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The New Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain: A Course in Enhancing Creativity and Artistic Confidence Hardcover – September 6, 1999
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When Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain was first published in 1979, it hit the New York Times bestseller list within two weeks and stayed there for more than a year. In 1989, when Dr. Betty Edwards revised the book, it went straight to the Times list again. Now Dr. Edwards celebrates the twentieth anniversary of her classic book with a second revised edition.
Over the last decade, Dr. Edwards has refined her material through teaching hundreds of workshops and seminars. Truly The New Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain, this edition includes:
- the very latest developments in brain research
- new material on using drawing techniques in the corporate world and in education
- instruction on self-expression through drawing
- an updated section on using color
- detailed information on using the five basic skills of drawing for problem solving
Translated into thirteen languages, Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain is the world's most widely used drawing-instruction guide. People from just about every walk of life—artists, students, corporate executives, architects, real estate agents, designers, engineers—have applied its revolutionary approach to problem solving. The Los Angeles Times said it best: Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain is "not only a book about drawing, it is a book about living. This brilliant approach to the teaching of drawing . . . should not be dismissed as a mere text. It emancipates."
- Print length320 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherTarcher
- Publication dateSeptember 6, 1999
- Reading age18 years and up
- Dimensions7.8 x 1.21 x 9.38 inches
- ISBN-100874774195
- ISBN-13978-0874774191
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Product details
- Publisher : Tarcher; Revised, Expanded edition (September 6, 1999)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 320 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0874774195
- ISBN-13 : 978-0874774191
- Reading age : 18 years and up
- Item Weight : 2 pounds
- Dimensions : 7.8 x 1.21 x 9.38 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #730,108 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #488 in Popular Psychology Creativity & Genius
- #3,671 in Drawing (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Betty Edwards is an American art teacher and author, best known for her 1979 book, Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain® (now in its 4th edition).
She was born in 1926 in San Francisco, and grew up in Long Beach, California, attending Long Beach Polytechnic High School. An artist from an early age, Betty received a Bachelor's degree in Art from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) in 1947, and exhibited her paintings in Los Angeles in the 1950s and 1960s. She later received a Master's of Art from California State University Northridge and a Doctorate in Art, Education, and Psychology from UCLA (1976).
Betty taught at Venice High School in the Los Angeles Unified School District, then at a Los Angeles community college. From 1978 until her retirement in 1991, she was in the Art Department at California State University, Long Beach. As Professor of Art, she taught and conducted research until she retired, and was the founder of the Center for the Educational Applications of Brain Hemisphere Research at CSULB. She lives in La Jolla, California, and has two children, Anne Bomeisler Farrell and Brian Bomeisler; and two grandchildren, Sophie and Francesca.
Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain® was published in 1979 (above), and since then has remained the preeminent book on its subject, used as a standard text in many art schools around the world and on the shelves of artists everywhere. More than three million copies have been sold, and it has been translated into many foreign languages, including French, Spanish, German, Portuguese, Dutch, Polish, Hungarian, Chinese, Korean, Russian, and Japanese. Betty Edwards is the author of:
Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain®, 1979 (revised and reprinted in 1989, 1999, and 2012), Penguin Putnam
Drawing on the Artist Within, 1986, Simon & Schuster
Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain® Workbook, 1998 (revised and reprinted in 2012), Penguin Putnam
Color. A course in mastering the art of mixing colors, 2004, Penguin Putnam
From her earliest days as a high school art teacher, Betty began to develop her groundbreaking theories about how to teach drawing successfully to every student, and her graduate studies at UCLA confirmed the results. Until her retirement, she lectured widely around the world on the subjects of drawing, creativity, and creative problem-solving, focusing not just on individuals but on the corporate community and at museums internationally. She continues to write and consult, occasionally participating in DRSB Workshops taught by her son, Brian Bomeisler. Her lifelong mission has been to return art to the public school curriculum nationwide, in her passionate belief that we should be educating the "whole brains" of our children, not just teaching the "Three Rs" or to standardized tests that concentrate on the "left brain" only.
Her company, Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain, Inc., develops special drawing tools, materials, workshops, and videos to help individuals learn to draw. The DRSB Web site is http://drawright.com.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book's content enlightening and useful for learning drawing techniques. They describe it as a great value for the money, with clear writing that is accessible and easy to follow. Readers appreciate the variety of exercises, which open up new worlds for those who can't draw.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book's content helpful. They say it teaches drawing skills and reinforces that drawing is a learned skill. The book provides useful techniques to turn on the correct parts of the brain for drawing. It's easy to read and has wonderful insight and step-by-step instructions. Readers mention it's a great textbook for art instruction in a classroom.
"...days, with the information in this book and the gentle, patient teaching of the Edwards team, I now can draw realistically, and I have a whole world..." Read more
"...It was such a helpful and inspiring class, and everyone improved dramatically. It was a wonderful class...." Read more
"...This is the book that revolutionized drawing instruction. Artistic talent, while helpful, is not essential to succeed...." Read more
"...that contributes little to learning to draw, but otherwise extremely helpful, instructive and encouraging...." Read more
Customers find the book a good value for money. They say it's worth it, and they learn a lot about composition and color from it.
"...Her work is very good, and I've learned a lot about composition and color, but it just seems to me that she can't really "see" what we're drawing in..." Read more
"...It's amazing! Fabulous!However, this book is not the ultimate book on drawing, and it should never be regarded as such...." Read more
"...want to immerse yourself in learning to draw, this is a very good book to begin with. A little too much theory about the brain, etc...." Read more
"...are lots of examples and the materials list is very small and very inexpensive. The rewards are astounding...." Read more
Customers find the writing clear and accessible. They say the book is challenging but filled with insights. The examples, images, jokes, and notes are a pleasure to read. It's designed for self-learning without an instructor, though there is a lot of text in the book.
"...DRSB is clear, encouraging, comforting, challenging, and beautiful at the same time...." Read more
"...This book is designed for a person to read and learn without an instructor...." Read more
"...I feel, this book is well written. It is taking an art class, it is not easy. You must spend the time doing the lessons...." Read more
"...It's amazing! Fabulous!However, this book is not the ultimate book on drawing, and it should never be regarded as such...." Read more
Customers find the exercises in the book enjoyable and enlightening. They appreciate the clear instructions and achievable goals. The book opens up new worlds for those who couldn't draw before, providing an enjoyable read with practical and achievable goals. It helps them see better and transform their perspective on drawing.
"...I have ever read, Betty Edwards' approach to drawing has transformed the way I see, so that now I can draw...." Read more
"...The good news is using the mental techniques in the book, practice is relaxing and enjoyable...." Read more
"...I like this book because it taught me how to see differently...I'm still learning, but I drew things I never thought I could draw..and that was..." Read more
"...and find it to be a great resource in letting go and letting my instinctive mind take over...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's visual quality. They find the photos realistic and beautiful. The book helps them draw realistically.
"...and the gentle, patient teaching of the Edwards team, I now can draw realistically, and I have a whole world of art open to me that I would never..." Read more
"...left to go, I'm drawing sketches that astound me with their photo-realistic qualities...." Read more
"...and then to draw what you see for accurate perception and realistic representation...." Read more
"...There are some great pictures, particularly, some before and after sketches of the writer's students...." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on November 5, 2001One of the most important books I have ever read, Betty Edwards' approach to drawing has transformed the way I see, so that now I can draw. I must say that the book on its own didn't accomplish this transformation: I also attended the intensive 5-day workshop, "Perceptual Skills in Drawing," led by Edwards' instructor team at California State University, Long Beach, CA, where she developed the approach. I always said of myself that while I was a fine musician and writer, I had no talent for the visual arts. I can't say that anymore. In five days, with the information in this book and the gentle, patient teaching of the Edwards team, I now can draw realistically, and I have a whole world of art open to me that I would never have believed possible. DRSB is clear, encouraging, comforting, challenging, and beautiful at the same time. I would recommend it to anyone, and while I am still a beginner, I have been absolutely astonished at what has become possible for me now. If you would like to see my "before" and "after" drawings, just ask me. Everything Edwards says in the book has been true for me, and I thank her from the bottom of my heart for my life transformed.
Update One Year Later:
Since my initial drawing awakening a year ago, I have studied with a private art tutor--an art-school graduate and professional fine artist. Her work is very good, and I've learned a lot about composition and color, but it just seems to me that she can't really "see" what we're drawing in the way that I "see" it. She indulges me when I talk about "right brain" drawing, but she doesn't understand it. And she seems amazed sometimes when I get to do it "my way," (slow and deliberate) and my art is markedly better than when I do it "her way" (fast and approximate).
Looking at all these reviews, I notice that many "artists" object to the "right brain" approach, and yet, I observe that they, too, could benefit from its lessons. Dr. Edwards' approach leads to a kind of visual accuracy that makes some art-school-trained artists nervous. As just one example, some classical drawing instruction teaches you to reduce what you see to regular geometric shapes (the hand as an inverted triangle, or the arm as a cylinder) as a crutch to overcoming the left-brain symbol system. On the other hand, having learned the "right brain" approach, I just "see" what's in front of me, and I draw it--accurately. No geometric shapes required. Once your "right brain is engaged," you draw. If it never engages, then you can only make up a different "left-brain" symbol system to attempt a closer and closer approximation of what's in front of you--but it never feels "real." Unless you learn to see with the "right brain," you'll never draw realistically. How you get there is open to discussion and experimentation, but I'd use this approach, if I were you. So, to the artists, I say, if you can draw realistically--I mean REALISTICALLY--congratulations, you're there. If on the other hand, your work is just abstract somehow, and realism eludes you, then keep an open mind. Even you may find a new depth that you never imagined if you walk this path.
For anyone who uses the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, DRSB is a fine example of an INTP book: Beautiful logic with impeccable theory, addressing all the Introverted Thinking questions with patience and clarity. If you're an INTP as I am, you will appreciate why this approach works for us. If you're an Introverted Intuitive, however, (INTJ or INFJ), I expect you'll lose patience with it quickly because that's just not how you learn. It's technical and complete, rather than condensed and "bullet-pointed." Contrast DRSB with "The Complete Book of Painting and Drawing," by Gerald Woods, INTJ, in which he makes sweeping, general statements that are unhelpful because they leave too much to the imagination: "I tell my students to work in terms of the medium," with no further explanation. If you're already experienced with art, you'll know what he means, but if you're not, it's meaningless. Betty Edwards' explanations are complete and specific.
P.S. I, too, have read the Kimon Nicolaides "The Natural Way to Draw," and it IS good--but it's the long way around, requiring weeks and weeks of several hours per day of hard training.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 30, 2002I have been drawing for a long time (since I was 4). Drawing is a major influence and passion in my life, so I always am looking for new art books, and new perspectives on drawing. I consider this book to be an excellent addition to any artist's (or aspiring artist's) library.
Also, I once attended a class taught by one of Betty Edwards' students. It was such a helpful and inspiring class, and everyone improved dramatically. It was a wonderful class.
Even though I am no longer a drawing "newbie", I found new insights and new ways to observe and see, thanks to this book. It truly can help new artists and "non" artists draw more accurately. It's amazing! Fabulous!
However, this book is not the ultimate book on drawing, and it should never be regarded as such. It cannot possibly answer every question, or provide every insight. It is only a first step. Drawing accurately is just one component to being an artist. (And I hasten to add, I'm REAL big on drawing accurately, I think it is important.) There is a lot of exploration and growth that each artist must undertake in order to fully develop. There will be further study of anatomy, color, line, etc. etc. This book does not pretend to teach everything, and no one should expect it to.
But, don't worry about that right away, if you are a "newbie". Get the book, enjoy it, learn from it, and then look into other books. This book will give you that needed "jump start" and will help you gain a great deal of confidence. You will be most pleased with the progress you will be able to make, thanks to this book.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 11, 2014If you can only have one book about realistic drawing, this would be the one. This book is designed for a person to read and learn without an instructor. Admittedly, there is a lot of "why this works" psychological information at the beginning. If one wants to skip this information and just do the exercises with an "attitude of blind obedience" that can be done. The exercises in the beginning are absolutely essential to success! There are only about a half dozen basic skills that must be mastered for successful, realistic, pencil drawing and they are all in here. This is the book that revolutionized drawing instruction. Artistic talent, while helpful, is not essential to succeed. People really are pre wired to be able to draw. This book shows how to reach your inborn ability.
I taught, quite literally, thousands of people to draw using this book. This book is a great beginning. After working through this book, one continues to find nuggets of information, techniques and skills to add from other sources. It is amazing how often revisiting this book provides new insights into solving drawing problems.
Just like learning to play a musical instrument, if you want to learn to play the pencil, you will need to practice. The good news is using the mental techniques in the book, practice is relaxing and enjoyable.
The ideas in this book lend themselves to suggesting other ways to expand one's ability.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 22, 2006If you really want to immerse yourself in learning to draw, this is a very good book to begin with. A little too much theory about the brain, etc. that contributes little to learning to draw, but otherwise extremely helpful, instructive and encouraging. The emphasis on learning to become "reasonably passable" in just 5 days is misplaced, in my opinion. It certainly is taking me longer than 5 days - or 5 weeks for that matter, but that should not be the issue anyway. If you can devote at least a couple of hours per day on drawing, this book can be an excellent guide alongside your own dilligence.
Top reviews from other countries
SimonReviewed in Canada on April 7, 20225.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic book!
My wife and I used this book to learn how to draw. The exercises are fun and challenging. You will not regret it!
GAYNOR PHAROAHReviewed in the United Kingdom on May 15, 20235.0 out of 5 stars Art book
Good easy to hollow
yeltrab, JanetReviewed in Germany on June 7, 20135.0 out of 5 stars review of order
The book arrived promptly and in great condition. Thank you very much. It is a book worth reading. Was not sure it was still in print.
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Annie-ClaireReviewed in France on June 2, 20105.0 out of 5 stars Un plaisir immense à dessiner d'un nouvel oeil
Ce livre, sur lequel je suis tombée par hasard, mais y a-t-il un hasard, est arrivé à point et converge parfaitement avec le travail de développement personnel dans lequel je suis engagée depuis un certain temps. Le fait de travailler, par différentes techniques, avec le cerveau droit, celui de l'intuition et de la créativité, synchroniquement avec le gauche, celui de la logique, fait faire un bond en avant non négligeable, que certains nommeraient quantique. Je ne suis pas une dessinatrice débutante mais j'avoue que ce que je fais maintenant n'a qu'un rapport très lointain avec ce que je dessinais il y a peu de temps encore. C'est enthousiasmant.
Sarath Chandar Rao, SANKUReviewed in Japan on April 15, 20125.0 out of 5 stars For those who think drawing is tough... do read this one please.
Betty did it with this.
Need I say more.
Fantastic treatise on drawing and with this anyone can learn to sketch and draw.
Highly recommended.
Sincerely,
Sarath








