Dictionary Definition
illustration
Noun
1 artwork that helps make something clear or
attractive
2 showing by example [syn: exemplification]
3 an item of information that is representative
of a type; "this patient provides a typical example of the
syndrome"; "there is an example on page 10" [syn: example, instance, representative]
4 a visual representation (a picture or diagram)
that is used make some subject more pleasing or easier to
understand
User Contributed Dictionary
see Illustration
English
Pronunciation
-
- Rhymes: -eɪʃǝn
Noun
- The act of illustrating; the act of making clear and distinct; education; also, the state of being illustrated, or of being made clear and distinct.
- That which illustrates; a comparison or example intended to make clear or apprehensible, or to remove obscurity.
- A picture designed to decorate a volume or elucidate a literary work.
Translations
act of illustrating
- German: Illustration
that which illustrates
- German: Illustration
picture designed to decorate
- German: Illustration
Extensive Definition
An illustration is a visualization
such as a drawing,
painting, photograph or other work of
art that stresses subject
more than form. The aim of an illustration is to elucidate or
decorate textual information (such as a story, poem or newspaper article) by
providing a visual representation.
Function
Illustrations can:- give faces to characters in a story;
- display examples of an item described in an academic textbook (e.g. a typology);
- visualize step-wise sets of instructions in a technical manual;
- communicate subtle thematic tone in a narrative;
- link brands to the ideas of human expression, individuality and creativity; and
- inspire the viewer to feel emotion to expand on the linguistic aspects of the narrative.
History
Early history
The earliest forms of illustration were prehistoric cave paintings. Before the invention of the printing press, illuminated manuscripts were hand-illustrated. Illustration has been used in China and Japan since the 8th century, traditionally by creating woodcuts to accompany writing.15th century through 18th century
During the 15th century, books illustrated with woodcut illustrations became available. The main processes used for reproduction of illustrations during the 16th and 17th centuries were engraving and etching. At the end of the 18th century, lithography allowed even better illustrations to be reproduced. The most notable illustrator of this epoch was William Blake who rendered his illustrations in the medium of relief etching.Early to mid 19th century
In the early 19th century the proliferation of popular journals, which often serialised novels for mass-circulation, produced a boom in popular illustration. The medium moved away from steel engraving which was the standard in the early century towards wood-engraving which could more easily be incorporated into pages of text. Book and journal publishers would employ workshops of wood-engravers to render artists' drawings onto polished blocks of fine-grained yew or box-wood which could then be locked directly into the printing-chase with the metal type. Notable figures of the early century were John Leech, George Cruikshank, Dickens' illustrator Hablot Knight Browne and, in France, Honoré Daumier. The same illustrators would contribute to satirical and straight-fiction magazines, but in both cases the demand was for character-drawing which encapsulated or caricatured social types and classes.The British humorous magazine Punch, which was
founded in 1841 riding on the earlier success of Cruikshank's
Comic
Almanac (1827-1840), employed an uninterrupted run of
high-quality comic illustrators, including Sir John
Tenniel, the Dalziel
Brothers and Georges
du Maurier, into the 20th century. It chronicles the gradual
shift in popular illustration from reliance on caricature to
sophisticated topical observations. These artists all trained as
conventional fine-artists, but achieved their reputations primarily
as illustrators. Punch and similar magazines such as the Parisian
Le
Voleur realised that good illustrations sold as many copies as
written content.
Golden age of illustration
The American "golden age of illustration" lasted from the 1880s until shortly after World War I (although the active career of several later "golden age" illustrators went on for another few decades). As in Europe a few decades earlier, newspapers, mass market magazines, and illustrated books had become the dominant media of public consumption. Improvements in printing technology freed illustrators to experiment with color and new rendering techniques. A small group of illustrators in this time became rich and famous. The imagery they created was a portrait of American aspirations of the time.A prolific artist who linked the earlier and
later 19th century in Europe was Gustave
Doré. His sombre illustrations of London poverty in the 1860s
were influential examples of social commentary in art. He remained
with the medium of monochrome engraving in his later more
fantastical work, but other artists were discovering the
possibilities of color, particularly under the influence of the
Pre-Raphaelite
painters and emulations of hand-printing techniques by the
design-oriented Arts
and Crafts Movement. Edmund
Dulac, Arthur
Rackham, Walter Crane
and Kay
Nielsen were notable representatives of this style, which often
carried an ethos of neo-mediævalism and took mythological and
fairy-tale subjects. By contrast the English illustrator Beatrix
Potter based her colored children's illustrations on accurate
naturalistic observation of animal-life.
The opulence and harmony of the work of the
"golden age" illustrators was counterpointed in the 1890s by
artists like Aubrey
Beardsley who reverted to a sparser black-and-white style
influenced by woodcut and silhouette, anticipating Art Nouveau,
and Les
Nabis. American illustration of this period was anchored by the
Brandywine
Valley tradition, begun by Howard Pyle
and carried on by his students, who included N.C. Wyeth,
Maxfield
Parrish, Jesse
Willcox Smith and Frank
Schoonover.
A movement was started in Latin America by
Santiago
Martinez Delgado who worked in the 1930s for Esquire
Magazine while an art student in Chicago, and later in his
native Colombia with the Vida Magazine, Martinez a disciple of
Frank
Lloyd Wright worked in the Art Deco style.
Also in the 1930s the influence of propaganda art and expressionism was felt in
the work of the British freelance illustrator Arthur
Wragg. His stylised monotone shapes suggested the
block-printing techniques used for political posters, but by this
time the technology of transferring artwork to printing plates by
photographic means had advanced to the extent that Wragg could
produce all his work in pen
and ink.
Post World War II period
Disregarded in their own day, the styles of illustration which have since come to characterize the 1950s and 1960s are magazine advertising and comic art. These styles even began to flow back into the mainstream of fine art in the work of Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein (both of whom had worked as commercial illustrators). Not so admired have been the various styles of illustration associated with pop album cover in the 1970s, often based on airbrush techniques.The 1950s and 1960s were another Golden Age of
Illustration, with hundreds of Illustrators working. Illustrations
appeared in magazines, on billboards, on magazine covers and on
television. The use of Illustrators began to wane in the mid 1950s,
but the genre continued to be seen regularly through the early
1960s. The artwork of Norman
Rockwell, Harry
Anderson, and Charles
Kerins, epitomize the era.
Today
Starting in the 1990s, traditional illustrators confronted a challenge from those using computer software such as Adobe Illustrator, Photoshop, and CorelDRAW. The use of Wacom tablets and similar apparatus also increased the ability of drawing and painting directly in a computer.Today, many illustration students are made aware
of the technology available, with equal emphasis placed upon more
traditional illustration techniques. As a result, traditional and
digital techniques are often used in conjunction with each other.
One form of this is fusion
illustration which crosses the boundaries of fine art and
commercial art in a world where illustration, graphic design,
typography, and photography work together as one glorious
being.
While illustrations have been previously been
considered just a small part of the creative and entertainment
industries, they are becoming a new and significant factor in
industries such as video games,
movies, animation, advertising and publishing, the former three
known for their use of concept art
in pre-production.
Illustration art
Today, there is a growing interest in collecting and admiring original artwork that was used as illustrations in books, magazines, posters, etc. Various museum exhibitions, magazines and art galleries have devoted space to the illustrators of the past.In the visual art world, illustrators have
sometimes been considered less important in comparison with fine
artists and graphic
designers. But as the result of computer
game and comic industry growth, illustrations are becoming
valued as popular and profitable art works that can acquire a wider
market than the other two, especially in Korea, Japan, Hong Kong and
USA.
See also
illustration in Czech: Ilustrace
illustration in Danish: Illustration
illustration in German: Illustration
illustration in Estonian: Illustratsioon
illustration in Esperanto: Ilustraĵo
illustration in French: Illustration
illustration in Indonesian: Ilustrasi
illustration in Italian: Illustrazione
illustration in Hebrew: איור
illustration in Lithuanian: Iliustracija
illustration in Hungarian: Illusztráció
illustration in Dutch: Illustratie
illustration in Japanese: イラストレーション
illustration in Norwegian: Illustrasjon
illustration in Polish: Ilustracja
illustration in Portuguese: Ilustração
illustration in Serbian: Илустрација
illustration in Finnish: Kuvitus
illustration in Swedish: Illustration
illustration in Turkish: İllüstrasyon
illustration in Chinese: 插畫
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abstract, abstraction, acrylic
painting, allegorization, alphabet, altarpiece, art, block print, blueprint, case, case history, case in point,
charactering,
characterization,
chart, choreography, citation, clarification, collage, color print, coloring, conventional
representation, copy,
cracking, cross
reference, cyclorama,
dance notation, daub,
decipherment,
decoding, delineation, demonstration, demythologization,
depiction, depictment, diagram, diptych, drama, drawing, editing, elucidation, emblem, emendation, encaustic
cerography, encaustic painting, engraving, enlightenment, euhemerism, example, exegesis, exemplar, exemplification,
explanation,
explication,
exponent, exposition, expounding, figuration, figure, finger painting, flower
painting, for instance, fresco, fresco painting, genre
painting, gouache,
grisaille, hieroglyphic, icon, iconography, ideogram, illumination, image, imagery, imaging, impasto, instance, item, letter, light, likeness, limning, logogram, logograph, map, miniature, monochrome, montage, mosaic, mural, mural painting, musical
notation, notation,
object lesson, oil painting, painting, panorama, particular, photograph, pictogram, picture, picturization, plan, portraiture, portrayal, poster painting,
prefigurement,
presentment,
print, printing, problem, projection, quotation, rationale, realization, reason, reference, relevant instance,
rendering, rendition, representation, representative, reproduction, sample, sampling, schema, score, script, simplification, solution, specimen, stained glass window,
stencil, still life,
syllabary, symbol, tablature, tableau, tapestry, the brush, triptych, type, typical example, unlocking, wall painting,
wash, wash drawing,
writing