Lines and Colors art blog

Author: cparker

  • Paul Schulenburg

    Paul Schulenburg is a painter originally from New York State who now lives and works in Cape Cod. In the galleries on his website you’ll find a variety of figurative subjects, with people working on the fishing docks and in casual situations, as well as studio figure work. You will also find still life subjects…

  • Eye Candy for Today: Jongkind’s Quai d’Orsay

    View from the Quai d’Orsay, Johan Barthold Jongkind. In the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Click on “Fullscreen” and use zoom or download arrow. What might appear, in its wonderful painterly immediacy, to have been painted by a contemporary plein air master, was in fact painted in the mid 1800’s. Jongkind, a Dutch painter who spent…

  • Tomislav Tomić

    Tomislav Tomić is an illustrator from Croatia whose illustrations carry influences of both Golden Age illustration and Renaissance printmaking. Tomić works with technical pens (Rotring Isographs), adding color for some pieces with colored inks, watercolor and occasionally acrylics. There is a recent feature on his tools on The Tools Artists Use, which is where I…

  • Eye Candy for Today: Shishkin’s Oak Grove

    Oak Grove, Ivan Shishkin. On Wikipaintings. Large version here. Original is in the Kiev National Museum of Russian Art. See my previous Eye Candy post of a Shishkin forest scene (presumably in the same oak forest) and my post on Ivan Shishkin.

  • Massimo Carnevale movie portraits

    As I reported back in 2011, Italian illustrator and comics artist Massimo Carnevale has for some time been posting to his blog, Sketches’natched, a series of his interpretations of various movies (and occasionally tv series). These are apparently done for fun, and it’s fascinating how he pics elements from the movies that, while characteristic of…

  • Eye Candy for Today: Boldini’s Table

    Corner of Painter’s Table, Giovanni Boldini On Wikipaintings, high-res version here. Perhaps not the best reproduction, with light reflecting off the surface, but what a bizarre and wonderful composition. I don’t know the location of the original. See my post on Giovanni Boldini.