“…there must be doubt as long as one does not understand or see clearly. To get rid of doubt one has to see clearly.” P. 3.
- Rahula, Walpole Sri. What the Buddha Taught. Grove Press. New York. 1959.
“…there must be doubt as long as one does not understand or see clearly. To get rid of doubt one has to see clearly.” P. 3.
“In the world of primitive art, the most common mannerisms are elongated forms, a preference for curves rather than straight lines, the lack of perspective, and an absence of shadows.” Schlain.
“In the bad drawings the parts remain parts. But good or bad, once a drawing is finished it should be forgotten. After all, it is only a fossil of experience – a fossil, however, that at any time can be resurrected by any eye that is sufficiently aware to follow the lines as process, to sense that a drawing is not a thing but an act.” Frank.
“Yet today, one might be hard-pressed to find architects and designers who rely on such a skill. Instead, skeins of spiderweb lines with volumetric overtones defy tradition to create new, luminous forms generated by algorithms and strategic conditions set by their authors.” Hsinming Fung.
Transparent Drawing, the book, is available from Amazon US, Amazon UK, Barnes and Noble, and the publisher, Black Dog Press. It is also available from your favorite book seller.