Fred Lynchさんのプロフィール画像

Fred Lynchさんのイラストまとめ


Professor of Illustration at Rhode Island School of Design (@RISD) - Always drawing, or drawing conclusions.
linktr.ee/FredLynch

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What I thought was an ink drawing of a humble “Ape” on a skinny street in is actually a picture about rectangles. I’m often surprised to find out later, the hidden motivation behind most of my drawings - compositions.

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1/4 President Millard Fillmore (1800-1874) and I are related. It’s true. Really. The 13th US President’s great-grandfather, Captain John Fillmore II (1701-1777), who lived in this house in Norwich, Connecticut, is also my great-great-great-great-great-great grandfather.

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The Scotti Palace of in Central Italy. A drawing from onsite, with lots of work back in the studio.

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New on my teaching blog, Picture It https://t.co/k9Z7Hiboys
Did you know J.M.W. Turner was an illustrator?

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BIG IRISH FAMILIES - The stereotype of oversized Irish Catholic families proves true in my ancestry. Ellen O’Connor, was one of ten children born in the Cork, Ireland in 1863. She had twelve children of her own in MA - for a time sharing this center house.

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It’s not easy to draw what isn’t there anymore.
Story at https://t.co/KNEO5VUiMb

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In 1914, not long after her immigrant husband Michael died, Theresa (O’Day) Lynch (my g-grandmother) lived here, on a small lane on the West Side of Providence. She resided on this thin backstreet for ten years at four different addresses, but this is the only house that remains.

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HOME AWAY FROM HOME

This was the first home of my Lynch ancestors in America. In 1884, John Lynch and his wife, Mary Sullivan, along with their six surviving children abandoned Cahersiveen in Kerry, Ireland, and joined relatives and neighbors who had settled in CT

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The Alfred E. Smith Houses were built in the early 1950s. They replaced an entire neighborhood (considered slums) that housed my immigrant ancestors a century before. The area now known as “Two Bridges” in the Lower East Side of Manhattan had no bridges back then.

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Hi, I’m Fred Lynch and I’m an illustrator, artist and professor at RISD. A lot of my work comes from onsite investigation.

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