Moleskine Sketch-Book Large, Hard Red for Art (Moleskine Legendary Notebooks) Moleskine Sketch-Book Large, Hard Red for Art (Moleskine Legendary Notebooks)
Sketchbook: Black- Large Sketchbook: Black- Large
Drawing From Memory Drawing From Memory
One Sketch a Day: A Visual Journal One Sketch a Day: A Visual Journal
Drawing the Human Head (Practical Art Books) Drawing the Human Head (Practical Art Books)
Don't Toss My Memories in the Trash-A Step-by-Step Guide to Helping Seniors Downsize, Organize, and Move Don't Toss My Memories in the Trash-A Step-by-Step Guide to Helping Seniors Downsize, Organize, and Move
Some Memories of Drawings Some Memories of Drawings
Moleskine Info Book Pocket (Moleskine Classic) Moleskine Info Book Pocket (Moleskine Classic)
Maximize Your Memory - Techiques and Exercises for Remembering Just About Anything Maximize Your Memory - Techiques and Exercises for Remembering Just About Anything

Memory Drawing Books

Ballestar drawings are full of realism, a vivid graphic description, your images are full of life. The characters are not added, are part of the landscape, move in the context of the artwork. The expression on their faces betrays his feelings. Talk, act, fight, dance. Today we have the opportunity to see part of this collection is displayed in Mexico for the first time. Ballestar Vicens (Barcelona, ??1929) is watercolor and artist, and his reputation as an illustrator is world renowned. He has worked with publishers such as Bastei (Germany) Robert Hale (UK), Clevalend (Austria), Semic (France and Sweden) and Winthers (Denmark) among others. As an author, has published several technical books on drawing and painting. His strokes are admired for their great realism and sensitivity. His long career as an illustrator of books, especially the novels of John Sinclair, an inspector from Scotland Yard, to fight battles of all kinds with demonic and undead creatures, showing all levels, excellent command of the line of this wonderful artist. "This project is deposited in a series of drawings my relationship with people around me, which I proposed to tell a dream. We all keep in memory drawing books some dreams that seem important or unusual. At the beginning of this process I did not know a question to answer: Why do comics? And why draw the dreams of others?. My answer now is: I draw comics because dreams and even that was not the order in my process, that is my current condition. memory drawing books dreams of others because it is an attempt to share that with someone underworld. There's something about turning pages with images that I'm beginning to discover, perhaps has to do with when you're a child and can not read, then look at the books. For me recount a dream like that, to a world impossible to tell without pictures. ". Rita Ponce de León (Peru, 1982). He studied art for several years, then decide to come to Mexico City to continue his studies. For almost 8 years in the city, sketching, presenting and publishing comics about dreams of friends. Using art to talk to specific people and to deepen their relationship with them. . .
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Moleskine Sketch-Book Large, Hard Red for Art (Moleskine Legendary Notebooks) Sketchbook: Black- Large Drawing From Memory One Sketch a Day: A Visual Journal Drawing the Human Head (Practical Art Books) Don't Toss My Memories in the Trash-A Step-by-Step Guide to Helping Seniors Downsize, Organize, and Move Some Memories of Drawings Moleskine Info Book Pocket (Moleskine Classic) Maximize Your Memory - Techiques and Exercises for Remembering Just About Anything