Arts & Literature1 min ago
What's The Difference Between An Artist And An...
... illustrator?
I remember reading somewhere that Norman Rockwell was an illustrator. He seemed á fairly good artist to me.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.An illustrator needs something to illustrate!
So, for example, John Tenniel read Lewis Carroll's stories and provided the pictures to accompany them:
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i.e. he was an artist doing a particular job within the field of art as a whole.
Other artists might not be illustrating stories (etc) but simply producing their own entirely independent work.
There's no difference. Rockwell was a modest man and felt he wasn't up to the mark because he relied heavily on photographs, but so did hundreds of other famous artists since the invention of photography in the mid 19th century, and before that by the extensive use of the camera obscura and other optical instruments: Vermeer and Canaletto for example.
There is a difference.
An artist creates art, which is done entirely for the pleasure of looking at it.
An illustrator provides images to enhance text.
That's not to say that art cannot be used to illustrate, or that illustrations cannot be art.
But the strict definitions of the two are defined, before the potential crossovers come into play.
both
Norman Percevel Rockwell (February 3, 1894 – November 8, 1978) was an American painter and illustrator.
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As that makes clear, he did illustrations for books but I don't think his work for the Saturday Evening Post could be called "commissions", he chose the subject and painted it, hough he might well have checked in advance that a magazine wanted it.
I'd sort of disagree with andy, though. Much art, up to and beyond the Renaissance, was "illustration" of the Bible and other religious subjects, whether on altarpieces or in hand-painted holy books, almost always on commission. I think it's still art, though, and the painters still artists, though their work wasn't done purely for visual pleasure.
andy-hughes; // I would ask you to expand on that rather lofty response...//
Avec plaisir. 'Artist' is the collective term for anyone practicing the visual arts, such as a portraitist or indeed an illustrator. Though they are both artists, not all artists are portraitists or illustrators - some are landscape artists etc.
'Artist' is like the term 'musician'; a pianist is a musician and so is a violinist, but all musicians are not necessarily either - some are cellists.
Khandro - I promise that when I need a lesson in the blindingly obvious, you are the top of my list of people to call.
Since the thrust of the thread involves illustrative art, the notion of music as an art form is not relevant. Except to you who needs to show off your ability to condescend with pointless sidetracked guff.
Hopefully this post is long enough to trigger your often mentioned need to ignore it.
And anyone else can watch you falling flat on your condescending face - again.
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