''Drawing''' is the act of creating an image, idea, or theme through illustration or a picture. Drawing is usually performed with a pencil, pen, crayon, or other tool that leaves behind an amount of itself or that which it contains on the surface it is being applied to: a [[pencil]] will deposit amounts of [[graphite]] onto paper; a [[pen]] will leave [[ink]]; a [[crayon]] will leave [[wax]]; a [[marker]] will leave a [[pigment]] or [[dye]]. | ||
More than one of these means may be used to mark on the surface, and different means can interact. Graphite and charcoal, either in a pencil or as powder, will spread. Ink and markers tend to stay just where they have been applied, unless deliberately spread with a brush and solvent. Some media, such as [[pastel]], can be blended to create intermediate intensities and colors. | |||
The images conveyed while drawing are usually a result of an individual's [[perception]] of the object being illustrated. | The images conveyed while drawing are usually a result of an individual's [[perception]] of the object being illustrated. |
Revision as of 22:56, 1 September 2008
Drawing is the act of creating an image, idea, or theme through illustration or a picture. Drawing is usually performed with a pencil, pen, crayon, or other tool that leaves behind an amount of itself or that which it contains on the surface it is being applied to: a pencil will deposit amounts of graphite onto paper; a pen will leave ink; a crayon will leave wax; a marker will leave a pigment or dye.
More than one of these means may be used to mark on the surface, and different means can interact. Graphite and charcoal, either in a pencil or as powder, will spread. Ink and markers tend to stay just where they have been applied, unless deliberately spread with a brush and solvent. Some media, such as pastel, can be blended to create intermediate intensities and colors.
The images conveyed while drawing are usually a result of an individual's perception of the object being illustrated.