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Promoting some friends and some clients of my website design business
- Twin Willows T’ai Chi studio in Wilmington DE. Taiji classes with Bryan Davis.
- Ray Hayward, Inspired Teacher of T’ai Chi ( Taiji ) in Minneapolis, Founder of Mindful Motion Tai Chi Academy
- OldHead Tattoo studio and Art Gallery in Wilmington DE. Tattoos and paintings by Bruce Gulick
- Sharon Domenico Art, pet portrait oil paintings
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- Lisa Stone Design, interior designer, Main Line and Philadelphia, PA
- Studio12KPT, original art, prints, calendars and other custom printed items by Van Sickle & Rolleri
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Seth Havercamp

Virginia based artist Seth Havercamp studied at The Cleveland Institute of Art, the Memphis College of Art and Carson-Newman College. He continued his study with Robert Liberace at the Art League and Nelson Shanks at Studio Incamminati.Havercamp concentrates on figures, portraits and still life. In the latter, he takes a fascinatingly textural approach that at times lends his oil paintings some of the surface quality of pastel. He carries some of those characteristics into the backgrounds of his portraits and figures, creating a visually engaging contrast with the more refined areas.
Throughout, there is a keen attention to edges and value relationships that give his compositions both harmony and drama.
Seth Havercamp is married to painter Catherine Havercamp, and his family often features prominently in his work.
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Eye Candy for Today: Hassam’s Fifth Avenue flags

Rainy Day, Fifth Avenue, and Flags, Fifth Avenue; Childe HassamFirst link is to Princeton University Art Museum, which has the original oil in its collection (there is also a version on Wikimdeia Commons); the second link is to Wikimedia Commons; I don’t know the location of the original watercolor.
Today is Veterans Day here in the U.S., when it’s traditional to fly the American flag in honor of those in military service, past and present.
Inspired by a view along Fifth Avenue on “Preparedness Day” around the time of World War I, American Impressionist Childe Hassam began a series of what would eventually be 30 paintings on the theme of the American Flag, in many of the compositions flying along New York’s Fifth Avenue.
I find particularly interesting similarities and contrasts in these two, the oil showing the muted tones of the flag and street on a rainy day — rendered in Hassam’s clipped almost pastel-like brush strokes —and the sunny, interestingly similar point of view — in free but precise watercolor.
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Artem “Rhads” Chebokha

Most of us have at some point enjoyed laying back and watching cloud formations in which it is easy to see shapes that look like ships, dogs, hills, oceans, dragons and more.Artem Chebokha — who also goes by the handle, “Rhads” — is a digital artist based in Omsk, Russian Federation. Chebokha has taken the notion of seeing things in clouds and carried it out as a theme for a series of digital paintings — distilling skies full of clouds into a variety of forms. Some are overtly fantasy, some more naturalistic and others in between.
You can find these and other themes on his galleries on Behance and deviantART. He also has a presence on Instagram and the Russian social media site, VK. You can find prints of his work on society6.
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Marie Spartali Stillman (update)

Marie Spartali Stillman was a Pre-Raphaelite painter, notably the most well known of the women painters among that group, as well as a model for several of the other painters in the Pre-Raphaelite circle.Stillman studied with the renowned Victorian painter Ford Madox Brown, who was not a member of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, but was influential within their sphere.
She worked in an interesting mixed-media approach combining gouache and watercolor along with pastel and chalk suspended in gum arabic, the binder in gouache and watercolor.
The result is paintings with a richly but subtly textural surface. Combined with Stillman’s muted value relationships and her fascination with Renaissance painting and Italian literary themes, her technique gives her work a kind of dreamily wistful vision of an idealized Renaissance world.
There is currently a show of her work, featuring over 50 works: “Poetry in Beauty: The Pre-Raphaelite Art of Marie Spartalli Stillman” at the Delaware Art Museum. It will be on display until January 31, 2016.
An abbreviated version will then travel to the Watts Gallery, Compton, Guildford, England, where it will be on view from 1 March to 5 June 2016.
I had the pleasure of visiting the show yesterday. Stillman’s most famous painting, Love’s Messenger (above, top) has always been a favorite of mine in the Museum’s permanent collection of Pre-Raphaelite art (the largest outside of the UK), and it is unsurprisingly the highlight of the show. It is in good company with the wonderful examples of Stillman’s work that make up the exhibition.
Many of her themes are repeated — young women posed at decorative leaded glass windows holding flowers or precious objects, and tableaux of idealized Renaissance-style gardens populated with literary figures. I was particularly taken, however, with her landscapes and straightforward garden views, directly observed but painted with the Pre-Raphaelite attention to fidelity to nature, and a sense of contemplative quiet.
Unfortunately, the availability and quality of Stillman’s images on the web is still quite limited. The most reliable in terms of color are those in the Delaware Art Museum’s preview for the show. There is also a selection on their site devoted to their Bancroft Collection of Pre-Raphaelite Art, though that site is experiencing problems at the moment.
There is a catalog from the exhibition, and another collection of works by Stillman and her husband, who was an American Journalist and amateur painter: A Pre-Raphaelite Marriage: The Lives and Works of Marie Spartali Stillman & William James Stillman.
For more, see my previous Lines and Colors post on Marie Spartalli Stillman (2006).
[Addendum: There is a short BBC video about Stillman and the exhibit.]
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Batz

Batz is an animated short (6 min) by Max Maleo & Aurélien Prédal.The animation is done with a CGI process known generally as “cel shading” or “toon shading”, in which the normally 3-D appearance of CG animation is given a look more like 2-D hand drawing by the use of gradients and flat areas of color.
In the right hands, this can be quite effective and pleasing, and Batz, directed by Maleo with art direction by Prédal, is a case in point.
The production is nicely graphic and beautifully designed, particularly in respect to the use of lighting, and scenes that take place in near darkness punctuated with areas of light.
The story involves two bats with very different personalities: one an aggressive insectivore who loves mosquitoes, the other a timid fruit-eating bat who hates and fears them. Add a mosquito and the result is frantic, icky at times, and, well… batty.
There is a website devoted to the film, with images, background information and items for sale, including a “making of” animatic (animated storyboard).
[Via Mark a. Nelson]
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Eye Candy for Today: Degas’ Dance Lesson

The Dance Lesson, Edgar DegasIn the National Gallery of Art, DC. Downloadable high-res file on Wikipedia, as well as a descriptive page.
This wonderfully brushy oil painting — that has some of the textural feeling of the artist’s pastels — is the first of a series of works on the theme of ballet dancers training or preparing for performances, that are remarkable for their daring break from the compositional conventions of preceding centuries.
The severely horizontal format might be thought of these days as “cinematic”, a term that had no meaning twenty years before the invention of motion pictures.
The empty areas of the canvas — the large area of wall above the dancer to our left, and the expanse of floor beneath the dancers on our right — have a precedent in the aesthetics of the Japanese woodblock prints that were popular in Europe during that period; Degas’ use of the space, however, is unusual and quite daring.
The “blank” area of the wall is emphasized by the framed picture to the far end — grouped as a shape with the middle ground figures — and the way the foreground dancer’s figure is completely below the line of color at the bottom of that space. We are forced to recognize the wall area as a form, not just a background.
Likewise the area of the floor, emphasized by its texture and the play of light from the windows, becomes an object of attention, particularly from our odd point of view, which seems to be looking downward as if from a slight height.
The way the strong diagonal arrangement of the figures, and their position in perspective, draws you back into the composition is remarkable.
Though the overall tone seems muted in subdued light, up close the intensity of the color and texture which which Degas has rendered his subjects is striking.
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Charley’s Picks
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John Singer Sargent: Watercolors
Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective
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John Singer Sargent: Watercolors
Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective











