Calling All Artists: Check Out These Drawing Tips and Tutorials on Pinterest!

You love to draw, but taking an art class might be too time-consuming. Just like with most things, you can find everything you need to improve your art skills right on the Internet! Pinterest boasts a number of drawing tutorials, painting tips, and other ways to connect with experienced artists without leaving the comforts of your own laptop.

Drawing Tutorials
If you’re a visual learner looking for a bit of assistance improving your sketches, the Drawing Tutorials board on Pinterest can help. This board is filled with links to videos that will show you the mechanics of drawing landscapes, sketching the details of a person’s lips, and even creating beautiful drawings on a chalkboard.

Draw
You don’t particularly need to watch instructional videos, but you could use a bit of guidance when it comes to drawing. This board contains endless sources of drawing inspiration, as well as diagrams and daily assignments to help you improve your drawing skills. You can also use the additional tabs at the top to browse the Draw board by doodles, anime, sketches, or whichever type of drawing that you’re most interested in.

5 Interesting Facts About Artist Edgar Degas

The stunning paintings of young dancers and women by Edgar Degas are well loved by many arts patrons. Degas used his classical techniques and merged it with his avant-garde, impressionistic tendencies to create singular portraits of modern life in Paris during the late 1800s. There are a few things you might not know about this important artist, like these five facts:

Degas initially studied law.
At the request of his father, Degas enrolled into the Faculty of Law of the University of Paris. It didn’t suit him well, and Degas left the school two years later to study his true passion—art—at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts.

Degas never married.
For all of the time he spent with women, drawing, painting, and obsessing over them, Degas never took a wife. He had intimate relationships throughout his life, occasionally with famous artistic women like Mary Cassatt, but the painter remained a bachelor until his death.

New Orleans was his second home.
Degas was born in Paris to a French father and American mother, who was from New Orleans, Louisiana. As an adult, Degas spent much of his time between the two cities, often staying for long periods in New Orleans during the French-Prussia War. His painting "The Cotton Exchange at New Orleans" was inspired by the city and was the only work purchased by a museum during his lifetime.

He collected art.
Degas was a rare type of artist who enjoyed financial success, unlike many of his contemporaries. This allowed him the ability to purchase artwork to create a collection that included work from Cézanne, Gauguin, and Van Gogh.

He stopped painting.
Toward the end of his life, Degas suffered from terrible sight problems. Embittered by this problem, Degas stopped painting altogether. He focused on sculpture, experimented with photography, and promoted his own work. By the time he died in 1917, he had stopped his artistic endeavors altogether.

Edgar Degas [Biography]
Edgar Degas Biography [Edgar Degas]
Edgar Degas Biography [Modern Art Muse]

3 Must-Read Magazines for Art Enthusiasts

Art lovers know there is nothing like seeing a work in person, but with these excellent magazines you can get pretty close to experiencing the detail of the piece. Stay connected to the art world and get a chance to see work you haven’t been able to see up close with the well written articles and photo spreads. Discover new talent you haven’t heard of and see what your favorite artists are working on next.

Smithsonian
What better place to get a deeper look at the artists and artwork that has shaped American history than with Smithsonian magazine? Immerse yourself in articles about past and current work and view pictures of exhibitions and collections, all while staying in touch with the modern art world.

Hi-Fructose
Stay in the know about the current art scene with a digital subscription to Hi-Fructose. This compendium of modern art and artists gives you a monthly dose of what’s hot. Find exhibit and show info while following your favorite current artists' careers.

ARTnews
Each copy of ARTnews is packed with insightful articles about current art trends, highlights of past works, and investigations into different areas of the art world. Read it to become a knowledgeable patron, collector — or both.

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