Author picture

Edmund J. Sullivan (1869–1933)

Author of Model-Based Processing for Underwater Acoustic Arrays

4+ Works 20 Members 1 Review

Works by Edmund J. Sullivan

The art of illustration (2016) 5 copies
Line: An Art Study (2015) 4 copies
Line: An Art Study (2015) 3 copies, 1 review

Associated Works

The Rubáiyat of Omar Khayyám (FitzGerald) (1120) — Illustrator, some editions — 6,057 copies, 87 reviews
The Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám (1120) — Illustrator, some editions — 3,543 copies, 40 reviews
The Vicar of Wakefield (1766) — Illustrator, some editions — 3,496 copies, 62 reviews
Lavengro (1852) — Illustrator, some editions — 351 copies, 5 reviews

Tagged

art (2) design (1) drawing (1) li_3 (1) non-fiction (1)

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Sullivan, Edmund Joseph
Other names
Sullivan, E. J.
Birthdate
1869
Date of death
1933
Gender
male
Nationality
UK
Associated Place (for map)
UK

Members

Reviews

1 review
Long, long ago, in a fantasyland not that far away, I went to art school. I don't do much with that part of my brain any more, but now and then I cherish fond hopes of doing a Victor Frankenstein on whatever talent I had/have (*kzot* "It's alive!!"). Hence my interest in "Line".

What I didn't realize when I requested it, or when I started reading it, was that this was a Dover reprint of a book originally written in 1922. I mean, look at that cover. (The Goodreads description cites it; the show more Netgalley description did not.) My first clue was – well, the language. Apart from that, which might just have been a stylistic choice, nothing really raised any suspicion that this wasn't a new, slightly pedantic book. My ears figuratively perked up at his discussion of a "new" instrument that sounded interesting. I enjoyed the advice ("Altogether preferable to the stick charcoal is the Siberian compressed charcoal" and "Hard smooth forms are often best expressed by a swift line") and opinion ("if an artist can become pleasurably excited about the handling of a tool, that tool is for the time being the best possible"). I learned that "etching" means "biting", "and refers, not, as is frequently thought, to the use of the needle, but to the use of the acid." And I enjoyed the glimpses of the author's humor: "The present writer once ventured to introduce this definition of the two processes as “biting and scratching” into the draft of an official report; but it never got beyond the draft, being considered too vivid and undignified for an official document.

But then, all of a sudden, there appeared "the 'n' word", used quite casually. That was a shock. Yup – definitely not a recent release.

If you can get past that, and can settle happily into the rather elaborate writing style, I recommend this highly. It made me chuckle; it made me want to go stock up on Siberian compressed charcoal and go sit in a field somewhere. That I didn't do the latter is my fault. That the author used an unfortunately common-for-the-time derogatory isn't really his.

Received from Netgalley for an honest review - thanks!
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Statistics

Works
4
Also by
4
Members
20
Popularity
#589,234
Rating
3.8
Reviews
1
ISBNs
6