Floyd Norman, the first black artist at Disney, animating on Sleeping Beauty, 1958
Why yes, I am a being sent from the nineties to remind you all that it was pretty much the same as the present day
Some stuff from Dr Sketchys, 23rd February this year.
First one I've been to and hopefully not the last :)
Some oil pastel observational drawings from the Dingle film festival. I was so rusty it was embarrassing! It took me at least two hours to get anywhere near warmed up. There were a ton of other talented artists there too!
Blind Sorceress Queen I'm working on at the moment
I swear, if I had anyone special at the mo, this is the card they'd get....EVERY YEAR.
So my class and I have started a zine of illustrations. The first theme was Buffy the vampire slayer!
Fiona Hill
http://feestarr.tumblr.com
An illustration I did for the fantastic blog http://coolchicksfromhistory.tumblr.com/
Everyone should follow them!
Émilie du Châtelet
Art by Fiona Hill (tumblr)
Émilie is best known for her 1759 translation of Isaac Newton’s Principia Mathematica. It is still the leading French translation today. A close romantic and professional companion of Voltaire, Émilie wrote on a wide variety of subjects including mathematics, physics, philosophy, and female education.
In 1737, Émilie published a paper on the nature of fire which foresaw the discovery of infrared radiation by William Hershel in 1800. Frustrated by the lack of cohesion between the work of Isaac Newton and the work of Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Émilie combined elements of both along with the work of other scientists in Institutions de Physique. Created as a textbook for her thirteen year old son, the book was published anonymously in 1740 and soon became popular in France.
On September 4, 1749, Émilie gave birth to her fourth child, a daughter named Stanislas-Adélaïde du Châtelet, the biological daughter of the poet Jean François de Saint-Lambert. A week later, Émilie died from a pulmonary embolism at the age of 42.