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How I found an extr...
By Danny Gregory
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    The Sketching Forum has an interesting post on how to get the most out of a moleskine..

    It would be enormously helpful for my new book if you and your pals could post reviews and ratings of the book on Amazon.
    The more the merrier. Seriously.
    Vote early. And often.
    You can do it here.

    Your pal,
    Danny Gregory

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    Above: Recent images from our Flickr Site

    On January 1, 2009 Suana said, “A wonderful idea! I wish you much creativity and inspiration!” in A plan.

    On December 31, 2008 4ojos said, “5 years is quite a long time. Keep on drawing/posting, Danny” in A plan.

    On December 30, 2008 Thomasina said, “This news makes me sad, but you are a wise man to make this decision. Good luck!” in A plan.

    Just Try It


    (click on video to see it larger on YouTube)
    I stumbled upon this video on YouTube. The creator, a young Brazilian named Marcos, draws other people who appear on YouTube or send him online videos. His drawing style is interesting and it certainly gives me ideas of how to work on my portrait drawing when it's far too freezing to draw strangers in the street. Give it a whirl. P.S. The same artist also rigged a machine that would simultaneously paint on a canvas and punch him in the face. I'm not sure I recommend this particular idea.


    To see a world in a grain of sand,
    And a heaven in a wild flower,
    Hold infinity in the palm of your hand,
    And eternity in an hour.


    William Blake - Auguries of Innocence

    I have been reading a quite fascinating book by Chicago professor of art history James Elkins called "How To Use Your Eyes." Elkins devotes each chapter to examining every element of mundane things we likely take utterly for granted. He describes all the aspects of a drainage culvert, the causes of various cracks in oil paintings, the types and forms of sand grains, the elements of a sunset, the bones and muscles of a shoulder, a moth's wing, the human face and much more.

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    Drawings & doggerel
    By Danny O. Gregory

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    Gill McCowen of Journal Craft Inspiration has published an interview I did with her recently.

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    "An Illustrated Life has been picked by Amazon as one of the seven best books of the month! Yay!

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    A nice way to support Barack Obama. Drawings are submitted, auctioned, and the proceeds contributed. A few of us in NY discussed a similar idea but were too disorganized to pull it off. Fortunately these guys did. Some of the participants are also contributors to my new book, An Illustrated Life: Drawing Inspiration From The Private Sketchbooks Of Artists, Illustrators And Designers

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    Past Matters

    The effect of globalization on the landscape and how we draw it.

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    Curtis has been living on the street for over a year. He tells me he can do any sort of work if he's just given instructions and left to do the job. He doesn't like it when people hover over him, monitoring. Despite this adaptability

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    A record of my exploration into all aspects of drawing, illustrated journaling, creativity, and the inspiring aspects of art. By the author of "Everyday Matters," "The Creative License", and "An Illustrated Life" and other books.


    Peanut
    Everyday Matters

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    I've just marked five years of keeping this blog. The milestone prompted me to think about how much time blogging, corresponding, promoting, writing,self-justifying and so on have absorbed of my free time. It has been a wonderful experience, but the very thing that started me on this road has suffered the most -- namely, time for my own drawing.
    So I have decided, for an indeterminate period, to take a break from scanning and posting and uploading and monitoring and responding (and I've been pretty lax at even at doing that recently). I will be using that time instead to draw and paint and write and think and learn and be.
    I shall keep a bit of a record of how that's progressing on the right hand side of this site, a mini blog within a slumbering blog where I can ruminate on what I am doing and learning with no intention to make a mark on anything but the pages of my journal.
    Eventually, I shall probably return, recharged, refreshed, and newly resolved.
    In the meantime, feel free to read the 842 posts that precede this one or any of these books. Or better yet, join me in getting off the computer and doing some drawing instead.
    Until we meet again, I remain,
    your pal,
    Danny Gregory

    A short film about my new book.

     

    Recent Matters

    A card from Seamus

    "An Illustrated Life: Drawing Inspiration from the Private Sketchbooks of Artists, Illustrators and Designers" now shipping from Amazon! Click to play...

    First reviews

    Dear Danny, I've been looking through your book. over the past several days and it's a gem. It's a delight. I had great fun checking out the various ways artists approach those blank, bound sheets of paper. My three...

    Cindy

    Cindy Woods has long been one of my favorite sketchbook artists. I love the quality of her line, the clarity of her observation. And she is a strong exemplar of the fact that no matter what one's situation, drawing...

    Teaching

    For the first time, I am teaching a regular class on sketchbook journaling and, it is some thing I really look forward to each week. I have an awful lot of students (25 or so) and our classroom is...

    Catching up

    The very first copy of my new book, An Illustrated Life: Drawing Inspiration From The Private Sketchbooks Of Artists, Illustrators And Designers finally arrived and it is gorgeous. First off, it is ridiculously thick, 266 pages jam-packed with journal...

    Souvenir Stand

    G'ahead, take home something nice!

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