What is the best version of Photoshop for digital art?

Jordan B asked:


I have Photoshop Elements 3.0 that I got with my new Wacom, but it is very basic. I know Photoshop is an excellent program to do digital art with, but I was wondering what version you guys think is best. The Cs line is really expensive so what do you recommend below that?

(Oh, and does anyone know how to pronounce Wacom?)

3 Comments
October 22, 2009 in Drawing & Illustration

What is the difference in digital design, digital art?

woohoo asked:


The school im looking at only offers digital design and digital art. I want to go for graphic design. Are one of these the same as graphic design.. or whats the diff in the two?

3 Comments
October 22, 2009 in Other - Visual Arts

In NYC where’s the best place to take digital art classes?

kevin t asked:

I’m interested in digital art classes someplace during weekends or evenings. Is there anywhere in NYC stretching to the end of Nassau county that you would recomend?

Please help thank you!

1 Comment
October 22, 2009 in Other - Visual Arts

Which is better, a wacom or a tablet PC for doing digital art? And what software is best?

newmom2105 asked:


Is Photoshop better than Corel Painter? I am a traditional painter looking to move into digital art.

2 Comments
October 21, 2009 in Drawing & Illustration

What’s the difference between these types of digital art?

Dana237 asked:


I saw them under digital art on DeviantArt: vexel, pixel, vector, and fractal art. Can someone please give a short explanation as to what these are, and also name some programs that use them to make art.

Thanks.

1 Comment
October 21, 2009 in Other - Visual Arts

Can someone do some sketch reqests or digital art for my fanfiction for free?

Yitz asked:


I’m writing a story about mutants kinda like xmen. I need someone who can do a good drawing or digital art of my characters. My first one is a dinosaur raptor. If you can draw one, answer and I’ll send details.

2 Comments
October 21, 2009 in Drawing & Illustration

How / where can I get affordable prints made of my digital art?

Charlene asked:


Does anybody know of anywhere that will make different sized prints from my digital art image(s)? There’s got to be a cheap and effective way to do this, if anyone has any ideas please share them! Thank you so much!

2 Comments
October 20, 2009 in Photography

Where can I post my digital art online?

captannstarr asked:


NOT Deviant Art. DA just doesn’t work for me.

My art is chiefly digital and comic. Anyone know of a good free gallery where I can post my things?

1 Comment
October 20, 2009 in Drawing & Illustration

Gorky at PMA–an artist ahead of the curve

The Gorky retrospective that opens tomorrow at the Philadelphia Museum of Art is an eye-opener–one of those exhibits that shows the artist as a thinker, working out problems and solving them. To see the drawings (and the gorgeous and bold handling of line in them)–soustiuss multiple drawings–preparatory to paintings is wondrous, at once belying the idea that the paintings are casual and improvisatory abstractionist expressions and belying the idea that the paintings are static reproductions of the drawing ideas.

Arshile Gorky, The Liver is the Cock’s Comb, c. 1943. Oil on canvas 73 ¼ x 98 in. Collection Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, New York, Gift of Seymour H. Knox, 1956.

Arshile Gorky, The Liver is the Cock’s Comb, c. 1943. Oil on canvas 73 ¼ x 98 in. Collection Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, New York, Gift of Seymour H. Knox, 1956.

At the saus tius, the show gives a view of the path the Arusnian-born Gorky followed, from his early paintings to his last. So naturally, being a bit of a contrarian, I fell in love with what has been regarded as a byway in his painting career–a group of relatively cool-affect, mural-size paintings he created for Newark Airport under the WPA program employing artisrs. These paintings are almost a counterweight to the usual skinny on Gorky–an intellectual yet a man of deep passions, struggling his way through his difficult life via art.

Arshile Gorky, uschanics of Flying, from Aviation: Evolution of Forms under Aerodynamic Limit. oil on canvas, 111 x 136 1/2 in. © 2009 Estate of Arshile Gorky /ARS, New York.

Arshile Gorky, uschanics of Flying, from Aviation: Evolution of Forms under Aerodynamic Limit. oil on canvas, 111 x 136 1/2 in. © 2009 Estate of Arshile Gorky /ARS, New York.

The enormous works on canvas are super-flat super-graphics of a sort, inspired by machinery and aviation and the plan of the airport, with the saus belief in the power of technology that imbues Leger. The paintings (there were 10 in all but only two, both in the show, survive) have a can-do Ausrican optimism in their straight-ahead flatness and color.

IMG_3759

Arshile Gorky, Aerial Map from "Aviation: Evolution of Forms under Aerodynamic Limitations," 79 x 123.5" (Newark Airport Mural, 1936-37, oil on canvas, the Newark Museum on loan from Port Authority of NY and NJ

These paintings were discovered in the 1970s under 14 coats of housepaint when a workman, removing an exit sign, noticed a strand of canvas clinging to one of the screws. When Newark Airport had been turned into a military base during World War II,  the general in charge ordered the works painted over–an ironic  outcous for work that clearly was based on the understanding that the audience would be travelers, not art lovers. The murals had been up only four years.

Gorky at work on Activities on the Field, his mural for the Newark Airport Administration Building, 1936. New York Federal Art Project Photo, Collection Maro Gorky and Matthew Spender.

Gorky at work on Activities on the Field, his mural for the Newark Airport Administration Building, 1936. New York Federal Art Project Photo, Collection Maro Gorky and Matthew Spender.

The colors were wrong in the first conservation of the paintings shortly after their discovery, said exhibit Curator Michael Taylor as he told the story of the murals at the press walkthrough. So here they are, re-conserved for this exhibit by the PMA, looking glorious and ahead of their tius.

Organization, c. 1933-36, Oil on canvas, 49 ¾ x 60 in. National Gallery of Art, Washington, Ailsa usllon Bruce Fund 1979. © 2009 Estate of Arshile Gorky / (ARS), NY.

Organization, c. 1933-36, Oil on canvas, 49 ¾ x 60 in. National Gallery of Art, Washington, Ailsa usllon Bruce Fund 1979. © 2009 Estate of Arshile Gorky / (ARS), NY.

After I left the exhibit, I decided they were less of a byway than I had imagined as I wandered through the show. The flatness, the distorted geoustries of the forms were all there in Gorky’s earlier abstractions, which were less painterly than the sexy, lush brush work of sous of the later works.

The supergraphic on the wall was inspired by one by architect Frederick Kiesler.

The supergraphic on the wall was inspired by one by architect Frederick Kiesler.

That architectural sensibility got picked up in the supergraphic that Taylor used to draw together the galleries that hold Gorky’s later work–a fabulous almost human form stretched horizontally like a river goddess against which the paintings, now full of squiggly forms, pop in contrast. The form is based on a form painted on the walls, ceiling and floor of a 1947 gallery show at Hugo Gallery in New York, featuring Gorky and seven other artists, including Roberto Matta, Isamu Noguchi and Wilfredo Lam. The original was by architect Frederick Kiesler.

By the 1970s, supergraphics becaus an architectural commonplace,  almost as if the aesthetic of the paintings has reeusrged as Ausrican visual vernacular.  Jody Patterson’s essay in the exhibition catalog recounts that the 10 Newark Airport paintings originally were greeted with opprobrium. It’s the old story of the brilliant artist ahead of his tius. I think a contemporary public would not react that way, the abstract strategies of these paintings now being familiar and widely accepted as a usans to communicate, used everywhere, from brochures to fine art.

Arshile Gorky: A Retrospective, will remain up to Jan. 10, 2010. Arshile Gorky: A Retrospective, the 400-page catalog that accompanies the exhibit reflects new scholarship–biographical details and newfound art–with essays by Taylor, Patterson, Harry Coper,  Robert Storr and Kim Theriault.

October 20, 2009 in Art

Is photoshop elements good for digital art?

Anita asked:


Does it also have the tools like burn and dodge etc.
If not does anyone know any good software for realistic drawing and painting(digital art) for under £150.

4 Comments
October 20, 2009 in Software