Lines and Colors art blog

Author: cparker

  • Dan Hipp

    Illustrator and comics artist Dan Hipp has clients that include Real Simple, Wired, DC Comics, Image Comics and Random House. When not working on professional assignments, and/or training to survive the zombie apocalypse, Hipp fills his blog with his wonderfully colorful, energetic and in-your-face drawings of characters from comics, movies, games and other aspects of…

  • Rembrandt and the Face of Jesus

    For as long as I’ve been visiting the Philadelphia Museum of Art there has been a small painting called “Head of Christ” (image above, top) in the museum’s John G. Johnson collection of European Art (larger but somewhat oversaturated version here). It is a small but strikingly beautiful painting, 14 x 12 inches (36 x…

  • Cartoon Color Wheel

    Here’s a fun notion; the Slate Magazine blog, Culturebox, has put together an interactive color wheel of cartoon characters arranged by their hue (and, correctly enough, by intensity, as indicated by our grayish friends at the center of the wheel). In the original, you can mouse over the characters for identification. [Via Cartoon Brew]

  • Femke Hiemstra

    Dutch artist Femke Hiemstra paints her richly detailed and wonderfully textural paintings of animals (anthropomorphic and otherwise), odd characters and fantastical landscapes on found objects. Her odd shaped “canvases” are the covers of old books, wooden holy water fonts and antique wooden panels. Her mixed media pieces also include typography, sometimes completing the illusion that…

  • Augustin Lesage

    Augustin Lesage was a French painter associated with “outsider art” (L’Art Brut), art created outside of normal cultural definitions. A coal miner from the age of 14, Lesage supposedly heard a voice deep in the mine say “One day you’ll be a painter!”, followed by a succession of other voices, some of which he took…

  • 1923 aka Heaven and 1925 aka Hell by Max Hattler

    1923 aka Heaven (images above, top five) and 1925 aka Hell (above, bottom 5) are two animated film by Max Hattler that were inspired by two paintings by French outsider artist Augustin Lesage. The two paintings are both named A symbolic Composition of the Spiritual World, one painted in 1923 (above, middle left) and one…