Lines and Colors art blog
  • Barontieri (Thierry Doizon)

    Barontieri
    Thierry Doizon, who goes by the alias Barontieri, is an artist living in Montreal who does concept art and illustration for games and interactive media. He has done work for for Ubisoft, Disney Imagineering, Peugot, Artari and others. The gallery contains illustrations, 2D and 3D experiments and color “sketches”. As is often the case, I find the quicker work even more appealing the the finished pieces.

    Doizon provides tutorials and downloadable Photoshop CS brushes in the Atelier section, and provides information for arranging personal instruction in the Services section. The Atelier page also includes links to other sites that showcase his work.



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  • State of the Art (Jeff Hayes – update)

    Jeff Hayes Jeff Hayes published a nice post about Lines and Colors today on his blog State of the Art. I wrote about his painting and art-comments blog back in November.

    He’s still writing fascinating posts about all aspects of being a painter, including this one about constructing a shadow box for controlled dramatic lighting of still life subjects.

     


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  • Shutterbug Follies

    Shutterbug Follies
    Shutterbug Follies is Jason Little’s nicely done comic about a photo-finishing technician in NYC who is nosy about the titillating photos that happen to pass through her hands, particularly when one of them seems to show evidence of a murder.

    You can read the first 13 episodes online. The entire story is available from Random House as a hardcover book. Little’s site, Beekeeper Cartoon Amusements, includes another ongoing series: Motel Art Improvement Service, as well as other comics.



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  • Todd Gallina

    Todd Gallina
    Todd Gallina creates Flash animations for commercial and entertainment clients. The site features an archive of animations from both categories. It also contains well-crafted tutorials on creating and animating characters in Flash. The tutorials feature characters created for G. Beato’s Cooking with Bigfoot web toon series.



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  • How Van Gogh Made His Mark

    How Van Gogh Made His Mark
    I had a chance to see Vincent Van Gogh: The Drawings at the Met (see my previous post). It’s a great exhibit that continues to the end of December. Unlike many polished master drawings that seem to spring from the artist’s hand fully realized, you can really see Van Gogh working and learning in his drawings. Even after he had mastered some aspects of drawing, deftly executing complex perspective problems in large drawings of fields and farm buildings, you can still see him struggling with other challenges, like human proportions and placement of features on a face. It’s a fascinating and enlightening exhibit for anyone engaged in the ongoing process of learning to draw.

    The Met has created another learning experience – an online Flash interactive called How Van Gogh Made His Mark. It’s ostensibly aimed at children, but worth a look for anyone interested in drawing. The interactive uses several Van Gogh drawings to explore some basic principles of drawing as well as investigating Van Gogh’s own process and history. It features reproductions of drawings that can be zoomed in on and dragged around within the interface. It investigates the artist’s tools, methods and learning experience and features a “sketchbook” where you can draw onscreen with a virtual reed pen.



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  • Robert Chang

    Robert Chang Illustrator, concept artist and comics artist Robert Chang works in both traditional and digital media. His 2D digital work is often done in Corel Painter and Adobe Photoshop. The “Goodies” section of his site includes tips, techniques and downloadable custom brushes for Painter. There are also several excellent and detailed tutorials for his digital work, including the image shown here.

    Robert Chang

     

    Chang is the co-author of a book on digital painting techniques: d’artiste (Ballistic Publishing).



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Vasari Handcraftes artist's oil colors