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INTRODUCTION12                                                                       imaginations are the tools with which we can increase the
                                                                                     essence of life, be visionary, and inspire others.
                   VISION
                                                                                        The observed world may be our subject, but it should
                     All artists see the world differently. The art historian        be the experienced world we draw. There should neve:
                     Professor Sir Ernst Gombrich, author of The Story of Art,       be a slavish obligation to represent things exactly as we
                     wrote as the opening line of this great work, "There really is  collectively agree we see them.We all see differently. We also
                     no such thing as Art. There are only artists." The clarity and  see differently ourselves, depending on the occasion and
                     empowerment of these words, is, I hope, embedded in this        our purpose. There are countless reasons for drawing. We
                     book. When we look back at Wallis' seascape (see p. 11), it
                     may not be accurate to our critical adult eye, but the child
                     in us knows that this is an all-embracing, clear-minded
                     understanding of the sea,
                     boats, and breathtaking wind
                     of a choppy harbor. If as
                     artists we nail a subject down
                     too hard, we can drive out its
                     spirit, and lose the very thing
                     that attracted us to it. Our

              BIRD STUDIES
              The flutter of faint scratches that dance
              across the pages on the right is an
              attempt to see the movement and
              bony weightlessness of a bird. Below,
              the breast- and collarbones and shoulder
              blades of a different bird almost become
              new creatures in themselves.

                                                                                          IDEAS AND INVENTIONS
                                                                                           These active machines, right, all
                                                                                          raise water From the Archimedes'
                                                                                         screw to Leonardo's own cupped
                                                                                         wheel, the page bristles with the
                                                                                          focus of ideas. His notes visually
                                                                                         balance his drawings. They are also
                                                                                           always written backward, not for
                                                                                         disguise but as a personal choice,
                                                                                         perhaps for comfort or ease as a
                                                                                        left-hander or a habitual enjoyment

                                                                                                               of the challenge.

                                                                                     Archimedes' Screws and Water Wheels

                                                                                                     LEONARDO DA VINCI
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