Description

Book Synopsis

Opens with several first-person anecdotes about the author’s life as a practicing artist and a discussion of the intellectual lineage of his vision-based pedagogy. Many more anecdotes from the author’s teaching appear in most chapters.

The author discusses perception as it benefits the artist in the studio. Perceptual laws govern both our experience of seeing and the artist’s process of creating. The book presents a proven process developed by the author over many decades of teaching and studio practice that the artist can apply to their own painting/drawing and/or teaching. The painting and drawing principles in the book are essential and yet not generally taught or understood. They will benefit anyone learning how to draw/paint or advance their practice. The book will also help practitioners to make rapid progress and to avoid clichéd, overused solutions. It also offers insights and discussions of interest to art lovers and “Sunday painters.” It is for everyone who enjoys viewing and thinking about art.

Integrated into the text are more than one hundred images—works of art by well-known historical and contemporary artists and students, photographs, and diagrams—to reinforce the concepts presented. A recap section ends each chapter, followed by an exercise, or group of related exercises, to encourage and guide the practitioner in immediate application of the concepts.



Trade Review

Studio Seeing is a great resource for artists and students or anyone who wants to learn about the mystery of painting and drawing—essentially the making of flat shapes to communicate multi-dimensional perceptions, concepts, and meanings. This book is a wonderful exploration of that mystery as it so deftly explicates perception, material, and methods as applied to painting and drawing. It makes for good reading whether you want to use it as a teaching/learning aid or just as a pleasure to read.”

-- John Torreano, artist and NYU Professor Emeritus, New York University

“Studio Seeing is a timely work making a case for ‘vison-based pedagogy.’ The book is filled with helpful anecdotes, clever and memorable analogies, and excellent exercises. More than just an instruction book or teacher’s manual, Torlen explains the reason and the context for the exercises included in the book, articulating many of the ideas that painters understand in making their work but are often less able to explain.”

-- Magnus Quaife, Professor of Artist Pedagogy, University of the Arts Helsinki

“Torlen’s experiences as a student, a teacher, and a practicing artist enhance his discussions of the psychology and physiological components in how we see. Studio Seeing is an informative examination of visual perception and the methods for advancing an individual’s skills in drawing and painting.”

-- Honour Mack, Professor, Painting Department Chair, Maine College of Art & Design

“In this brilliant book, Michael Torlen sets out to create what he calls an “Academy of Individuals,” inviting artists to follow their individual interests and stylistic paths. Studio Seeing covers a lot of ground, from facing a bare canvas to chapters on perception, line, and value. By way of clear, well-wrought guidance, diverse illustrations, and engaging exercises, Torlen draws on a lifetime of art-making and teaching to enrich the creative lives of artists. The book is a gift to artists and those of us who want to know how the creative process works. Read this book and you’ll see.”

-- Carl Little, art critic and author

Studio Seeing is a triumph. I don’t believe anyone has written about ‘seeing’ so clearly and completely. ‘Seeing’ things entails more than copying things that you see. Seeing ‘things’ is not understanding things unless you see them in relation to what is adjacent to them, in front of them, behind them or even things that are not there. It is the context of things that gives the viewer (or the artist) understanding. How you perceive things can control meaning; and meaning can vary from person to person. Therein lies the power of art. Having Michael Torlen as a teacher was a gift. It is thrilling to have a book that puts his lifetime of experience and thoughts in one place for artists, young and old, to learn from and enjoy.”

-- Fred Wilson, 1999 MacArthur Fellow and conceptual/installation artist

“Michael Torlen’s Studio Seeing, an assemblage of pedagogical postulates honed over a career of interacting with artists, is an essential volume for those interested in art, perception, artists, or the education of people with these interests.”

-- Ravi S. Rajan, President, California Institute of the Arts (CalArts)

“A must have book for anyone who wants to learn how to ‘see.’”

-- Michael Scott, artist

Table of Contents

Figures

Foreword

Julian Kreimer

A Practical-Meditative Lineage XVII

Teaching XVIII

Learning to “See the Ground”

Preface

Learning to See

The Brick

The Lineage

Introduction

1. The Fear Factor

The Bare Canvas

Into the Void

Course of Action

Fear’s Tyranny

Mistakes and Accidents

Part-to-part

Recap

2. How We See It, How We Don’t

The 3D Cues

Perspective

Binocular Vision

Light and Shadow

Relative Motion

Recap

Exercises – Two or One Eyed

3. The Artist’s Vision

The Monocular Cues

Constancy

2D Visual Cues

Position

Shape-Size

Overlap

Value Contrast

Color Contrast

Hierarchy and Interaction

Recap

Exercises – 2D Cues

4. More About Seeing

Parts and Wholes

The Gestalt Contribution

Think Ahead

Arnheim

Where and What

Figuring the Ground

Object-Directed vs. Ground-Directed Seeing

Past Experience, Purpose, and Action

Recap

Exercises – Parts and Whole

5. Beyond Face or Vase

Head First

Figure-Ground

Not Negative and Positive

Edge-condition

Yes and No

Intentions, Meanings, and Context

Recap

Exercises – F/G

6. Forces in the Field

Inner Necessity

Closure

Coincidence of Edge and Continuity

Locales

Recap

Exercises – Three C’s

7. Line

Positioning Line

Contour

Gesture

Blind-contour

Cross-contour

Recap

Exercises – DYI

8. Value

Positioning Value

Reserving the Light

Adding and Subtracting

On Readymade

Adding Wash and Brush

Elegance or Clumsiness

Recap

Exercises – Plus and Minus

9. Brush, Paint, Process

Shape Paint, Don’t Paint Shapes

Color Studies

Bridging Triangle

DLWCDI

Recap

Exercises–DLM

10. Muscles and Marks

The Body Against Itself

Four Variables

Pressure

Tempo

Duration

Direction

Deliberate Practice

Recap

Exercises–PTDD

11. Figuring Where

Plumb, Level, and Square

The Frame

Sighting and Measuring

2D to 2D

Linear Perspective

Aerial Perspective

Sfumato

Recap

Exercises–Devices

12. Unmediated Response

Focal Point

Approximation

The Great Law

Recap

Exercises–Focal Point

13. Fixing

Jumping Parts

Add More of It

Build a Bridge

Reverse the Overlap

Adjust the Scale

Do Something Else

Recap

Exercises–Ground-Directed

14. The End is The Beginning

Limits of Language

Nothing Changes if Nothing Changes

Meaning, Metaphor, Myth

Last Words

Endnotes

Bibliography

Acknowledgments

About the Author

Index

Studio Seeing: A Practical Guide to Drawing,

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    £23.70

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    RRP £24.95 – you save £1.25 (5%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Wed 17 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Michael Torlen

    3 in stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Studio Seeing: A Practical Guide to Drawing, by Michael Torlen

      Publisher: Intellect Books
      Publication Date: 04/09/2023
      ISBN13: 9781789387896, 978-1789387896
      ISBN10: 1789387892

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Opens with several first-person anecdotes about the author’s life as a practicing artist and a discussion of the intellectual lineage of his vision-based pedagogy. Many more anecdotes from the author’s teaching appear in most chapters.

      The author discusses perception as it benefits the artist in the studio. Perceptual laws govern both our experience of seeing and the artist’s process of creating. The book presents a proven process developed by the author over many decades of teaching and studio practice that the artist can apply to their own painting/drawing and/or teaching. The painting and drawing principles in the book are essential and yet not generally taught or understood. They will benefit anyone learning how to draw/paint or advance their practice. The book will also help practitioners to make rapid progress and to avoid clichéd, overused solutions. It also offers insights and discussions of interest to art lovers and “Sunday painters.” It is for everyone who enjoys viewing and thinking about art.

      Integrated into the text are more than one hundred images—works of art by well-known historical and contemporary artists and students, photographs, and diagrams—to reinforce the concepts presented. A recap section ends each chapter, followed by an exercise, or group of related exercises, to encourage and guide the practitioner in immediate application of the concepts.



      Trade Review

      Studio Seeing is a great resource for artists and students or anyone who wants to learn about the mystery of painting and drawing—essentially the making of flat shapes to communicate multi-dimensional perceptions, concepts, and meanings. This book is a wonderful exploration of that mystery as it so deftly explicates perception, material, and methods as applied to painting and drawing. It makes for good reading whether you want to use it as a teaching/learning aid or just as a pleasure to read.”

      -- John Torreano, artist and NYU Professor Emeritus, New York University

      “Studio Seeing is a timely work making a case for ‘vison-based pedagogy.’ The book is filled with helpful anecdotes, clever and memorable analogies, and excellent exercises. More than just an instruction book or teacher’s manual, Torlen explains the reason and the context for the exercises included in the book, articulating many of the ideas that painters understand in making their work but are often less able to explain.”

      -- Magnus Quaife, Professor of Artist Pedagogy, University of the Arts Helsinki

      “Torlen’s experiences as a student, a teacher, and a practicing artist enhance his discussions of the psychology and physiological components in how we see. Studio Seeing is an informative examination of visual perception and the methods for advancing an individual’s skills in drawing and painting.”

      -- Honour Mack, Professor, Painting Department Chair, Maine College of Art & Design

      “In this brilliant book, Michael Torlen sets out to create what he calls an “Academy of Individuals,” inviting artists to follow their individual interests and stylistic paths. Studio Seeing covers a lot of ground, from facing a bare canvas to chapters on perception, line, and value. By way of clear, well-wrought guidance, diverse illustrations, and engaging exercises, Torlen draws on a lifetime of art-making and teaching to enrich the creative lives of artists. The book is a gift to artists and those of us who want to know how the creative process works. Read this book and you’ll see.”

      -- Carl Little, art critic and author

      Studio Seeing is a triumph. I don’t believe anyone has written about ‘seeing’ so clearly and completely. ‘Seeing’ things entails more than copying things that you see. Seeing ‘things’ is not understanding things unless you see them in relation to what is adjacent to them, in front of them, behind them or even things that are not there. It is the context of things that gives the viewer (or the artist) understanding. How you perceive things can control meaning; and meaning can vary from person to person. Therein lies the power of art. Having Michael Torlen as a teacher was a gift. It is thrilling to have a book that puts his lifetime of experience and thoughts in one place for artists, young and old, to learn from and enjoy.”

      -- Fred Wilson, 1999 MacArthur Fellow and conceptual/installation artist

      “Michael Torlen’s Studio Seeing, an assemblage of pedagogical postulates honed over a career of interacting with artists, is an essential volume for those interested in art, perception, artists, or the education of people with these interests.”

      -- Ravi S. Rajan, President, California Institute of the Arts (CalArts)

      “A must have book for anyone who wants to learn how to ‘see.’”

      -- Michael Scott, artist

      Table of Contents

      Figures

      Foreword

      Julian Kreimer

      A Practical-Meditative Lineage XVII

      Teaching XVIII

      Learning to “See the Ground”

      Preface

      Learning to See

      The Brick

      The Lineage

      Introduction

      1. The Fear Factor

      The Bare Canvas

      Into the Void

      Course of Action

      Fear’s Tyranny

      Mistakes and Accidents

      Part-to-part

      Recap

      2. How We See It, How We Don’t

      The 3D Cues

      Perspective

      Binocular Vision

      Light and Shadow

      Relative Motion

      Recap

      Exercises – Two or One Eyed

      3. The Artist’s Vision

      The Monocular Cues

      Constancy

      2D Visual Cues

      Position

      Shape-Size

      Overlap

      Value Contrast

      Color Contrast

      Hierarchy and Interaction

      Recap

      Exercises – 2D Cues

      4. More About Seeing

      Parts and Wholes

      The Gestalt Contribution

      Think Ahead

      Arnheim

      Where and What

      Figuring the Ground

      Object-Directed vs. Ground-Directed Seeing

      Past Experience, Purpose, and Action

      Recap

      Exercises – Parts and Whole

      5. Beyond Face or Vase

      Head First

      Figure-Ground

      Not Negative and Positive

      Edge-condition

      Yes and No

      Intentions, Meanings, and Context

      Recap

      Exercises – F/G

      6. Forces in the Field

      Inner Necessity

      Closure

      Coincidence of Edge and Continuity

      Locales

      Recap

      Exercises – Three C’s

      7. Line

      Positioning Line

      Contour

      Gesture

      Blind-contour

      Cross-contour

      Recap

      Exercises – DYI

      8. Value

      Positioning Value

      Reserving the Light

      Adding and Subtracting

      On Readymade

      Adding Wash and Brush

      Elegance or Clumsiness

      Recap

      Exercises – Plus and Minus

      9. Brush, Paint, Process

      Shape Paint, Don’t Paint Shapes

      Color Studies

      Bridging Triangle

      DLWCDI

      Recap

      Exercises–DLM

      10. Muscles and Marks

      The Body Against Itself

      Four Variables

      Pressure

      Tempo

      Duration

      Direction

      Deliberate Practice

      Recap

      Exercises–PTDD

      11. Figuring Where

      Plumb, Level, and Square

      The Frame

      Sighting and Measuring

      2D to 2D

      Linear Perspective

      Aerial Perspective

      Sfumato

      Recap

      Exercises–Devices

      12. Unmediated Response

      Focal Point

      Approximation

      The Great Law

      Recap

      Exercises–Focal Point

      13. Fixing

      Jumping Parts

      Add More of It

      Build a Bridge

      Reverse the Overlap

      Adjust the Scale

      Do Something Else

      Recap

      Exercises–Ground-Directed

      14. The End is The Beginning

      Limits of Language

      Nothing Changes if Nothing Changes

      Meaning, Metaphor, Myth

      Last Words

      Endnotes

      Bibliography

      Acknowledgments

      About the Author

      Index

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