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Topic : "Anatomy question...." |
Fafnir member
Member # Joined: 10 Mar 2001 Posts: 112 Location: Canada
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Posted: Tue Mar 13, 2001 7:16 pm |
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Heyas
I am trying to find more about anatomy, cause I truly do suck at it...heh
if anyone has some good sites, books etc, I would be very appreciative (perhaps I need a dictionary too)...
thanks
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"I wanna go to bovine university when I grow up!"
-Ralph Wiggum |
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Collosimo member
Member # Joined: 30 Dec 2000 Posts: 551 Location: Brisbane, QLD, Australia
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Posted: Tue Mar 13, 2001 10:07 pm |
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Simply the best book available for artists anatomy would have to be:
Andrew Loomis - Figure Drawing for all it's Worth
available courtesy of the Supreme "Anthony"
www.antsin3d.com/Loomis
other than that, a book that should be available around the world would be:
Dynamic Anatomy by Burne Hogarth
or
Dynamic Figure Drawing by Burne Hogarth
[This message has been edited by Collosimo (edited March 13, 2001).] |
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Totally member
Member # Joined: 17 Jun 2000 Posts: 280 Location: Laguna Niguel, Ca
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Posted: Wed Mar 14, 2001 12:03 am |
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woo sweet. My figure drawing instructor recommended purchasing that book, but it's no longer being published.
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Dave Myers http://members.home.com/totally |
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jzero member
Member # Joined: 15 Jan 2001 Posts: 57 Location: Dallas TX USA
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Posted: Wed Mar 14, 2001 9:22 am |
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My anatomy bibles:
"Atlas of Human Anatomy for the Artist"
by Stephen Rogers Peck
"Constructive Anatomy"
by George Bridgman
These are reference books of the highest order. And they are both very much in print. Try for 'em at Amazon or your local indie-crushing bookaplex.
The Bridgman book is an especially good value in that it's a Dover 'permanent edition' paperback. Mine must be twenty years old and it looks about five. The Peck book is even better as a human anatomy reference, with painstaking muscle and skeletal drawings. The advantage that both if these over any medical text is that medical books just show you the parts, but the artists' books show you how they MOVE.
/jzero |
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philjaeger Guest
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Posted: Wed Mar 14, 2001 9:38 am |
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1) I think he most accurate of the anatomy books is "Artistic Anatomy", by Dr. Paul Richer, translated by Robert Beverly Hale, a former lecturer on anatomy at the Art Students League in New York.
2) I enjoyed surfing through the "Atlas of Human Anatomy for the Artist", by Stephen Rogers Peck. It has fully rendered and shaded muscle and bone groups, although the line drawings are lightweight.
3) Burne Hogarth's "Dynamic Figure Drawing" and "Dynamic Figure Anatomy?" are nice especially for comic artists. for initial study i would recommend studying another anatomist, whose drawings aren't as stylized.
4) Loomis has great work, although i've mainly looked at his drawings to study the drawing technique rather than the anatomy.
5) Bridgeman is good. he shows you how to establish mass and centerline.
6) The anatomy book i started off with was "The Human Fgiure" by Davis K. Rubins. that one is still one of my favorites. he very clearly shows the layering of the muscles.
7) "Drawing the Living Fgiure" by Joseph Shepperd is nice. He breaks down the anatomy on his classically done figure drawings.
well...the list keeps going on, so i'll stop here.
Phil |
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Bishop_Six member
Member # Joined: 13 Dec 2000 Posts: 646 Location: Arizona, US
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Posted: Wed Mar 14, 2001 9:41 am |
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Figure Drawing for All it's Worth and Constructive Anatomy are both very good. |
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Fafnir member
Member # Joined: 10 Mar 2001 Posts: 112 Location: Canada
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Posted: Wed Mar 14, 2001 6:53 pm |
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thank you very much
I will not have to scrounge up money and blow it all again! whoo!
thanks again
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"I wanna go to bovine university when I grow up!"
-Ralph Wiggum |
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sheriftariq junior member
Member # Joined: 16 Dec 2000 Posts: 28 Location: New Jersey
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Posted: Sun Mar 18, 2001 4:30 pm |
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I just realized that the Andrew Loomis book is available here in the Plainsboro, New Jersey public library. I found the book a couple of weeks ago, while taking a break from studying from my Computer Science mid-terms. So if any of you guys live around New Jersey, you know where you can get the book
It's kind of remarkable how some of these older books are so much more practical and useful than the newer books (like Hogarth). I have two books by Jack Hamm, both published in the 60s, both highly recommended. |
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