This important & original book affirms the significance of drawing as visual thinking in western art from the fifteenth century to the present through an examination of its practice: how & why it is made how it relates to other forms of visual production & theories of art & what artists themselves have written about it. The author herself is a practicing artist & through scrutinizing a wide range of drawings in various media she confirms a long historical commitment to the primal importance of sketching in generating ideas & problem solving examines the production of autonomous drawings as gifts or for pleasure & traces the importance of the life-class & theories of drawing in the training of artists until well into the twentieth century. In the final chapters she address the changing role of drawing in relation to contemporary practice & its importance for conceptual artists working in a non-hierarchical manner with a multiplicity of practices techniques & technologies."ing the writings of artists from Vasari to Reynolds Delacroix to Ruskin Klee & Kandinsky to Beuys Petherbridge proposes that drawing constitutes a discrete if engaged discourse within visual practice with its own internal economy its own typologies codes systems materials & strategies of making; its own markets & collectors its own power relations & self-representations. As well as analyzing specific works by great draughtsmen such as Leonardo Michelangelo Rembrandt Goya & Picasso close attention is paid to those artists traditionally regarded as minor because of their graphic elaboration or involvement with caricature & play as well as to the important contribution of women artists in the twentieth & twenty-first centuries. The book is a response to the vibrant rediscovery of drawing as significant practice in studios exhibitions & art schools & proposes an ambitious & novel agenda for the study & enjoyment of drawing.