Lines and Colors art blog
  • Zezhou Chen

     Zezhou Chen, concept art and illustration
    Zezhou Chen is a Chinese concept artist and illustrator working for the gaming industry.

    His subjects are usually of fantasy or science fiction themes. The latter includes a nicely retro-future piece that is part of a group project called “Retro“.

    His website includes galleries of his work for book covers, games and various personal projects. His style and subject matter appears to include influences from classical Chinese myth and history as well as contemporary and classic science fiction and fantasy.

    I enjoy the way he combines passages of overt digital painting technique with others that are closer to traditional media in appearance. He plays with light and composition in ways that give his pieces a dramatic, theatrical feeling.

    [Via io9]



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Peder Krøyer’s Luncheon

    A luncheon. The artist, his wife and the writer Otto Benzon, Peder Severin Kroyer
    A luncheon. The artist, his wife and the writer Otto Benzon, Peder Severin Krøyer

    Link is to zoomable version on Google Art project; downloadable file on Wikimedia Commons, original is in the Hirschsprung Collection, Copenhagen.

    Group portrait, self portrait, room interior or still life — Kroyer’s simple but beautifully painted domestic scene works brilliantly in any of those roles.

    Everything is alive with texture and color, the portrait of Krøyer’s wife, in particular, is sensitive and wonderfully expressive. Just the handling of the relative value of each figure against their section of the background is a lesson in compositional mastery. Just beautiful.

    See my previous posts on Peder Severin Krøyer (and here).



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  • Stepan Kolesnikoff (Kolesnikov)

    Stepan Kolesnikoff (Kolesnikov), Ukrainian, Russian Yugoslav artist gouache and oil
    I came across the work of Stephan Fedorovich Kolesnikoff (alternately spelled Kolesnikov or Kolesnykov) while poking through some Russian language blogs, and had a “Woah! Who is this?” reaction.

    After searching up a bit more of his work, Kolesnikoff immediately went on my list of favorite artists who work in gouache. Though he also did very nice oils, it was his gouache paintings, with their wonderfully delineated trees, shadowed walls, gritty earth, soft fields of snow and colorfully dressed peasants, that grabbed me.

    You will alternately see him mentioned as Russian or Serbian, but the best information I can find indicates that Kolesnikoff was born in Ukraine, and after studying there at the Odessa Art School, went on to study at the Imperial Academy of Arts in St. Petersburg, Russia, where his instructors included Ilya Repin.

    Kolesnikoff lived and painted in Russia for some time, travelled and painted in various parts of Europe, and eventually settled in what was then known as Yugoslavia, in the region now known as Serbia.

    Kolesnikoff’s primary subjects were farm workers, their toil in the fields, village life and church celebrations. His scenes were frequently of winter landscapes, in which he found fascinating contrasts of detail and open space, texture and softness.

    His trees, figures and buildings were given form with carefully controlled variations in value and subtle nuances of color. Combined with his handling of the medium of opaque watercolor, and the matt areas of color it facilitates, the resulting works are a treat for the eye.

    Unfortunately, I haven’t found a major single source for Kolesnikoff’s work, a search made more difficult by the fact that he didn’t die until 1955, which leaves his work subject to copyright in most countries. I’ve gathered what I can below.



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  • Yap Kun Rong

    Yap Kun Rong, concept art and illustration
    Yap Kun Rong is a concept artist and illustrator originally from Singapore and currently living and working in Tokyo, Japan.

    His credits in the gaming industry include Metal Gear Rising, Wonderful 101, and Bayonetta 2. He has also worked in comics for companies like Avalon Studios and Radical Publishing.

    I particularly like his choice of color palettes, sometimes muted, but often in a wide range of high-chroma hues. He also has a nicely imaginative touch with the freeform shapes in his environments, and a knack for juxtaposing organic and mechanical forms with an eye to their contrasting textures.

    There is a brief interview with the artist on It’s Art.

    [Via Concept Art World]



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  • Superbowl art bet 2015: Bierstadt and Homer

    Superbowl art bet 2015: Bierstadt and Homer
    In what has become a fledgling tradition — started in 2010 at the suggestion of Modern Art Notes writer Tyler Green — major museums from the two regions of the U.S. competing in this years Superbowl have engaged in an art loan wager.

    Each museum wagers a three month loan of a major artwork from its collection to the other museum on the outcome of the game. Ideally the works are chosen not only to be of comparable stature, but to be in some way related to the region represented by the museum and the football team.

    This year, the Seattle Art Museum put up Albert Bierstadt’s Puget Sound on the Pacific Coast (above, top, with detail; high-resoluton file on Wikimedia Commons); and the Clark Institute in Williamstown, Massachusetts countered with Winslow Homer’s West Point, Prout’s Neck (above, bottom two; high-resolution file on Wikimedia Commons).

    So we have a pair of superb coastal landscapes, one of the Pacific Northwest, the other of the Atlantic Northeast.

    We know who won, of course, and the Bierstadt will be traveling to Williamstown for a three-month loan later this year. Hopefully, both museums come out winners, as the friendly competition is meant to take advantage of the Superbowl media hype to point a bit of public attention to the fine art collections in both cities.

    For more, see the before the game article on Art News, and my previous posts on past events (below).



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  • Jakub Rozalski

    Jakub Rozalski, concept 1920s farms peasants and mecha
    Jakub Rozalski is a Polish concept artist and illustrator based in Krakow. His work, particularly in a series involving mecha in the context of rural farms, is particularly interesting for the way it combines sci-fi concepts with naturalistic landscape rendering.

    Though primarily digital, Rozalski’s landscapes and machines have a wonderfully painterly feeling. In many cases, his landscapes, if they were done in traditional media, would serve nicely as stand alone gallery landscape paintings.

    His farmlands are inhabited by working peasants that might have come from the 19th century or earlier, juxtaposed with what appear to be World War I era soldiers and grimy retro-futuristic mechs that somehow traverse the centuries as though they had always been present.

    Rozalski blends these elements with his naturalistic, atmospheric and painterly approach into a seamless evocation of an alternate history.

    Rozalski does’t have a dedicated website, instead relying on an ArtStation portfolio and Tumblr blog as his web presence. Neither provide a great deal of background information on the artist, but the mecha-amid-peasants series appears to be related to a game called Scythe.

    There is an interview with the artist on print24.

    [Via io9]



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Vasari Handcraftes artist's oil colors

Charley’s Picks
Bookshop.org

(Bookshop.org affilliate links; sales benefit independent bookshop owners; 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
Rendering in Pen and Ink

Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective
Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective

World of Urban Sketching
World of Urban Sketching

Daily Painting
Daily Painting

Drawing on the right side of the brain
Drawing on the right side of the brain

Understanding Comics
Understanding Comics

Charley’s Picks
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
Rendering in Pen and Ink

Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective
Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective

World of Urban Sketching
World of Urban Sketching

Daily Painting
Daily Painting

Drawing on the right side of the brain
Drawing on the right side of the brain

Understanding Comics
Understanding Comics