This book may be found in online bookstores, like Amazon.com, using the ISBNs below:
Softcover ISBN:
9798295086113
About the Book
What do portraits reveal when paired with stories that linger behind the eyes?
In this collection, Tracy Kocsis—an intuitive, self-taught artist—brings together pencil portraits and companion vignettes that explore memory, heritage, and the weight of working-class life. These faces draw us into a world of dreamers, outsiders, and immigrants who dared to step into a strange new land. Some images shimmer with joy and strength, while others carry uncanny indifference, sorrow, or quiet angst.
With the raw immediacy of outsider art and the lyrical cadence of folk storytelling, Visions and Vignettes invites readers into an eclectic gallery of human resilience and longing—threads woven together across generations, forming a fragile but enduring ancestral tapestry.
In this collection, Tracy Kocsis—an intuitive, self-taught artist—brings together pencil portraits and companion vignettes that explore memory, heritage, and the weight of working-class life. These faces draw us into a world of dreamers, outsiders, and immigrants who dared to step into a strange new land. Some images shimmer with joy and strength, while others carry uncanny indifference, sorrow, or quiet angst.
With the raw immediacy of outsider art and the lyrical cadence of folk storytelling, Visions and Vignettes invites readers into an eclectic gallery of human resilience and longing—threads woven together across generations, forming a fragile but enduring ancestral tapestry.
Features & Details
- Primary Category: Crafts & Hobbies
- Additional Categories United States of America (USA), Biographies & Memoirs
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Project Option: 8×10 in, 20×25 cm
# of Pages: 96 -
Isbn
- Softcover: 9798295086113
- Publish Date: Oct 10, 2025
- Language English
- Keywords Sketching, Drawing, Art, Memoir, Portraits, Artist
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About the Creator
Tracy Kocsis
Ohio
Self-taught artist inspired by outsider, naive and folk artists such as Lee Godie, Anderson Johnson, Esther Pearl Watson, and many more. As a child, I spent summer mornings drawing people at my grandparent's kitchen table before running off to play. I've been drawing much more in the last few years, specifically, since the Pandemic. I continue to draw in my free time, as it is good for my wellbeing.
