Lines and Colors art blog
  • Eye Candy for Today: Böcklin’s Odysseus and Polyphemus

    Odysseus and Polyphemus, Arnold Bocklin
    Odysseus and Polyphemus, Arnold Böcklin

    Link is to zoomable file on Google Art Project; downloadable file on Wikimedia Commons; original is in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

    The file on Wikimedia, though originally from the Sotheby’s sale to the museum in 2012, seems over-saturated in reds. Not having had the pleasure of seeing the original, I’ve adjusted a copy of that file to bring it more in line with the color on the museum’s site.

    Arnold Böcklin is an artist whose best known painting, Isle of the Dead, is so famous it makes him seem a one-hit-wonder, and his other work is often overlooked. Here he takes on a mythical scene, but his heart is obviously in his love of dramatic rocky landscape.

    The figure of Polyphemus, the giant son of Poseidon as portrayed in Homer’s Odyssey, is rendered in a sketchy, gestural forms almost as textural as the rocks on which he stands. His face is essentially a blur of madness and motion.

    The rocks themselves, however, are painted in wonderful lavish detail, rich with subtle variations of color and texture, as is the sea and foam that washes around them .


    Odysseus and Polyphemus, Google Art Project

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  • A Revolution of the Palette at Norton Simon

    A Revolution of the Palette: The First Synthetic Blues and their Impact on French Artists:

    Though it had been slowing expanding over the centuries, the range of paint colors available to artists increased most dramatically in the 19th century, when a number of new synthetic pigments began to come into production, partly as a result of the industrial revolution.

    Prior to that, new color discoveries were few and scattered, and the development of a significant new color could change the course of painting.

    A Revolution of the Palette: The First Synthetic Blues and their Impact on French Artists” is an exhibition at the Norton Simon Museum in California that traces the development of one of the most important of these colors: Prussian Blue — a greenish blue addition to the palette that could be used more liberally than the artist’s other primary blues.

    Smalt was a difficult to use blue pigment made from particles of glass containing cobalt, and Ultramarine Blue was an incredibly expensive color made from crushed semi-precious stone that could only be used sparingly. (The French Ultramarine we use today, beautiful though it may be, is an inexpensive synthetic version created in the 19th century.)

    Conservator John Griswold, who curated the exhibit, tells the story of the discovery and impact of Prussian Blue in the beginning of the 18th century in an article on Zócalo: “The Accidental Color That Redirected Human Expression“.

    There is also a podcast version of the story, accompanied by slides, on the museum’s site.

    Unfortunately, the museum’s preview images gallery for the exhibit consists of an anemic little slideshow, not even bothering to link to the mentioned images in the museum’s online database.

    I’ve taken the trouble to do that for you. Though I don’t see a comprehensive exhibition object list, here are the items shown in the preview (in the order shown above). Note that the images on the museum’s object pages are zoomable and the zooming window can be resized:

    Canoe on the Yerres River, Gustave Caillebotte
    Portrait of Theresa, Countess Kinsky, Marie-Louise-Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun
    Sappho Recalled to Life by the Charm of Music, Louis Ducis
    The Abduction of Psyche by Zephyrus to the Palace of Eros, Pierre-Paul Prud’hon
    Baron Joseph-Pierre Vialetès de Mortarieu, Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres
    The Seine at Charenton, Jean-Baptiste Armand Guillaumin

    “A Revolution of the Palette” will be on display at the Norton Simon Museum until January 4, 2016.

    (For more on the history of pigments, see my article on the ColourLex website.)



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  • Seth Havercamp

    Seth Havercamp
    Virginia based artist Seth Havercamp studied at The Cleveland Institute of Art, the Memphis College of Art and Carson-Newman College. He continued his study with Robert Liberace at the Art League and Nelson Shanks at Studio Incamminati.

    Havercamp concentrates on figures, portraits and still life. In the latter, he takes a fascinatingly textural approach that at times lends his oil paintings some of the surface quality of pastel. He carries some of those characteristics into the backgrounds of his portraits and figures, creating a visually engaging contrast with the more refined areas.

    Throughout, there is a keen attention to edges and value relationships that give his compositions both harmony and drama.

    Seth Havercamp is married to painter Catherine Havercamp, and his family often features prominently in his work.



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Hassam’s Fifth Avenue flags

    Rainy Day, Fifth Avenue and Flags, Fifth Avenue by Childe Hssam
    Rainy Day, Fifth Avenue, and Flags, Fifth Avenue; Childe Hassam

    First link is to Princeton University Art Museum, which has the original oil in its collection (there is also a version on Wikimdeia Commons); the second link is to Wikimedia Commons; I don’t know the location of the original watercolor.

    Today is Veterans Day here in the U.S., when it’s traditional to fly the American flag in honor of those in military service, past and present.

    Inspired by a view along Fifth Avenue on “Preparedness Day” around the time of World War I, American Impressionist Childe Hassam began a series of what would eventually be 30 paintings on the theme of the American Flag, in many of the compositions flying along New York’s Fifth Avenue.

    I find particularly interesting similarities and contrasts in these two, the oil showing the muted tones of the flag and street on a rainy day — rendered in Hassam’s clipped almost pastel-like brush strokes —and the sunny, interestingly similar point of view — in free but precise watercolor.



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  • Artem “Rhads” Chebokha

    Artem Rhads Chebokha
    Most of us have at some point enjoyed laying back and watching cloud formations in which it is easy to see shapes that look like ships, dogs, hills, oceans, dragons and more.

    Artem Chebokha — who also goes by the handle, “Rhads” — is a digital artist based in Omsk, Russian Federation. Chebokha has taken the notion of seeing things in clouds and carried it out as a theme for a series of digital paintings — distilling skies full of clouds into a variety of forms. Some are overtly fantasy, some more naturalistic and others in between.

    You can find these and other themes on his galleries on Behance and deviantART. He also has a presence on Instagram and the Russian social media site, VK. You can find prints of his work on society6.



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  • Marie Spartali Stillman (update)

    Marie Spartali Stillman, Pre-Raphaelite painter
    Marie Spartali Stillman was a Pre-Raphaelite painter, notably the most well known of the women painters among that group, as well as a model for several of the other painters in the Pre-Raphaelite circle.

    Stillman studied with the renowned Victorian painter Ford Madox Brown, who was not a member of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, but was influential within their sphere.

    She worked in an interesting mixed-media approach combining gouache and watercolor along with pastel and chalk suspended in gum arabic, the binder in gouache and watercolor.

    The result is paintings with a richly but subtly textural surface. Combined with Stillman’s muted value relationships and her fascination with Renaissance painting and Italian literary themes, her technique gives her work a kind of dreamily wistful vision of an idealized Renaissance world.

    There is currently a show of her work, featuring over 50 works: “Poetry in Beauty: The Pre-Raphaelite Art of Marie Spartalli Stillman” at the Delaware Art Museum. It will be on display until January 31, 2016.

    An abbreviated version will then travel to the Watts Gallery, Compton, Guildford, England, where it will be on view from 1 March to 5 June 2016.

    I had the pleasure of visiting the show yesterday. Stillman’s most famous painting, Love’s Messenger (above, top) has always been a favorite of mine in the Museum’s permanent collection of Pre-Raphaelite art (the largest outside of the UK), and it is unsurprisingly the highlight of the show. It is in good company with the wonderful examples of Stillman’s work that make up the exhibition.

    Many of her themes are repeated — young women posed at decorative leaded glass windows holding flowers or precious objects, and tableaux of idealized Renaissance-style gardens populated with literary figures. I was particularly taken, however, with her landscapes and straightforward garden views, directly observed but painted with the Pre-Raphaelite attention to fidelity to nature, and a sense of contemplative quiet.

    Unfortunately, the availability and quality of Stillman’s images on the web is still quite limited. The most reliable in terms of color are those in the Delaware Art Museum’s preview for the show. There is also a selection on their site devoted to their Bancroft Collection of Pre-Raphaelite Art, though that site is experiencing problems at the moment.

    There is a catalog from the exhibition, and another collection of works by Stillman and her husband, who was an American Journalist and amateur painter: A Pre-Raphaelite Marriage: The Lives and Works of Marie Spartali Stillman & William James Stillman.

    For more, see my previous Lines and Colors post on Marie Spartalli Stillman (2006).

    [Addendum: There is a short BBC video about Stillman and the exhibit.]



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Vasari Handcraftes artist's oil colors

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Amazon

(Amazon.com affiliate links; sales go to a larger yacht for Jeff Bezos; but I get a small percentage to help support my work on Lines and Colors)

John Singer Sargent: Watercolors
John Singer Sargent: Watercolors

Sorolla the masterworks
Sorolla: the masterworks

The Art Spirit
The Art Spirit

Rendering in Pen and Ink
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Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective
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World of Urban Sketching
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