Lines and Colors art blog

Author: cparker

  • Van Gogh: Up Close

    As I’ve suggested before, Vincent van Gogh’s work was much more varied and diverse than most books on the artist, which tend to take the safe path of presenting his “greatest hits” over and over, would lead you to believe. Van Gogh: Up Close, an exhibition that is toward the end of its run at…

  • Tom Bagshaw

    Tom Bagshaw is an illustrator and gallery artist based in Bath, England. He works digitally in a style that often combines refined rendering with background patterns or textural elements. His compositions often feature women who are looking out of the canvas, engaging the viewer directly, often with what seems to be a challenging stare. His…

  • New Mucha Foundation website

    Alphonse (Alfons) Mucha was a remarkable Czech painter and graphic artist who occupies a unique position in the history of art. His name is essentially synonymous with “Art Nouveau” an art movement he helped start (it was originally known as “Mucha Style”), but from which he later attempted to distance himself. His posters and package…

  • J.M.W. Turner on Google Art Project

    More visual splendor from the terrific new version of the Google Art Project: over 236 artworks by Joseph Mallord William Turner from various museums, with which to mark his birthdate of April 23rd, 1775. The images range from his luminous paintings, with their striking, light filled landscapes, to sketches, drawings and watercolors, both roughly indicated…

  • Carolyn Pyfrom

    Carolyn Pyfrom is a painter based here in Philadelphia whose rough edged textural style, coupled with strongly geometric compositions, gives her work a satisfying sense of unity and visual strength. She works with a muted, carefully controlled palette that further serves to accentuate the textural quality of her work. Pyfrom studied Japanese art and culture…

  • Franz Jüttner

    Franz Jüttner was a German illustrator, cartoonist and caricaturist about whom there seems to be little available information on the net (at least that I can find without knowledge of the German language). Unfortunately there are not many images either, but the ones that are available, primarily his illustrations from a well regarded German edition…