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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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Peter “Pete the Street” Brown

Peter brown is British painter, whose dedication to location painting and penchant for working in all manner of weather conditions, often in the streets in the midst of the bustle of city activity, has earned him the nickname of “Pete the Street”.Brown paints in his home base of Bath in southwestern England, and on his frequent visits to London and other UK cities, as well as his travels abroad.
He has developed a wonderfully economical approach, driven by the limitations of location painting and honed by many years in the field. He defines his forms with gestural brush marks — laid down over a foundation of solid draftsmanship — in a manner that suggests that no strokes are wasted.
Brown’s colors also bear witness to his history of location painting, ringing true to the light and atmosphere of all manner of atmospheric conditions.
His urban compositions are strongly geometric, and suggest an uncommon ability to find subjects almost anywhere. His scenes of the countryside and seaside also simplify and reduce value masses into strong basic forms. His views down city streets and country lanes often feel as though they are inviting you to walk into them.
Brown frequently works on large and sometimes severely horizontal canvasses, creating panoramic impressions of his subject.
There are short videos of Brown working, some of them previews for available DVDs, that show him on location and painting in snow and rain. Brown has a number of videos and book collections available from his site, and is working on a new collection of his paintings of London.
On his website, you can browse through his exhibitions sections, or use the search feature for more extensive browsing. Don’t be put off by the complex search form that dominates the “Paintings for Sale” and “Search Works” sections, you can simply scroll down in the former, or submit a default search in the latter, and browse through the listings at the bottom of the page like a normal online gallery, with links to multiple pages at the bottom.
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Eye Candy for Today: Rose Adélaïde Ducreux self portrait

Self portrait with a Harp, Rose Adélaïde DucreuxIn the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Use the download arrow under the image for larger version.
Rose Adélaïde Ducreux, who studied with her father, painter Joseph Ducreux, here portrays herself with a harp and in a luxuriously finessed gown that dominates the work. I suspect that, like many self portraits, it was meant as a display of the painter’s skill to prospective portrait commissions.
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Noah Bradley

Noah Bradley is a concept artist and illustrator, known in particular for his work on the “Magic: The Gathering” card-based games.A number of the works on his website are from an ambitious personal project, titled “The Sin of Man”, which also has a dedicated website. You can find additional work in his deviantART gallery.
Bradley has an appealing way of working complex patterns and textural areas into his pieces so that they enliven the compositions without overwhelming or distracting from them. I particularly like his use of patterns on many of the figures and surfaces in his Sin of Man project.
Bradley formerly worked in oil, but now works primarily in digital painting. He has a number of instructional digital art videos on YouTube, several of which are full-length features from his Art Camp endeavor.
He also has pieces available as prints on InPrint.
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Andrew Bonneau

Andrew Bonneau is an Australian artist currently living in New York, where he studied at the Grand Central Academy of Art.I was struck first by his still life paintings, in which he gives attention to delicate nuances of light in the presentation of his forms. He carries that same attention to the illumination of form to his portrait and figurative works.
On his website, you will find those categories as well as landscape and a selection of drawings. In all of them he reveals his admiration for the traditions of classical, and in particular, Renaissance art.
On his blog you will often find larger images of many of his pieces.
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Gouache in the Wild, James Gurney

Unfairly overlooked among artists’ mediums, gouache is the neglected stepchild of watercolor — disdained by transparent watercolor purists (who I can’t help but picture as cartoon aristocrats, painting with their pinkie fingers extended), and looked at in confusion by oil and acrylic painters. (“Gouache? Isn’t that for designers? You know — illustrators?“)For those who have come to know it, however, gouache is a lovable mongrel, with some of the best characteristics of other mediums: quick drying like acrylic, with the ability to layer and work from dark to light like oil, but with the easy portability, clean up and re-activation possible with watercolor.
Contrary to popular belief, as long as those colors designed specifically for illustrators with fugitive pigments are avoided, and colors are chosen with the traditional artist pigments familiar to oil and watercolor painters, gouache is a perfectly wonderful medium for gallery artists and plein air painters. Gouache is essentially just opaque watercolor.
In addition to common misconceptions about gouache, I think one of the barriers to its wider adoption by artists is the relative lack of instructional material for the medium. Books and instructional video materials are conspicuously thin for gouache, particularly when compared to the abundance of attention paid to transparent watercolor.
Gouache has been gaining more attention and adherents in recent years. One of the best resources for gouache information has been the ongoing mention of gouache techniques in blog posts by James Gurney, who has long been a champion of the medium (along with its milk-based cousin, casein).
In a follow-up to his excellent instructional DVD Watercolor in the Wild, Gurney has created a new DVD along similar lines, titled Gouache in the Wild.
As someone who has become more fascinated with gouache myself, I was delighted when I received a review copy, and even more delighted as I viewed it. Though most specifically aimed at the use of gouache for plein air or interior location painting — a role for which it is very well suited — the video also serves in many ways as an introductory guide to the medium.
Gurney takes us through the process of painting six varied subjects, with quick glimpses of a few others, and gives a guide to materials and basic techniques along the way. He covers some elements that others might not even think to mention, such as making your own opacity charts and brand color comparisons.
In addition to the overt instruction, I find that the close-up views of Gurney applying the paint in various ways, with touches of different kinds of brushes applied at a variety of angles, are instructive in themselves. They also make it clear that new users of gouache should not be misled by the small tubes, and should be unafraid to mix up and apply some generous brushloads of paint.
As is often the case with Gurney’s instructional videos, there is a wealth of supplementary material to be found on his blog, such as his post on “The Seven Gouache Hazards and How to Escape Them” and numerous other mentions of gouache.
Today, June 22nd, is the official release of the video, and Gurney is offering discounts for the day, and will be posting additional previews to YouTube during his “gouache week”, as well as a free live streaming demo of painting in gouache on location on this Wednesday at 4:00pm Eastern Time on ConcertWindow.
Here is the current trailer on YouTube, and another short excerpt from a longer segment.
Gouache in the Wild can be ordered as a DVD or purchased as a digital download. See this post on Gurney Journey for more details.
Gurney has provided a much needed guide for painting in gouache — an often overlooked artists’ medium that is deservedly gaining in popularity; every section is overflowing with his wealth of location painting knowledge and experience.
[Addendum: Gurney continues to add to the supplementary gouache information on his blog. Particularly informative, and much needed, is this remarkable post in which he has inquired of the major gouache manufacturers about the formulations of their gouache paint — a source of common question even among experienced painters in gouache: “Gouache Ingredients: Info from Manufacturers“, on Gurney Journey.]
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Paul Bond

Born in Guadalajara, Mexico and currently living in California, where he studied art, Paul Bond brings to his light-filled style of Magic Realism an obvious affection for the reality-teasing twists of Magritte, and a fascination with certain repeated themes.In particular, he finds ongoing variations on the theme of piled rocks, rendered with a tactile sense of texture and form and with playful indications of scale and place.
Objects in Bond’s painted worlds often float, at once defying and defined by gravity, arranged in geometric swirls that suggest invisible physics in their apparent movement.
When viewing the galleries on Bond’s website, be aware of the second gallery page, accessed from a link at the top of the page. He also has a blog, and offers limited edition prints as well as a book collection and other printed items.
Bond’s work will be on view at the Laguna Beach Festival of the Arts, July 5 – August 31, 2015.
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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
Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective
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
Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective











