River of Ink
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- $12.99
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
With grace, poetry, clarity, and expert knowledge, artist Etienne Appert brings us a book about the very origins of the art of illustration—what it means and why it exists.
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“Why do you draw?” A simple question by a young boy moves the author to travel with him down the River of Ink, which flows from the present day back to the very first illustration drawn by a human. Along the way, they visit legendary artists of the past and encounter personal tales that explore the philosophy of communication through drawing. Why do we draw? It’s a simple question with a spellbinding and complex answer with an entirely new and entertaining look at the history of art.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Appert's myth-spinning meditation on creativity weaves family history with the tale of Saurias, a young soldier, and Saminia, the lover who draws his shadow to remember him while he's at war. The ambitious effort opens with a child asking "Why do you draw?" In the pages that follow, the narrator and the child row "a river of ink, back through all of human history," with Maurice, the boyhood version of the narrator's grandfather, whose own soldier father sent him sketches of his outpost during WWI. Appert incorporates interviews with artists François Boucq and Edmond Baudoin, who observes, for example, that lashes that connect or abuse are similar to drawn lines. An interview with American cartoonist Scott McCloud accompanies the English translation, adding another layer to the "why draw?" question, as an escape from fixed reality: "art as an antidote to life." Appert plays with panel structure and populates his dreamscape with a range of styles, from a child's doodles to surreal backgrounds full of hidden bodies, skulls, or glyphs. Though statements like "Art reaches a dimension that speaks to all mankind" can veer so broad as to lose focus, Appert makes his point otherwise through fluid art and story. When Saurias dies, Saminia draws him again to immortalize him and, in the process, herself. Appert's themes will resonate with both artists and their appreciators.