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Promoting some friends and some clients of my website design business
- Twin Willows T’ai Chi studio in Wilmington DE. Taiji classes with Bryan Davis.
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Bill Mather (update)

Bill Mather loves to draw and paint women. If that wasn’t obvious enough from the galleries on his site, he’s named his blog Painter of Women.I wrote about Mather in September of last year. Since then he has added to his online galleries and started a blog. The blog isn’t frequently updated, so you’ll find more artwork on the main site.
Mather’s site has several online galleries, largely consisting of lively portrait drawings, paintings and painted studies of women in various media: chalk, conté crayon, vine charcoal, pencil, acrylic, gouache and oil. Many of the thumbnail images have additional links below them to detail images in which you can see the surface of the drawing or painting in enough detail to see how the media were applied.
The work he features most prominently, and is more recent, is actually not the work I find most appealing. In the newer work he surrounds his figures and faces with swirls and splashes of texture and wild scrawls of colored line. While it makes for interesting compositions, I find I prefer his work when he approaches his subjects more directly, with just a bit of the graphic enthusiasm popping in around the edges. These images have a great balance of solid draftsmanship, confident application of materials and fun graphic experimentation.
The nice variety of his approach and the freedom of his linework make all of the galleries worth investigating. There are also drawing class figure studies and, if you look hard enough, a section of landscapes.
Oddly enough, what you won’t find on the main site, or on the blog, is a mention of the fact that Mather is a high-end concept artist by profession and has done matte painting and design work for films like War of the Worlds, the Star Wars Trilogy, Forest Gump, Jumanji and The Polar Express. He received an Academy Award nomination in 1993 for his work on Batman Returns.
As a concept artist, Mather is affiliated with Doug Chiang’s Ice Blink Studios, members of which have been the subject of several posts on lines and colors.
Mather also teaches figure drawing at the Academy of Art College in San Francisco.
Addendum: I neglected to mention that Mather has published two collections of his drawings and paintngs, DRAWN TO BEAUTY: Collected Sketches by Bill Mather Vol 1 and DRAWN TO BEAUTY: Collected Sketches by Bill Mather Vol 2. The links are to the excellent Bud Plant online store.
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Rhonda Nass

I came across Rhonda Nass on a site dedicated to botanical illustration and was struck by the textural qualities and dimensionality of her plant paintings.There isn’t any information about technique on her site, but I assume from the look of her paintings that she works from photographs in the studio, even utilizing the out of focus background effect often found in photographs to control your eye in the composition of her paintings.
She uses detail and texture to bring her subjects into high relief, giving them a tactile quality, and also emphasizes the play of light across their surfaces.
Her site includes examples of her commercial work, stock images and available originals. In addition to her botanical illustrations there are paintings of birds and objects like gloves and jackets.
Nass is married to illustrator Rick Nass, and the web site divided on the home page between her work with his highly rendered cartoon style images.
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Dave’s [comic book artist] Art Nouveau Collection
This is a collection of Art Nouveau style images by modern comic book artists.It’s part of a larger collection called Dave’s Gallery of Comic Art, which, in turn, is part of the Digital Medusa site.
Digital Medusa contains other comic art collections, including a unique collection of Artistic Interpretations of Literary Figures by comic book artists that I wrote this post about back in October of last year.
Dave’s Art Nouveau Collection contains drawings and sketches by people like Paul Chadwick, Brom, Tony DiTerlizzi, Rick Geary, JG Jones, Rudy Nebres, George Perez, Steve Rude, Michael Whelan, Mike Kaluta and Aaron Lopresti (image at left), among others.
Some of them are convention sketches, some are more finished pieces and the quality varies. Also the term “art nouveau’ is pretty vaguely interpreted (basically meaning, “I have a book on Mucha“), but the results are a lot of fun.
The site contains some teasing “cheesecake” style nudity. You can avoid it if you’re likely to be offended.
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Optical Illusions Sites
As much as I despise the deliberate campaign by mid-20th Century modernist art critics like Clement Greenberg and Harold Rosenberg to denigrate the history and traditions of western art in order to elevate their own pompous theories (in the process killing realism for half a century), I will grant that they were correct about one thing.Representational art is an illusion.
It is the illusion of a three dimensional scene or object created by the arrangement of paint or other marks on a two dimensional surface.
With that in mind, most artists should at least have a passing interest in vision, optics and the fascinating subject of optical illusions. (Proponents of the modernist doctrine of flatness are, of course, excused and may go sit in the hall for the duration.)
I’ve featured some optical illusions in the past, such as the calculated space-altering architectural patterns of Felice Varini (images at left, top), the anamorphosis in Hans Holbein the Younger’s The Ambassadors and the anamorphic sidewalk art of Kurt Wenner (left, middle) and Julian Beever (left, two bottom images).
Here are some general interest optical illusions blogs and sites of varying quality and subject matter. They are at the very least fun to poke around in, and at best can be genuinely illuminating.
Of particular interest to artists should be optical illusions that deal with color and dramatically demonstrate how utterly and completely the perception of color is affected by the surrounding colors.
Notable in that respect is this series of color perception experiments on eChalk, which are the most striking examples of that principle I have ever seen.
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Pierre-Paul Prud’hon
In one of my recent posts I was talking about the place of value in painting. It brought to mind one of the greatest masters of value and tone, both in painting and drawing, whose chalk figure drawings are among my favorites by any artist.Pierre-Paul Prud’hon was a French painter of the Romantic era, a time he shared with Gothe, Gainsborough and Mozart, among others. Napoleon commissioned him for portraits and allegory paintings. Napoleon’s first wife, Joséphine was also his patron, as was his second wife, Marie-Louise, who employed Prud’hon to teach her drawing.
Prud’hon’s paintings are something of a bridge between the neo-classicism of Jacques-Louis David and his followers and Romanticism. He was particularly influenced by italian masters like Correggio.
As beautiful as Prud’hon’s portraits and allegorical paintings are, it’s his drawings that wow me. Prud’hon was a master draftsman and his academic figure studies are among the finest ever done. As someone fascinated by tone when I draw the figure, Prud’hon’s drawings are examples of the level of skill I would strive to acquire.
After achieving considerable success as a painter he began collaborating with Constance Mayer, who would finish many of their joint works, leaving Prud’hon free to pursue his academic figure drawings, something a master painter supposedly leaves behind on graduating from the Academy and uses only as studies for paintings. Not so for Prud’hon; drawing figures in chalk was apparently what he wanted to do with his life.
And what drawings they are! Usually starting with a toned paper as a middle ground, Prud’hon pulls the living form out of the surface with lights and darks that revel in the volume of the form, follow rippling shadows and highlights along the curves and turns of the body and create the figure’s shapes as revelations of value, often with little or no evidence of line.
Prud’hon’s figures can seem oddly mixed-gendered, his muscular male forms often oddly paired with heads and faces that seem feminine; and his women are often classical to the point of appearing ready to be made into statues; but the confidence and subtlety with which he draws them is never in doubt.
Prud’hon did not have an easy life, despite his success, and separated from his wife of 25 years, who was reportedly prone to drunkeness and violence, taking custody of his 5 children when she was committed to an asylum. I’m not sure of the nature of his relationship with his young collaborator, Constance Mayer, but Prud’hon’s beautiful portrait drawing of her certainly shows great affection, and he was devastated by her suicide in 1821, dying himself two years later.
I was fortunate to catch a show of Prud’hon’s work at the Met in New York a few years ago that included many of his drawings. The control and sensitivity with which he handles the chalk is just amazing. Some of his drawings are larger, but he usually worked at a size that most artists today would find comfortable for life drawing, roughly 18″ x 24″. The drawing shown here, which is in the collection of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, is about 13 x 24″ (35 x 61 cm). The Art Renewal Center has a great high-resolution image of this drawing.
There is a catalog from the exhibition at the Met, “Prud’hon, ou, Le rêve du bonheur, by Sylvain Laveissiére. The exhibit was organized by the Galeries nationales du Grand Palais in Paris and the catalog is in French, but the reproductions are obviously in the universal language of art.
There is another book on Prud’hon by the same author, simply titled Pierre-Paul Prud’hon, but it emphasizes his paintings over the drawings. Unfortunately the excellent Language of the Body by John Elderfield is out of print and expensive on the used book market, but look for it in libraries.
For a wonderful contrast in the study of master drawing techniques, compare the drawings of Prud’hon, master of value and tone, to the drawings of Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres, master of line.
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Frank Reilly
Some artists have as much, or more, impact as a teacher as they do as an artist.Although Frank Reilly had been fulfilling assignments as a professional illustrator even while he was still a pupil at the Art Students League, it was on his return there as a teacher that he would make his greatest contribution.
Reilly was one of the most influential American art teachers in the 20th Century. He is credited with codifying methods for teaching drawing, painting, illustration and other aspects of representational art in ways that became the foundation for teaching techniques still in use today.
Reilly organized the study of color, value, form, composition and other elements of painting and drawing into systematic programs built on Munsell’s scientific study of color and the knowledge he acquired from his own teachers (who included renowned anatomist George Bridgeman, Frank Vincent DuMond and his friend and neighbor, the great illustrator Dean Cornwell), as well as his own experience as a working illustrator.
For the 35 years he taught at the Art Students League his classes and lectures were waiting list and standing room only.
I can point you to two excellent sources of information about Reilly on the web. One is an article American Art Archives, the other is a remembrance by contemporary realist Doug Higgins in which he gives a wonderfully detailed account of his experiences as a student of Reilly’s, profusely illustrated with his notes, drawings and paintings from his classes (images at left, bottom).
Because Higgin’s site is in frames, I’ve popped it out of context here because it’s the only way to link to it directly. The original context is a link within Higgin’s main site.
Another of Reilly’s students, Jack Faragasso, who succeeded Reilly at the school he founded, has published a book, Mastering Drawing The Human Figure From Life, Memory, Imagination which is based in large part on Reilly’s instruction.
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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
Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective
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John Singer Sargent: Watercolors
Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective











