How To Draw By Scott Robertson &Amp; Thomas Bertling Pdf
Scott Robertson was born in Minnesota and grew up in Plymouth. As a child his artist father, Scott, taught him how to draw and design the toys he played with. Fascinated by speed, he and his father designed and built soapbox derby cars. At the age of 14, Scott finished sixth in the world at the annual race in Akron, Ohio.
- Dec 19, 2014. This is the post I will be updating as I'm working through Scott Robertson & Thomas Bertling's How to Render book and doing the 13 day challenge. I'll be letting you know what I'm doing, why I'm doing it and to what outcome I expect to have after the 13 days. I'll also be providing all the custom exercises.
- Perspective Sketching: Freehand and Digital Drawing Techniques for Artists & Designers (3 edition). Go beyond the horizon with Perspective Sketching. With a combined 26 years of teaching experience, Scott Robertson and Thomas Bertling bring you the lessons and techniques they have used to help.
Scott Robertson (born 1966) is an American concept artist, known for his transportation design work, contributions to movies like Steven Spielberg's Minority Report[1], and his educational DVDs with the Gnomon Workshop.
Robertson is a graduate of ArtCenter College of Design in Pasadena, CA where he was the program director of Entertainment Design.
Biography[edit]
Scott Robertson was born in Minnesota and grew up in Plymouth. As a child his artist father, Scott, taught him how to draw and design the toys he played with. Fascinated by speed, he and his father designed and built soapbox derby cars. At the age of 14, Scott finished sixth in the world at the annual race in Akron, Ohio. In 1984 he attended Oregon State University. In addition to his studies, he was on the rowing team in the bow position.
After two and a half years at Oregon State, Scott transferred to ArtCenter College of Design, where his father had attended before him. He graduated with honors with a B.S. degree in Transportation Design in April 1990.
The day after graduation, Scott opened a product design consulting firm in San Francisco with friend Neville Page. Soon they were designing a variety of consumer products, the majority being durable medical goods and sporting goods. Clients included Everest and Jennings, Kestrel, Giro Sport Design, Nissan, Volvo, Yamaha, Scott USA, Schwinn, and Medical Composite Technology.
In 1995 both Scott and Neville relocated to Vevey, Switzerland to teach drawing and industrial design at Art Center, Europe. Upon the closing of ACE in the middle of 1996 they relocated to Los Angeles. Scott continues to share a studio with Neville where they do consulting work for a wide range of clients.
Scott is married to film editor Melissa Kent and they live in Culver City.
References[edit]
- ^'Art Of Drive: An Interview With Industrial Concept Designer Scott Robertson'. Fuel Tank. Retrieved 2018-12-20.
How To Draw By Scott Robertson Video
External links[edit]
How To Draw By Scott Robertson Children
- Scott Robertson Workshops Official Website
- Design Studio Press Publishing Company Website