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SEARCH RESULTS FOR

paris

Anne Keenan Higgins Anne Keenan Higgins
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Metro

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Anne Keenan Higgins Anne Keenan Higgins
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fleuri

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Gary Bernard Gary Bernard
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Notre Dame de Paris

Still reeling from that fire; totally unnecessary. Cover and inside illustration from my book, The Moth and the Sun.

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Colin Silverman Colin Silverman
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Paris Cool

Bic pen and white pencil on vintage postcards

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Junkyard Sam Junkyard Sam Plus Member
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Waiting For a Turn

I’m back! The game company I work for hit some turbulence and laid off half the studio. I’m still there but it took a while to adjust. Getting back to my own work now. This was drawn with my Sailor King of Pen (M). What a pen! My Royal Tangerine 1911s is to the left for size comparison.

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Anna Anna
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Garden of Tuileries - Paris

Little pause in my travelbook, for little watercolors mixed with ink pen on parisian landscapes

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Noa Noa Plus Member
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The Eiffel Tower

Based on a photo I took when I was there a few weeks ago. Bic pen in my sketchbook

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Anne Keenan Higgins Anne Keenan Higgins
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Jane Birkin

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InkCatsAndMore InkCatsAndMore
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Love Cats

Illustrated with Ink and Ink-Pens on Paper. Urh.-Nr:1811955 Copyright

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Nate Padavick Nate Padavick
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Illustrated Doodle Map of Paris

I just returned from 10 days in Paris and documented my experience, over the course of the trip, in my journal.

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Anne Keenan Higgins Anne Keenan Higgins
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Paris

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Anna Anna
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Paris Saint-Martin canal

Little pause in my travelbook, for little watercolors mixed with ink pen on parisian landscapes in plein air

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David Young David Young
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the locals

Montmartre, Paris, France.

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Aditya Jain Aditya Jain
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Sketch 1 : Paris

I just wanted to capture the beauty of the architecture. These are some random sketches i made to express my view.

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Sabina Hahn Sabina Hahn
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Jean-Paul Sartre

Jean-Paul Sartre (1905–1980) By the 1950s, too much work on too little sleep—with too much wine and cigarettes—had left Sartre exhausted and on the verge of collapse. Rather than slow down, however, he turned to Corydrane, a mix of amphetamine and aspirin then fashionable among Parisian students, intellectuals, and artists (and legal in France until 1971, when it was declared toxic and taken off the market). The prescribed dose was one or two tablets in the morning and at noon. Sartre took twenty a day, beginning with his morning coffee and slowly chewing one pill after another as he worked. For each tablet, he could produce a page or two of his second major philosophical work, The Critique of Dialectical Reason. The biographer Annie Cohen-Solal reports, “His diet over a period of twenty-four hours included two packs of cigarettes and several pipes stuffed with black tobacco, more than a quart of alcohol—wine, beer, vodka, whisky, and so on—two hundred milligrams of amphetamines, fifteen grams of aspirin, several grams of barbiturates, plus coffee, tea, rich meals.” - From Daily Rituals: How Artists Work by Mason Currey #dailyrituals #inktober #jeanPaulSartre @masoncurrey

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yabisanart yabisanart
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Kanagawa wave mystery Dragon

I've always found it so Satisfying to draw Dragons! I love dragons, whether it's for a personal project or a clean wok, Dragons are the subject I enjoy the most and love to explore in so many ways ♥ This was an illustration for a Traditional Action Gamepad with its big buttons, this work is so old, and I improved a lot after it, but its simplicity remains lovely to me and maybe I will remake it with my improvement level right now and make a comparison.

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B6 Drawingman B6 Drawingman
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聖心堂山坡下的餐酒館 / The resturant La Maison Rose

聖心堂山坡下的餐酒館(法國, 巴黎) The resturant La Maison Rose in Montmartre, Paris, France

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Derek Lowes Derek Lowes
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The Woman Puppet from Rome

The Woman Puppet from Rome. A clay or plaster of paris puppet head that was glossy and smooth. This painting of the woman pupped is regal and dignified. It shows little animation or dramatic expression. It is unlike most of the others, say for its counterpart

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Ilga Jansons Ilga Jansons
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Boy in Blue

Playing with colored pencils this week. This is very loosely based on a photo....changed hair, eyes, and skin tones to suit my mood. Vintage Conte a Paris Criterium, Prismacolor Verithin, and Tombow Irojiten pencils.

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Alexandra Martin Alexandra Martin
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Adeline Lisette Morel

This creation of mine is Adeline. She is from Paris,France in the year 1838. Made with watercolors (Jazperstardust, Rublev,Daniel Smith, etc...) and a bit of pencil (just the outline). Made her on my new Arches watercolor paper.

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Sabina Hahn Sabina Hahn
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Joan Miró

Joan Miró (1893-1983) Miró always maintained a rigidly inflexible daily routine—both because he disliked being distracted from his work, and because he feared slipping back into the severe depression that had afflicted him as a young man, before he discovered painting. To help prevent a relapse, his routine always included vigorous exercise—boxing in Paris; jumping rope and Swedish gymnastics at a Barcelona gym; and running on the beach and swimming at Mont-roig, a seaside village where his family owned a farmhouse. Miró hated for this routine to be interrupted by social or cultural events. As he told an American journalist, “Merde! I absolutely detest all openings and parties! They’re commercial, political, and everybody talks too much. They get on my tits!” From Daily Rituals: How Artists Work by Mason Currey

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Anna Anna
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Blue Parisian Rooftops

Little pause in my travelbook, for little watercolors mixed with ink pen on parisian landscapes

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B6 Drawingman B6 Drawingman
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中式餐廳鑫城 / Chinese restaurant Xing Cheng

中式餐廳鑫城(法國, 巴黎) Chinese restaurant Xing Cheng in Paris, France

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Anna Anna
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Fanny in the living room

little project of collage, about woman in their daily life at home, using primary colors. Here Fanny in her parisian flat with Kelloggs her cat collage, acrylic painting, colored pencils, charcoal, aluminium

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miladyheroine miladyheroine
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Futur in Paris

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Mike Sheehan Mike Sheehan
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Untitled

My "Sketching for Animators and Illustrators" class started yesterday, which means the start of whiteboard doodlemania. #doodle #fullertoncollege #fullertoncollegeartdepartment #whiteboard #whiteboarddrawing #dryerase #perpective #sketching #marker #paris

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Sabina Hahn Sabina Hahn
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Erik Satie

Erik Satie (1866–1925) In 1898, Satie moved from Paris’s Montmartre district to the working-class suburb of Arcueil, where he would live for the rest of his life. Most mornings, however, the composer returned to the city on foot, walking a distance of about six miles to his former neighborhood, stopping at his favorite cafés along the way. According to one observer, Satie “walked slowly, taking small steps, his umbrella held tight under his arm. When talking he would stop, bend one knee a little, adjust his pince-nez and place his fist on his hip. Then he would take off once more, with small deliberate steps.” His dress was also distinctive: the same year that he moved to Arcueil, Satie received a small inheritance, which he used to purchase a dozen identical chestnut-colored velvet suits, with the same number of matching bowler hats. Locals who saw him pass by each day soon began calling him the Velvet Gentleman. The last train back to Arcueil left at 1:00 A.M., but Satie frequently missed it. Then he would walk the several miles home, sometimes not arriving until the sun was about to rise. Nevertheless, as soon as the next morning dawned, he would set off to Paris once more. The scholar Roger Shattuck once proposed that Satie’s unique sense of musical beat, and his appreciation of “the possibility of variation within repetition,” could be traced to this “endless walking back and forth across the same landscape day after day.” Indeed, Satie was observed stopping to jot down ideas during his walks, pausing under a streetlamp if it was dark. During the war the streetlamps were often extinguished, and rumor had it that Satie’s productivity dropped as a result. - From Daily Rituals: How Artists Work by Mason Currey

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Rasha Al-Shawwa Rasha Al-Shawwa
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Paris, France- Pencil Drawing

Instagram: @rashawwa

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Carolyn S. Pio Carolyn S. Pio
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Inktober  Fragile

"Unthought-of Frailties cheat us in the Wise." ~ Alexander Pope, Moral Essays (1731-35), Epistle To Temple, line 69. I really had to ponder this quote and figure out how to illustrate it. A spider came to mind...so tiny and fragile in comparison yet invokes so much fear. Then considered a daddy long leg.

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Noelle V Noelle V
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Paris Cafe

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