Carlson's Guide to Landscape Painting
Carlson's Guide to Landscape Painting book cover

Carlson's Guide to Landscape Painting

Paperback – June 1, 1973

Price
$11.49
Format
Paperback
Pages
144
Publisher
Dover Publications
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0486229270
Dimensions
8.27 x 0.39 x 10.83 inches
Weight
14.5 ounces

Description

Written by a famous American painter and teacher, whose landscapes are found in many of the world's most noted museums, this book is known as one of the art student'sxa0most helpful guides. It provides a wealth of advice on the choice of subject; it tells what to look for and aim for, and explains the mysteries of color, atmospheric conditions, and other phenomena to be found in nature. Through his profound understanding of the physical nature of landscapes and his highly developed artistic sense, John Carlson is able to explain both the whys and the hows of the various aspects of landscape painting. Among the subjects covered are angles and consequent values (an insightful concept necessary for strong overall unity of design), aerial and linear perspective, the painting of trees, the emotional properties of line and mass in composition, light, unity of tone, choice of subject, and memory work. In the beginning chapters, the author tells how to make the best of canvas, palette, colors, brushes, and other materials and gives valuable advice about texture, glazing, varnishing, bleaching, retouching, and framing. Thirty-four reproductions of Mr. Carlson's own work and 58 of his explanatory diagrams are shown on pages adjoining the text. As Howard Simon says in the introduction: "Crammed into its pages are the thoughts and experiences of a lifetime of painting and teaching. Undoubtedly it is a good book for the beginner, but the old hand at art will appreciate its honesty and broadness of viewpoint. It confines itself to the mechanics of landscape painting but, philosophically, it roams far and wide. . . . This is a book to keep, to read at leisure, and to look into for the solution of problems as they arise, when the need for an experienced hand is felt." Unabridged republication of the revised (1958) edition.

Features & Highlights

  • Written by a famous American painter and teacher, whose landscapes are found in many of the world's most noted museums, this book is known as one of the art student's most helpful guides. It provides a wealth of advice on the choice of subject; it tells what to look for and aim for, and explains the mysteries of color, atmospheric conditions, and other phenomena to be found in nature. Through his profound understanding of the physical nature of landscapes and his highly developed artistic sense, John Carlson is able to explain both the whys and the hows of the various aspects of landscape painting. Among the subjects covered are angles and consequent values (an insightful concept necessary for strong overall unity of design), aerial and linear perspective, the painting of trees, the emotional properties of line and mass in composition, light, unity of tone, choice of subject, and memory work. In the beginning chapters, the author tells how to make the best of canvas, palette, colors, brushes, and other materials and gives valuable advice about texture, glazing, varnishing, bleaching, retouching, and framing. Thirty-four reproductions of Mr. Carlson's own work and 58 of his explanatory diagrams are shown on pages adjoining the text. As Howard Simon says in the introduction: "Crammed into its pages are the thoughts and experiences of a lifetime of painting and teaching. Undoubtedly it is a good book for the beginner, but the old hand at art will appreciate its honesty and broadness of viewpoint. It confines itself to the mechanics of landscape painting but, philosophically, it roams far and wide. . . . This is a book to keep, to read at leisure, and to look into for the solution of problems as they arise, when the need for an experienced hand is felt."

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(735)
★★★★
25%
(306)
★★★
15%
(184)
★★
7%
(86)
-7%
(-86)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Must Have Book

This book is instructional, (but NOT in the "step-by-step" sense, it's not), and also a very good read. This book is not for the "learning to paint" types, but rather for the "learning about ART" types. Carlson is a Classic, a must-have book, if you're as interested in art as I am.
3 people found this helpful
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A basic text on landscape painting

By far the most comprehensive book I have read on landscape painting. No wonder it is the most referenced book by instructors at the Lyme Academy of Art.
3 people found this helpful
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No color in a painting book?

It is a good book from an excellent artist. The book would have been more useful if it had colored pictures and lessons in color mixture and schemes.
3 people found this helpful
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No color/ illustrations all black and white

Interesting, informative. Would have appreciated addition of "color" to go along with descriptions--hard to see the colors discussed when picture illustrations are all in gray-scale.
2 people found this helpful
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Five Stars

love it
2 people found this helpful
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I now know why it is a painting standard!

The watercolor artist Eric Weigardt recommended this at a recent workshop so I bought it. I now know why it is considered a classic. The explanations are very clear and timeless which is why this has remained such a standard book for outdoor painters for so long.
2 people found this helpful
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Must-have Book For Any Artist

I bought this book based on other reviews... what a great purchase! As a teacher and artist this will be a vital book for me. This book is helpful to put vague, arty ideas (such as composition and handling of edges) into crystal clear language with visual examples. This is not a how-to multi-step book (yawn -- too many of those already!). Other reviews cite the text as a bit 'dated' for language (printed in the 50's) and only black-and-white illustrations, but that is of little concern. Color pictures are not needed to understand the ideas presented. I did not find the text too dated. This book contains ideas for beginners through advanced artists, although I think it will likely confuse the beginner who is just starting to paint. I'd still recommend getting this for the beginner however -- just know that you will only understand certain ideas as you practice painting.
2 people found this helpful
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Carlson's Guide to Landscape Painting

This is a must read for all landscape painters who want to get deeper into their understanding of nature and her effects. This book is geared to the realist painter. There are several diagrams which support what Carlson teaches.
2 people found this helpful
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Skip this one for Richard Schmid's, .Kathleen Lochen Staiger and Carol Marine

This is not the best one out there. The reviews were misleading. Richard Schmid's book far exceeds this one. And for learning to paint, Adn to really get the rubber on the road, The Oil Painting Course You've Always Wanted:...Kathleen Lochen Staiger. Combined with Daily Painting: Paint Small and Often To Become a More Creative, Productive, and SuccessfulArtist Book by Carol Marine, I have all the references I need.
1 people found this helpful
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One Star

The author spends a lot of time talking around a subject. Too antiquated and not specific enough.
1 people found this helpful