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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.
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Eye Candy for today: Hassam’s peach blossoms

Peach Blossoms—Villers-le-Bel, Childe HassamIn the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The Met’s collection pages have changed somewhat; the controls to zoom and download are now available directly under the image.
A beautiful, direct and deceptively simple painting by one of the foremost of the artists known as American Impressionists.
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Some thoughts on eyes in early Renaissance portraits

This started out as just an Eye Candy post on Rogier van der Wyden’s beautiful Portrait of a Woman with a Winged Bonnet (alternately known as Lady Wearing a Gauze Headdress, or simply Portrait of a Young Woman), shown above, top, with detail.In the course of preparing the images for the post, I once again became fascinated by the subject’s eyes, as I had when writing my 2007 post on Rogier van der Wyden. In writing that post, I had the temerity to suggest that the artist had represented the shape of the two eyes as essentially the same, when in fact the eye to our right should be more foreshortened due to its position on the curve of the skull.
I further suggested that this might be an example of artists of the period in general coming to grips with more sophisticated representation of reality than their counterparts in the Gothic period, and still struggling with some aspects of accurate seeing.
Many contemporary artists, yours truly included, struggle with the same thing — accurately drawing what we really see as opposed to what we know, or what we think we see.
I certainly can’t say I’ve conducted a survey of any percentage of early Renaissance artists in this respect, I just noticed it in this particular portrait, which I think is nonetheless one of the most striking and beautiful in the history of art.
Van der Wyden’s portrait was painted around 1440. For comparison, I’ve included images of a three-quarter portrait by his teacher, Robert Campin: Portrait of a Woman, from roughly 10 years earlier (which I’ve flipped left-to-right here, third and fourth down), and another striking portrait, Leonardo da Vinci’s Lady with an Ermine, from some 50 years later.
In Campin’s painting, I think something of the same problem exists, even if expressed slightly differently; and in Leonardo’s portrait, the issue is resolved — the eye to our right correctly turned in its socket, and the two eyes distinctly different in shape.
Arguments might be made that Campin’s portrait is turned slightly more toward us, and Leonardo’s slightly more away, but I don’t think in either case the difference is that significant.
I think Leonardo, the later and more brilliant observer, has simply worked it out correctly, and, along with his contemporaries, passed on his knowledge to those who followed.
Whether I’m right or not, I think it’s worth a look.
For more, see my previous post on Rogier van der Wyden, in which I initially suggested the same thing, and discussed it at greater length.
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MicroVisions 2014

MicroVisions is a yearly event in which established illustrators pay it forward by contributing small original artworks to be auctioned off on eBay, with proceeds to benefit the Society of Illustrators Student Scholarship Fund.This year’s auction is in progress, and features some wonderful pieces. Participants include Richard Anderson, Steve Belledin, Nicolas Delort, Eric Fortune, Robert Hunt, Greg Manchess, Iain McCaig, Tran Nguyen, and Karla Ortiz (links to my posts).
The 2014 MicroVisions auction ends on May 28, 2014.
(Images above: Robert Hunt, Iain McCaig, Gregory Manchess, Nicolas Delort, Tran Nguyen)
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Eye Candy for Today: Degas’ portrait of Manet

Edouard Manet, Seated, Holding His Hat, Edgar DegasIn the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Click on the image on the Met’s page for a zoomable version or use the download arrow.
I remember being struck by seeing this drawing in one of the volumes of the old Time Life Library of Art (The World of Manet) when I was a teenager.
It seemed to me to be a perfect example of an honest, direct drawing: no showing off, no frills, no excess — just incisive clarity of observation and superb draftsmanship; simultaneously accomplished and casual.
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Mukesh Singh (update)

When I wrote about Indian comics artist and illustrator Mukesh Singh back in 2011, I was only aware of his work on one major project, Grant Morrison’s 18 Days, but that was enough to impress me with his wonderfully lavish and over the top style, that combined western and Indian traditional sensibilities.Since then, Singh has garnered notice as a comics cover artist, with striking covers for titles like Marvel’s All-New Invaders and Indestructible Hulk, as well as interior art for graphic story projects like Dinosaurs Vs Aliens.
Singh uses intense color palettes, high levels of intricate detail and texture, and dramatic and atmospheric lighting effects to give his covers an immediate “Pick-This-Up!” appeal.
I particularly enjoy his comics illustrations in which he combines the in-your-face drama of American super-hero comics with influences pulled from the traditions of Indian art, like a kind of Tantric Jack Kirby.
Though I can’t find a dedicated website or blog, Singh now has a gallery on deviantART (where he goes by the handle, “Nisachar”), and I’ve listed some interviews, along with other mentions and listings, below.
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Eye Candy for Today: Carlsen roses

Still Life with Yellow Roses, Emil CarlsenOn Google Art Project. Hi-res downloadable file on Wikimedia Commons. Original is in the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, which doesn’t appear to have an image online.
I wish more of Carlsen’s beautifully painterly still life paintings were available in high resolution. For now, I’ll just be glad a few are online. Here’s another on GAP, and my previous Eye Candy post about one in the National Gallery, DC. There is also one online at the Met.
I’ll do a proper post on Carlsen soon.
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Charley’s Picks
Bookshop.org
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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











