Star Wars Art: Ralph McQuarrie

£107.5
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Star Wars Art: Ralph McQuarrie

Star Wars Art: Ralph McQuarrie

RRP: £215.00
Price: £107.5
£107.5 FREE Shipping

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This volume is a bit more interesting than the storyboard books since it covers artists' concepts from outside the trilogies (the first two), including Clone Wars and the novels. This book seems pretty pricey for what you get, but if you go into it knowing that, it is very high quality and I enjoyed it. This book is just a series of concept pieces of artwork for a wide variety of Star Wars sources. I was surprised that probably 60% weren't related to the movies. Quite a few were related to video games that I've never even heard of (maybe they got cancelled) and I've played pretty much all of them.

The paintings are beautiful, standard and varies, but mostly look great. The rougher ones are the digital concept art paintings. I didn't know what to make of this book before buying. It's about concept art but there are already has dedicated artbooks for all their six movies.

From pen and paint and paper to the digital realm, the result is the creation of breathtaking iconic worlds, vehicles, and characters that successive generations have embraced and made their own As the reader immerses him or herself into this collection, they will find themselves taken to the very beginning of the "Star Wars" Saga as George Lucas and Mr. McQuarrie collaborate in bringing to life "a galaxy far, far away." From Mr. Lucas' sparse pencil sketches of his initial toughts on the designs of the X-Wing and Tie Fighter craft, Mr. McQuarrie's fully painted production illustrations of the distinctive space ships soaring into battle to the evolving realizations of the vast and various characters and worlds in the "Star Wars" universe, this multi-volume set can be considered the ultimate book of Genesis in understanding the birth and ever growing saga that is "Star Wars." A highlight of this tome are the expanded reproductions of many of Mr. McQuarrie's famous conceptual paintings. These "detail" images give the reader the opportunity to more closely examine the technique of the artist. As someone who has been fortunate enough to have actually seen some of Mr. McQuarrie's original production paintings at a "Star Wars Celebration" convention, this reviewer was very grateful to have the chance to more fully gaze at these remarkable renderings. The original works of concept art are surprisingly modest in their true dimensions but the power and sense of scope they invoke have always been awe-inspiring. Paging through these volumes, the reader will discover that sense of grandeur again and again. As curated by George Lucas, the artwork that helped bring the Star Wars Saga to life is revealed in all its glory The highlight of this book is its large format. The paintings at huge sizes have more impact and it's wonderful looking at them. When looking at the large paintings, I feel that traditional media is better at handling the fade from detail to non-detailed areas. This is probably which I prefer the traditional media.

In terms of write-up, there's foreword by Joe Johnston, preface by Ryan Church, introduction by Dough Chiang and an interview with Erik Tiemens. The artworks are captioned with name, source and media. There's no explanation of the concept behind the art though.

Star Wars Art: Concept continues the Star Wars series of large oversized hardcover artbooks from publisher Harry N. Abrams. The books before are Star Wars Art: Illustration , Star Wars Art: Comics and Star Wars Art: Visions . Spanning the years from 1975 to the present, Star Wars Art: Concept is a fascinating look at the process of conceptual design. From pen and paint and paper to the digital realm, the result is the creation of breathtaking iconic worlds, vehicles, and characters that successive generations have embraced and made their own. I just hope that Joe Johnston's equally-inspiring Star Wars design work receives a similar treatment one day!!! Like all of these types of books I've read, the artwork is incredible. I would recommend reading the making of books for each of the three original trilogy movies. Those are very dense, but incredibly informative and fascinating. This book give virtually no explanations and a good deal of the imagery is referencing things that were ultimately cut from movies. You would have no idea what you were looking at if you hadn't read those other books first. I guess you could google them as well. I realized not far into the book that, if I hadn't recently read those previous "the making of..." books, I would have no idea what the concept was supposed to be or what it would turn into or if it would eventually be cut. It would just be a pretty picture.

It is going to take a long time to get through the wealth of visual (and written) detail in this book. Very cool to learn that McQuarrie was at Art Center with Syd Mead, and that he found Mead's work intimidating! The third unlooked-for, Star Wars-related artbook from my sister's family (see my review of Star Wars Storyboards: The Original Trilogy). Anyway, this is a book to admire the art and not learn anything about the decision making process or even what they were deciding. Well, this book features a mixture of concept art in the style of fully painted pieces, such as those from Ralph McQuarrie, some comic style art with outlines and markers, the very textural grayscale scenes you see from Doug Chiang and digital paintings. You can really see the transition from using traditional to digital media for creating art somewhere in the middle of the book. I definitely prefer the traditional media art, even though the digital paintings are also good. Magnificent in its size, weight and collected contents, "Star Wars Art: Ralph McQuarrie" is quite simply one of the greatest books ever published on the "Star Wars" Saga. It is a volume I happily give my very highest recommendation.Artworks are selected from the six films, animated TV series, video games (published and unpublished). Since there are so many Star Wars properties out there, only some can come from each. It's a mixed bag in the sense that you might actually want to see more of the art from the movies instead. While the art is good, the material selection or organisation feels haphazard. Star Wars is an entire world created by George's imagination, realized by Ralph's illustrations. It's a timeless universe with its distinct technology and history. It exists whenever you're watching it. It has magic to it." Unfortunately, there isn't much in the way of text. There are a couple of introductions at the beginning of the book, plus some artist profiles and one interview at the end. I am very pleased with what is included here, but I would have liked some more details about the stuff that isn't exactly self-explanatory, like the canceled games. Spanning the years from 1975 to the present, Star Wars Art: Concept is a fascinating look at the process of conceptual design



  • Fruugo ID: 258392218-563234582
  • EAN: 764486781913
  • Sold by: Fruugo

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