Lines and Colors art blog
  • Cecilia Beaux (update)

    Cecilia Beaux, 19th century American portrait painter
    Cecilia Beaux — an American portrait painter active in the late 19th and early 20th centuries — is, like her contemporaries John Singer Sargent and William Merritt Chase, receiving something of a revival of appreciation for her place in the history American Art.

    Unlike them, however, she still suffers from the fact that her contribution has rarely, if ever, been sufficiently acknowledged, largely because she was a woman.

    Beaux was one of the best portrait painters of her time and, in my estimation, one of the finest American painters in history. Not only do I hold her in similar regard to painters like Chase and Thomas Eakins — who was one of her teachers — I can’t help but think of her name as a fourth party whenever I hear the common grouping of the “Masters of the Loaded Brush”: Sargent, Sorolla and Zorn.

    Beaux was particularly adept in her portrayals of women, and was noted for her full-length and 3/4 length portraits in the “Grand Manner”.

    For more on my high opinion of Beaux as a painter, and why it deepened on seeing the extraordinary show of her work at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in 2008, I’ll refer you to my 2008 post on Cecilia Beaux.

    In this post, I’m taking advantage of the occasion of her birthday to display more examples of her work and point out some of the newer sources of images that have appeared on the web since my previous post. Unfortunately, they are still less than I would hope for a painter of her stature, and too few of them are large enough to appreciate her breathtaking command of the brush.

    The image above, bottom, is one of her self-portraits.

    There are a few books on Beaux, mostly out of print but available used from online sources:
    Cecilia Beaux: American Figure Painter (2007)
    Cecilia Beaux: A Modern Painter in the Gilded Age (2005)
    Cecilia Beaux and the Art of Portraiture (1995)

    The Cecilia Beaux Forum, named after the artist, is “a committee of the Portrait Society of America dedicated to the promotion of women in the arts”.



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  • Free Comic Book Day 2015

    Free Comic Book Day 2015
    Tomorrow, Saturday, May 2, is Free Comic Book Day 2015.

    Participating comic book shops (which you can look up by zip code on this Store Locator), will be giving away a selection of special promotional comic books, designed to introduce new readers both to those individual titles and to the fun of reading comics in general.

    There are some cover images on the special Free Comic Book Day titles on the FCBD website, some of which are linked to brief PDF previews of the interior pages. (Not all titles will be available at all shops.)

    I’ll be checking out the free comics at my personal favorite comic book (and other book) shop, Between Books, in Claymont, DE.

    Comic book shop proprietors will be on their best behavior in a kind of “open house” atmosphere, and glad to make recommendations and introductions to other titles for those who may not be aware of the diversity in the current range of comic book titles and subjects — it’s not all superheroes anymore.

    Many shops will be featuring guest artists or writers and having special sales in coordination with the event. Check the individual shops’ websites for details.

    For more of my descriptions of the event, see some of my previous years’ posts on Free Comic Book Day.



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  • Ben Fenske

    Ben Fenske
    Originally from Minnesota, Ben Fenske now deivdes his time between Sag Harbor, NY and Florence, Italy. Fenske studied at the Russian Academy of Art, The Florence Academy of Art, the Studio of Joseph Paquet, Minnesota, and Bougie Studio, Minnesota.

    Fenske paints still life, landscapes, interiors, portraits and figures with a fresh color palette, economical notation and painterly vigor — often with brushy scrubbing of color in areas that barely covers the support, at other times with a more refined and developed approach. In many cases, there is a appealing Van Gogh-like quality to his brusque, directional brush strokes.

    Throughout his work is a keen sense of light and dark, often used to dramatic effect; even simple still life subjects take on a sense of visual drama. His seemingly casual paint application belies a nuanced approach to the use of texture — defining planes, revealing light and inviting you into his paintings with tactile presence.

    In addition to his website, you can find an extensive selection of Fenske’s work, at times with larger reproductions, on the site of the Grenning Gallery.

    There is a brief plein air process video on Vimeo.

    [Via Marc Dalessio and Leo Mancini-Hresko]



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Jan van Huysum still life

    Fruit Piece, Jan van Huysu, highly detailed 18th century Dutch still life
    Fruit Piece, Jan van Huysum

    The link is to a zoomable version on Google Art Project; there is a large (14mb) downloadable image on Wikimedia Commons; the original is in the Getty Museum, which also has a zoomable image, as well as a large (18mb) downloadable image.

    Even among the highly detailed and superbly rendered still life compositions of his contemporaries, I find the work of 18th century Dutch painter Jan van Huysum extraordinary.

    There is a richness of tactile reality and a physical presence in his work that bears witness to his insistence on painting from life, often delaying the progress of a painting until certain flowers were in bloom.

    He’s taken the practice of including insects in still life paintings to another level, not only including multiple examples, but studying them with the eye of an entomologist, and his plant forms with with an accuracy that would stun most botanical artists.

    It’s not the detail itself that impresses me, however — that’s seldom satisfying on its own — it’s the way Van Huysum has incorporated that level of keen observation and intricate rendering with the artistic goals of a harmonious, dramatic composition. His control of color, texture, and in particular, value, is a joy to behold.

    The painting involves you in levels, inviting you further and further into the depths of the artist’s fascination with the visual splendor of nature at a small scale.


    Fruit Piece, Google Art Project

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  • CJ Hendry

    CJ Hendry, detailed large scale pen drawings of fashion items and food
    I have to say that I’m consistently unimpressed with most of the “amazing photorealist drawings” that seem to proliferate as click-bait around the web, but the large scale pen drawings of Australian artist CJ Hendry are a notable exception.

    Hendry takes as her primary subjects fashion items — designer shoes and handbags in particular — and renders their often shiny leathery surfaces at a large scale as detailed tone drawings in ink, created with fine point markers in a combination of hatching and stipple.

    Hendry’s work has become quite popular and in demand with collectors.

    Unfortunately, Hendry doesn’t appear to have a dedicated web presence other than an Instragram account, and most of the images I can find are of work in progress, or Hendry holding up the finished piece, rather than a photo of the work itself.

    Many of the drawings highlighted on her Instagram page, and on articles about her, are from a recent project in which she completed 50 drawings of various food items in 50 days.

    There is a brief process video on Vimeo.

    [Via DCAD Library]



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Manuel Ocaranza’s Love of the Hummingbird and The Dead Flower

    The Love of the Hummingbird, The Dead Flower, Manuel Ocaranza
    The Love of the Hummingbird and The Dead Flower, Manuel Ocaranza

    Links are to zoomable versions on Google Art Project, downloadable version of The Love of the Hummingbird and The Dead Flower on Wikimedia Commons, originals are in the Museo Nacional De Arte of Mexico (no images).

    The Love of the Hummingbird is a charming genre set piece — as much as still life as it is a portrait/figure study, but together with The Dead Flower, the two paintings may be intended to tell a morality tale — in which the promise of blossoming love suggested in the former is echoed in a metaphor of lost virtue in the latter.

    The model is different, but the theme and compositional elements are very similar; the lily, in particular, links the two and can serve as a metaphor for the young woman’s virginity.

    Though Ocaranza never officially tied the two works, they were painted during the same period, and displayed together when first revealed; it’s generally assumed they are meant to be related.


    The Love of the Hummingbird, Google Art Project
    The Dead Flower, Google Art Project

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Vasari Handcraftes artist's oil colors

Charley’s Picks
Bookshop.org

(Bookshop.org affilliate links; sales benefit independent bookshop owners; I get a small percentage to help support my work on Lines and Colors)

John Singer Sargent: Watercolors
John Singer Sargent: Watercolors

Sorolla the masterworks
Sorolla: the masterworks

The Art Spirit
The Art Spirit

Rendering in Pen and Ink
Rendering in Pen and Ink

Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective
Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective

World of Urban Sketching
World of Urban Sketching

Daily Painting
Daily Painting

Drawing on the right side of the brain
Drawing on the right side of the brain

Understanding Comics
Understanding Comics

Charley’s Picks
Amazon

(Amazon.com affiliate links; sales go to a larger yacht for Jeff Bezos; but I get a small percentage to help support my work on Lines and Colors)

John Singer Sargent: Watercolors
John Singer Sargent: Watercolors

Sorolla the masterworks
Sorolla: the masterworks

The Art Spirit
The Art Spirit

Rendering in Pen and Ink
Rendering in Pen and Ink

Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective
Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective

World of Urban Sketching
World of Urban Sketching

Daily Painting
Daily Painting

Drawing on the right side of the brain
Drawing on the right side of the brain

Understanding Comics
Understanding Comics