Lines and Colors art blog
  • Eugène Galien Laloue

    Eugene Galien Laloue, belle epoch paintings of Paris in gouache
    Though others have taken on the style and subject matter over time — continuing to this day — there are four artists that I associate with a particular approach to painting the subject of Paris during the Belle Epoch (around the turn of the twentieth century): Luigi Loir, Edouard Leon Cortès; Eugène Galien Laloue and Antoine Blanchard.

    For lack of a better or more formal term, I’ve heard them referred to as simply “Painters of Paris”.

    I might add Jean Béraud to that list, though his style wasn’t as close to the others. Neither was Loir, on the whole, but I think the origins of the style can be traced to him.

    The particular style focuses on the beauty of the City of Light, and often portrays it thus — its shops, monuments, quays, boulevards, plazas and people highlighted with pools of color and light, both natural and artificial, set against lower chroma backgrounds of the city’s striking architecture.

    Of the four painters, Eugène Galien Laloue (sometimes hyphenated as Eugène Galien-Laloue) is my favorite, both because I love his compositions, color choices and rendering style in general, and because he worked primarily in gouache, an often overlooked medium for which my admiration and fascination continues to grow.

    Galien Laloue worked in oil as well, but reportedly preferred gouache because he could produce a salable painting in two days, rather than the week or more it took him for a oil that might sell for a comparable price.

    Galien Laloue was prolfic, and while under contract to a single gallery, used several aliases, including J. Liwvin, E. Galiany and L. Dupuy, in order to continue to sell through other galleries.

    Though he sketched on location, Galien Laloue preferred to paint in the controlled conditions of his studio. It looks as though he ruled out the perspective that is the basis of his architectural subjects in pencil, and often left the pencil showing as part of the finished work, even to the point that some indications of rows of window are only pencil, with little addition of linear details in paint.

    This crossing of the border between painting and drawing, which gouache in particular facilitates, is one of the things I love about his work. He seems to have struck a wonderful balance between rendering and drawing, finish and sketch, detail and suggestion that I find particularly appealing.

    I also enjoy his wonderful color choices, and his use of muted grays, overcast skies and the reflections of scenes in rainy pavement. In particular, Galien Laloue had a beautiful touch with portraying the city in snow, not just freshly fallen, but with the traffic of the day evident in tracks, ruts and swept away areas.

    Many of his paintings of Paris are set in the late fall and winter. He also did oils of the countryside in springtime, and during World War I devoted himself to portrayals of soldiers in battle, though I find images of his work during this period are not prevalent on the web.

    The best source I’ve found for high-resolution images of his work (which are particularly a treat) is to do a Google search of Bohnams.com: Eugene Galien Laloue site:bonhams.com, and then follow the links to indivudal pieces. You can do the same trick for Sotheby’s.

    A great selection of medium sized images can be found in eight articles on One1more2time3’s Weblog, which is where I was introduced to Galien Laloue.

    A good source for Eugene Galien Laloue biographical information and images is Rehs Galleries in NY, which frequently sells his work (and also has good info and images for Edouard Leon Cortes and Antoine Banchard). There is also a nice selection on Galerie Ary Jan.



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Théodore Chassériau pencil portrait

    Portrait of a Young Woman Wearing a Cloak and Bonnet, Theodore Chasseriau, graphite on wove paper
    Portrait of a Young Woman Wearing a Cloak and Bonnet, Théodore Chassériau

    In the Metropolitan Museum of Art; graphite on wove paper; approximately 18 x 15 in. (46 x 39 cm).

    Chassériau has given us a beautifully sensitive pencil portrait. The commentary on the museum’s website suggests that Chassériau shows more interest in the subject’s garments than her face, but I have to disagree.

    The face is rendered with wonderful finesse, and some of the delicacy of an etching, while the rest of the figure is more gestural and economically realized, in a manner similar to the pencil portraits of Ingres, who was Chassériau’s teacher.



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  • Alvin Richard

    Alvin Richard, precise, light filled still life
    Canadian artist Alvin Richard, who lives in the Atlantic provence of New Brunswick, works in acrylic on board when painting his crisp, light-filled still life compositions.

    Richard balances his precise draftsmanship with a sensitivity to the softness of edges and a nuanced feeling for the play of light, particularly through glass. This is especially evident in his portrayals of canning jars, with their ridged grooves and raised logos, as well as more decorative glass, both crystal and art glass vessels.

    He will often juxtapose his glass containers against the covers of books, particularly art books, with the sheen of their coated covers a muted contrast to the more highly reflective passages on the glass surfaces. He will also often fill his glass containers with objects, both amusing and challenging in their own surface characteristics.

    I get the impression he is always looking to challenge himself with interesting combinations and subjects that can be difficult to render, even taking on the portrayal of stamps, labels and book pages.

    Richard uses his portfolio on the Federation of Canadian Artists website as his primary website, with selections of both available and sold paintings. He also maintains an active blog, which reaches back to 2007, and another shorter blog just to showcase his available paintings.

    You can also find his work on the sites of the Elliot Fouts Gallery and the Fog Forest Gallery.

    There is an interview with Alvin Richard on Carrie Waller’s blog, and several articles on Art & Critique.



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Louis Apol winter landscape

    Een januari-avond in het Haagse bos (A January evening in the Hague forest), Louis Apol
    Een januari-avond in het Haagse bos, Louis Apol

    In the Rijksmuseum. I think the title translates roughly as “A January evening in the Hague forest”.

    In addition to the muted colors and soft edged value transitions in which Apol achieves his almost tonalist atmosphere, I particularly love his textural application of paint.



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  • Sylvain Coutouly

    Sylvain Coutouly, Sylve, concept art, Below
    Sylvain Coutouly, AKA “Slyve”, is a concept artist for the gaming industry, based in Toronto and currently working for Capy.

    Beyond that, I can’t find much in the way of bio or credits. His web presence is a portfolio on ArtStation and a blog.

    I’m unsure how much of the look of his recent work is influenced by the particular project on which he is currently working, “Below”, but in the work on his online portfolio, he makes wonderful use of color, light and suggestion, to pull seemingly intricate scenes from sparely rendered details and pools of interest within largely dark compositions.

    Everything about his compositions — the atmosphere, depth, scale and apparent level of detail — is accomplished with deft suggestion. He leaves much of the scene to be filled in by the viewer’s imagination as the edges of the area of primary interest lead off into dimmer spaces, modulated with subtle touches of light and color.

    [Via Concept Art World]



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  • Tony Pro

    Tony Pro, portrait, figurative and still life painting
    California artist Tony Pro had early artistic guidance from his father, Southwest and wildlife painter Julio Pro, received his formal education from California State University, and also studied informally with well known illustrator Glen Orbik.

    Pro has taken his influences and his enthusiasm for academic and other past masters and developed a style of western landscape, still life, portraiture and figurative work that uses sophisticated compositions, muted color palettes and finessed value relationships.

    I particularly enjoy his portraits and figurative pieces that incorporate room interiors or elements of still life, which feel to me at though they carry the influence of turn of the 20th century American painters like William McGregor Paxton.

    Pro conducts occasional workshops, and is a resident professor of art at California Lutheran University in Thousand Oaks, California. He also has portrait sketch instructional videos available from his site.

    His painting “Last train home” (above, third form bottom) was awarded First Place for Best Painting in the 2014 Portrait Society of America International Competition.



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Vasari Handcraftes artist's oil colors

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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

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