Lines and Colors art blog
  • Paul McCormack

    Paul McCormackPaul McCormack is a portrait artist living in the Hudson Valley area of New York State. He creates portraits in oil, watercolor and graphite. Although his oil and graphite portraits are accomplished and refined, it’s the watercolor paintings that caught my attention. There is something about the way he handles the texture and color of fabric and skin in watercolor that is particularly appealing, and brings to mind the beautiful Pre-Raphaelite watercolors of Maria Spartali Stillman. (I’m using “watercolor” in its broad sense: including opaque watercolor.)

    I link below to both McCormack’s personal site and his gallery on the Art Renewal Center. The personal site has more information and includes a listing of workshops and exhibitions, but the images are inexplicably small and don’t do his paintings (or drawings) justice. The ARC gallery gives a much better showing of his work. In particular, you can see something of the texture and detail in the watercolor portraits.

     


    Categories:
    ,


  • Zot! Online: “Hearts and Minds”
    (Scott McCloud)

    Zot! OnlineYou’ll notice that this post is about a specific online comic, not Scott McCloud in general. (That’s a post for another day.) If you’re interested in comics and you’re not familiar with Scott McCloud (presumably because you’ve been living in a yurt somewhere on the Mongolian steppes), start with Understanding Comics and then go to ScottMcCloud.com and explore.

    McCloud brought back Zot!, his hero from the 80’s, for one of his best forays into online comics, and one of my favorites. You know right away that you’re in for something different when you load the first “page”. The Zot! Online pages are long, scrolling arrangements of comic panels in which McCloud plays with the traditional narrative format of comics by changing the spatial relationships between the panels, often in ways only possible on a scrolling web page. He also plays with the nature of “panels” themselves, dissolving the dividing line between panel and page and extending decorative elements and bits of image into the space surrounding the images.

    The story deals with Dekko, a favorite Zot! villain. (How can you not like a villain with a head shaped like the top of the Chrysler building?) McCloud often expresses frustration with his draughtsmanship, which he seems to feel is lacking, but his drawing style and overall approach works perfectly with the tone and subject matter of the Zot! stories. If you’re not familiar with Zot! you may want to get a little background on the characters before reading this strip.

    After reading Zot!, you’ll want to check out McCloud’s other online comics, including The Right Number, his precedent-setting experiment with the delivery of online comics via micro-payments. (It only takes about two minutes to get your BitPass account and be ahead of the curve on how comics will be delivered in the 21st Century.)



    Categories:
    ,


  • Peter de Sève

    Peter de Seve
    Peter de Sève has been a bright presence in American Illustration for a number of years. His wonderful cartoon-style illustrations have appeared in Time, Newsweek, Smithsonian, Atlantic Monthly and, in particular, on many covers for The New Yorker. His drawings reveal the influence of comic book art and early Mad magazine artists as well as classic illustrators. He displays a particular delight in his portrayal of animals.

    De Sève has also illustrated books and done animation character design for Disney, Pixar and others.

    There is a nice interview on the Norman Rockwell Museum site that includes videos of the artist in his studio. The video interviews are brief, but show him sketching. (Note the pencil grip.)



    Categories:
    ,


  • Stephen Hickman

    Stephen HickmanMany fantasy and science fiction artists create images of other worlds and other times. Few can imbue them with the feeling of cultured beauty that Stephen Hickman paints into his work. They are strange worlds, yes, but worlds where the inhabitants have gone to great lengths to beautify parts of their environment. This is an interesting touch and one that infuses Hickman’s images with a simultaneous impression of being foreign and familiar. Palaces gleam in architectural splendor and you can feel the weight and polish of metal, the smoothness of silken robes, even the texture of baby dragon skin.

    Hickman has been illustrating books by some of the most recognizable names in both contemporary and classic fantasy and science fiction for over 20 years. Of particular interest are a series of paintings for the Pharazar Mythos that evolved from a book that he himself wrote, The Lemurian Stone.

     


    Categories:


  • Winsor McCay

    Little Nemo
    I must have been a good boy this year, because Santa brought me a very nice treat indeed: a copy of Little Nemo in Slumberland – So many Splendid Sundays. This is a wonderful collection of 100 examples of one of the most beautiful comics ever created.

    There are other collections of Little Nemo pages, but the real treat here is that these are presented as they were meant to be seen: at the size of a full Sunday newspaper page! Wow. It’s been 100 years (in October) since Nemo began appearing in Newspapers and almost that long since the pages have been seen at their true size by anyone but collectors.

    The book was lovingly crafted by Peter Maresca. (The book is out of stock with the publisher until March of 2006, but you may be able to find it at Amazon.)

    How can I describe Little Nemo? (Sigh.) Little Nemo in Slumberland was a stunningly beautiful, wildly imaginative, surreal, dazzling, spectacular, dizzying, marvelous, jaw-dropping, eye-popping, mind-expanding work of comic art. (Have I gotten the idea across?)

    McCay was a virtuoso draughtsman and a superb colorist, and one of the finest masters of the comic art form. He played with time and space, perspective and proportion, color and design in ways that few artists (in any medium) can ever hope to match.

    He also did several other comic strips, including Dreams of the Rarebit Fiend and Little Sammy Sneeze, created elegant illustrations and beautifully drawn social commentary cartoons (a bit like extravagant political cartoons, but more general in topic) and was one of the earliest creators of cartoon animation with his groundbreaking film Gertie the Dinosaur, all at the time when comics and movies were just starting to develop.

    To say McCay was a comic art pioneer is like saying Newton was good at physics.

    McCay’s Little Nemo in Slumberland and George Harriman’s Krazy Kat are probably the two finest examples of comics as high art. This is such stuff as dreams are made on.

    Rather than go on for pages and pages I’ll point you to some resources.

    Here is a nicely illustrated Wikipedia article on Little Nemo and on McCay, a Little Nemo article on Toonpedia and an informative review of So Many Splendid Sundays on Salon (requires watching an ad to read the entire article.).

    The site I link at the bottom of this post has the best reproductions of Nemo pages I’ve found on the web, but here are a few others from my bookmarks. There are three full pages linked from here. (The site’s not in English, but the links are graphic.) There are several linked from here, another page here, and more individual pages posted here and here and here and here. Some smaller ones here and here and some black and white pages here and here.

    If you’re hooked, but can’t get So Many Splendid Sundays, there are other (smaller but less expensive) Little Nemo collections worth considering. Little Nemo 1905-1914 is nicely done and probably has the most strips in one volume. The Complete Little Nemo in Slumberland series (6 volumes) is a bit larger in page size, but the paper is matte and the colors are not as rich as the former title.

    There is also a new book on Winsor McCay: His Life and Art, and Daydreams and Nightmares, a collection of his other (mostly black and white) illustration.

    If you do get any of the books, resist the temptation to read through them in a hurry. The best way to read Little Nemo is to savor it one strip at a time. Try reading one a week (OK, one a day), perhaps just before going to bed, or even better, sprawled out on the floor on a Sunday morning; but imagine that there is no radio, no movies, no television, and you have to wait a week in delicious anticipation of the next Splendid Sunday.



    Categories:
    ,


  • Designers who blog

    Designers Who Blog
    Designers who blog is a fascinating blog by Catherine (cat) Morley that features, as you might expect, blogs by designers. As she points out, “Due to slop over in the industry, also included are illustrators, photographers, those in advertising and marketing, etc.”, which makes a pretty interesting mix.

    DWB (or “Dweeb”) featured a post about your humble writer today. (Here’s the archived post for lines and colors.) The blog has a rotating title banner composed of photos of previous featured designers, giving the blogs a personal face they may not always have. (It’s the only time you’ll see a photo of yours truly associated with lines and colors.) There is an archive of the banners.

    The blogs can be sorted by subject, including illustration. There’s also an extensive blogroll of blogs by designers, many of which are terrific. DWB goes on my “check daily” blog list.

    Cat also writes a column for Creative Latitude called “Cat’s fancy: Designers who blog” in which she lets a select group of the designers from that month respond to a round of questions about their blog.



    Categories:


Vasari Handcraftes artist's oil colors