Drawing autism

Jill Mullin

Book - 2014

Using artwork created by individuals diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), Drawing Autism celebrates their artistry and self-expression while also serving as an accessible point of entry into understanding how ASD manifests in individuals. Behavior analyst and educator Mullin has assembled a staggering array of work from established artists like Gregory Blackstock and Jessica Park, to the unknown but no less talented. Through their art, the contributors exhibit unique perspectives on how they see the world and their places in it. Their creations, coupled with artist interviews, comprise a fascinating and compelling book that serves to educate and inspire anyone who knows someone diagnosed with ASD.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Akashic Books [2014]
Language
English
Main Author
Jill Mullin (-)
Item Description
"Originally published in hardcover by Mark Batty Publisher in 2009"--Page [2].
Includes index.
Physical Description
158 pages : chiefly illustrations (chiefly color) ; 28 cm
ISBN
9781617751981
  • Nurturing the ways in which we see the world / Temple Grandin
  • As seen through the autism spectrum / Jill Mullin
  • Interaction, individual and societal
  • Repetition, repetition, repetition
  • Getting from here to there
  • Bird's-eye view
  • Another world
  • It's all history
  • Art for art's sake.
Review by New York Times Review

Music is an auditory experience, yet much of what complements and surrounds it is visual. Album covers are the most obvious example, but musical notation itself is a graphic language. Graphic artists create pictorial compositions that have melodic sensibilities, and interpreting music through image is so common that some visual artists are said to orchestrate their works. These books show a range of musical inspirations, derivations and exaltations. Walls of Sound Brian Eno, whose Roxy Music hits exemplify the best of glam, created tantalizing performances that combined music and visual spectacle. His career as a hybrid techno musician began in art school, and for more than 40 years he "has explored the complex relationship between light and sound," Christopher Scoates writes in BRIAN ENO: Visual Music (Chronicle, $50), a beautifully designed though dense analysis of how Eno became "completely enveloped in new and unorthodox ways of thinking about the world, visual ideas and music." This is a catalog of awesome accomplishments, in which we see how Eno's "parallel practices have often informed each other" and how his "formal visual arts education provided the theoretical tools that have served him so successfully as both a musician and a visual artist." (Below, "77 Million Paintings," 2006.) Scoates follows Eno from his early experimentation to creating architectural soundscapes to his computer-originated generative music, which takes some of the composing process "out of Eno's hands - and mind." High Fidelity Verve is the perfect name for one of the most successful jazz record labels in the world, founded by Norman Granz in 1955. It is also the best word to describe the album covers made for the likes of Charlie Parker and Billie Holiday. Record covers are only a portion of VERVE: The Sound of America (Thames & Hudson, $75), Richard Havers's history of the company, but the collection hits all the high notes. It's a fascinating portrait of Granz, who fought a war against segregation through music, and of Verve artists. The studio and documentary photographs are a draw, but nothing can beat the covers for eye appeal, even though most go uncredited. City of Splendors As the poet Gabriele d'Annunzio had it, "When one is in Venice, one cannot feel except through music or think except through images." ART AND MUSIC IN VENICE: From the Renaissance to the Baroque (Montreal Museum of Fine Arts/Hazan, $65), edited by Hilliard T. Goldfarb, is a lavish exhibition catalog that shows just how omnipresent music was in Venetian art and life. The church encouraged the processions that filled Piazza San Marco and gave soul to the exquisite musical manuscripts on painted parchment. (Below, a manuscript from the Museo Correr.) Venetian printing, which began as early as 1469 and reached its storied greatness in the work of Aldus Manutius between 1489 and 1494, developed a music publishing industry, producing books like "Harmonice Musices Odhecaton A," which "established a modern, standardized printed musical notation." Full Bloom Although there aren't references to music in Lisa DeLong's CURVES: Flowers, Foliates and Flourishes in the Formal Decorative Arts (Wooden Books/Bloomsbury, $12), a slim book packed with stunning black-and-white illustrations, it's flush with harmony and rhythm. In fact, there is an extremely harmonic aesthetic behind the vintage, intricate patterns on textiles, furniture and architecture. (At right, ironwork from a 19th-century catalog, and a centered-composition ornament.) "The urge to adorn and beautify sacred things and ordinary objects is universal," DeLong writes in the introduction to the principles of symmetry based on the complexities of nature. It is music to the eye. Speaking With Pictures DRAWING AUTISM (Akashic, $22.95) highlights an "area where individuals with autism can have great abilities." Jill Mullin, a clinical therapist, began the project with an artist named Glen Russ, who at an early age developed a passion for music and art. His drawings of the Temptations and the Jackson 5 inspired Mullin to explore the recurring themes in art made by people with autism. Russ's pictures are primitive but not naïve, while other works in the book are more advanced, notably Noah Schneider's "The Fiddler" (above), painted when he was 13, which combines a little Chagall with comic flair. Display Type In FIFTY TYPEFACES THAT CHANGED THE WORLD (Conran Octopus, $20), John L. Walters, editor of the design journal Eye magazine and a music critic for The Guardian, discusses influential typefaces, among them the Aldine Italic, commissioned by Aldus Manutius and designed by Francesco Griffo. "Venetian publishers were obliged to pursue a more economical approach after the collapse of the credit market in 1500," Walters writes. "Griffo's slimline design was intended to permit more words in less space." The book also singles out Cheltenham, designed in 1896 by the architect Bertram Grosvenor, the type for headlines in The New York Times.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [April 6, 2014]
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Behavior analyst and educator Mullin compiled this stunning volume of work from over 40 artists living with autism after working with an ASD (autism spectrum disorder) artist and becoming intrigued by his weekly drawings. The work featured here has been skillfully arranged to mirror the commonalities of the disease; for example, in the chapter "Repetition, Repetition, Repetition." Some of the best pieces appear child-like in their simplicity, but reminiscent of masters such as Klee and Picasso in their emotional heft, as in "The Man on a White Horse" by Kevin Hosseini. Mullin interviews the contributors (including established artists Gregory Blackstock and Jessica Park) about their process and reasons for painting or drawing. Noah Erenberg uses words as his subject matter and creates designs in bold typeface and different colors, which remind him of hip-hop music. Eric Chen's paintings feature words formed into figures and objects as a way to "convey the inner feelings I feel as a person with autism." In her foreword, Temple Grandin explains how visual processing works for people with ASD and discusses her experience learning to draw livestock handling facilities. This book is a testament to the power of art to reveal the inner world of people living with ASD. Full-color illus. throughout. (Mar.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Editor Mullin, a behavior analyst who has been working with individuals with autism since 2000, assembles an astonishing collection of art created by more than 40 international artists along the autism spectrum. The works, coupled with interviews with the creators themselves, foster understanding and acceptance and downright awe at the sheer talent of these remarkable individuals. The book's chapter organization-"Interaction, Individual and Societal"; "Repetition, Repetition, Repetition"; "Getting from Here to There"; "Bird's Eye View"; "Another World"; "It's All History"; "Art for Art's Sake"-showcase seven common characteristics of people on the spectrum. -Temple Grandin, a renowned author, autism advocate, engineer, and livestock behavior consultant, provides the foreword for this jaw--droppingly beautiful book. VERDICT Appealing in its variety of styles and media, this book is a valuable addition to any public library, as well as educational institutions offering programs in art, art therapy, or special education.-Virginia Johnson, Weymouth P.L., MA (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.