Lines and Colors art blog
  • Patrick Saunders

    Patrick Saunders
    Often when I feature a contemporary artist, I start by pointing out their geographic region, but plein air painter Patrick Saunder’s location might best be described as “America”, as he and his wife, photographer Kimberly Saunders, travel across the U.S. with an Airstream trailer, following the plein air circuit or going where the spirit takes them.

    Partick Saunders participation in plein air events has garnered him considerable press notice and numerous awards.

    He paints with an open, gestural style, that is laid on a solid grounding of traditional draftsmanship, some of which may come from his background in illustration.

    I particularly admire his use of value contrasts, sometimes muted, sometimes dramatic, and the way he adjusts his color choices accordingly. There is always a sense of the immediacy of the light, whatever its nature, in Saunders’ compositions.

    Saunders occasionally teaches classes and workshops at various locations.

    There are some interviews with the artist archived in the Press section of his website.



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  • Anton Fadeev

    Anton Fadeev. concept art
    Anton Fadeev is a concept artist based in Sochi, Russia, whose focus is on environments.

    Fadeev works with an unusually bright high-chroma palette and complementary color schemes, that give his work an immediate appeal.

    He sets a nice balance between naturalistic textures and pleasingly graphic rendering with lots of areas of flat color.

    Much of the work on his ArtStation portfolio is for the Duelyst game.



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Portrait of Maria Mancini, Jacob Voet

    Portrait of Maria Mancini, Duchess of Bouillon, Jacob Ferdinand Voet, 17th century Flemish portrait
    Portrait of Maria Mancini, Duchess of Bouillon, Jacob Ferdinand Voet

    In the Rijksmuseum; English language page for the work here. There is a zoom icon under the image. The download link requires a free Rijksstudio account (worth signing up for to my mind). There is also a downloadable version on Wikimedia Commons.

    Apparently, cautious historians have encouraged the Rijksmuseum to classify this beautiful portrait as “attributed to” Voet, but if the portrait is in Voet’s style by another hand, surely that hand is of a very good painter.

    Despite the composition of the portrait and the style of the sitter’s garments — which are in keeping with the painting’s late 17th century origin — the immediacy and presence of the woman’s face and the wonderfully painterly application of color feel more like something out of the 19th century.

    I love the soft edges of the hair as it fades into the background and falls across the woman’s shoulder in delicate wisps.



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  • Hugo Mühlig

    Hugo Muhlig, 19th century Impressionist influenced landscapes
    Hugo Mühlig was a German painter active in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

    Both his father and his uncle were landscape painters. After initial study with his father, Mühlig studied painting in the tradition of academic realism at the Dresden Academy of Fine Arts, but he eventually moved to a more impressionist influenced style well suited to his subjects of farms, fields, farm workers and domestic animals.

    Many of his compositions are nicely atmospheric, evoking haze and atmospheric distance. His style is more open and painterly than would be evident from small images, but there are enough large ones available to get a feeling for his approach.



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  • James Gurney: Flower Painting in the Wild

    James Gurney Flower Painting in the Wild
    Flower Painting in the Wild is the latest full length (hour-long) instructional video from author, illustrator and plein air painter James Gurney.

    As Gurney points out in the introduction, the approach to painting flowers he takes here is different than the usual flower arrangement in a vase common to still life or the traditional garden subjects found in landscape painting, in that it focuses on individual flowers, or small groups, in the natural environment of botanical gardens or as wildflowers along a stream.

    Gurney focuses on what he terms at one point as “portraits” of living flowers in their natural setting, with four major sections, each following the process of a painting from start to finish.

    He is painting here in casein and gouache, two underutilized painting mediums of which Gurney has long been an advocate, and there is discussion of their strengths and limitations, as well as plenty of demonstrations of technique. Most of the techniques would be applicable in other mediums in which you can work both opaquely and transparently, like acrylic or oil.

    Like many of Gurney’s instructional videos, and particularly those in the recent “…in the Wild” series devoted to painting on location, there is considerably more to Flower Painting in the Wild than the title might suggest.

    Throughout the course of the video, you’ll find lots of close-ups of brush loading and handling and paint application, as well as insights into painting plant forms, handling greens, controlling value ranges, simplifying complex backgrounds, painting shapes by both subtraction and addition and many more topics of general interest to painters.

    He even gives a demonstration of the age old but infrequently taught method of using a grid sighting system to accurately transfer outlines and key points of a scene to the paper or canvas.

    Flowers are a great subject for tackling one of the most daunting challenges artists face: complexity. Gurney devotes a good deal of attention to the process of simplifying complex subjects, and picking out the essentials needed to represent detail without trying to paint every petal and leaf. These same techniques can be applied to other complex subjects.

    Gurney produces and films his own videos, and he has gotten adept at delivering a relaxed but polished instructional presentation at a lower cost point than most professional level art instruction videos.

    He is sensitive to what makes a video like this useful to the viewer, with lots of cuts from the painting to the subject and back again, augmented by split-screen comparisons of them side-by-side, which I particularly like.

    He also devotes attention to the palette and color mixing, a glaring omission from many how-to painting videos.

    I’m not always fond of the use of time-lapse in painting instruction videos, because it can make it difficult to tell how the paint was actually applied, but here Gurney uses compressed time sequences to advantage by preceding them with normal-time sequences of painting the same passage, giving them context in terms of actual paint application.

    The commentary throughout is dense with information on technique and the choices and decisions made in the selection of subjects, medium and painting approach.

    Flower Painting in the Wild is a valuable resource not just on painting flowers, but on painting plants and landscape in general (the last segment, though it concentrates on wild roses, is essentially a full landscape), as well as a continuation of his instruction on using gouache and casein. It is also the kind of art instruction video that will reveal more on repeated viewing and study.

    Also, perhaps in response to the experiences of painting in beautiful environments like botanical gardens, this video seems to have more of a poetic quality than Gurney’s previous efforts, with attention given to the cinematography of the subject flowers and even a philosophical quote from Victorian artist and critic John Ruskin.

    Flower Painting in the Wild is currently available as a digital download (roughly 3GB) for $14.50 USD from Sellfy or Gumroad or Cubebrush, or as a DVD for $24.50 from Kunaki (the manufacturer) or Amazon. (I chose a digital download from Gumroad for my review copy.)

    There is a trailer on YouTube, along with a ten minute sample, and more information on Gurney’s blog, Gurney Journey.

    As always with James Gurney’s instructional videos, there is a wealth of supplementary information on his blog, which you can access with a search for “Flower Painting in the Wild“.


    Flower Painting in the Wild, Gurney Journey
    Sellfy, digital download
    Gumroad, digital download
    Cubebrush, digital download
    Kunaki, DVD
    Amazon, DVD
    Trailer on YouTube
    Ten minute sample on YouTube
    Related Lines and Colors posts (a search for “Gurney”)

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  • Eye Candy for Today: Emil Carlsen Still life with roses and mandolin

    Still life with roses and mandolin, Emil Carlsen
    Still life with roses and mandolin, Emil Carlsen

    Another beautiful still life by turn of the century Danish-American master Emil Carlsen.

    This is from the Emil Carlsen Archives, larger image here.

    The Emil Carlsen Archives is a terrific resource, but I haven’t figured out their thinking in terms of image display. If you click on an image, you are provided with a larger one in a pop-up, but the size of that image is apparently limited by the resolution of your screen, with no option to zoom. I found the larger image file on their server by using Google Image Search.



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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