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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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Michael Cheval

Originally from Russia and now living in the U.S., Michael Cheval’s flights of imaginative visions might be called “magic realism”, though classifying this kind of work is always a slippery process.Certainly not “surrealism”, a term often used casually and incorrectly to describe fantastic art, though you may see nods to the visual language of Surrrealist painters like Dalí, Magritte and Paul Delvaux in Cheval’s work, you’ll find even more reference to baroque and classical painters.
In classifying his own work, Cheval bypasses these concerns by using the term “absurdity”, referring to his various series by names like “Nature of Absurdity”, “Eternity of Absurdity”, “Illusions of Absurdity”, and so on.
In addition to the galleries on his website of those series, he also has a section of drawings, and another of portraits, in which he has cast his sitters in his absurdist roles and settings, often with reference to their occupations or preoccupations.
Cheval has obviously given some study to classical painting technique and brings a sophisticated touch to his freely imagined subjects. Cheval plays with scale, recursion, perspective and collage-like juxtapositions of objects and spaces, toying with the viewer’s expectations and preconceptions. He often repeats themes such as chessboards, marionettes, jesters, musicians, theatre and fancy dress balls.
[Note: some of the images can be considered NSFW]
[Via Artist A Day]
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Renoir’s landscapes

I have to go on record as saying that Pierre Auguste Renoir is not one of my favorite painters.Certainly among the original French Impressionists, I find him the weakest and most inconsistent — not a painter at the level of his contemporaries in the Impressionist circle. Renoir was prolific, and I’ve seen enough bad Renoirs to last a lifetime, even if at the Barnes Foundation alone.
That being said, I will turn around and say that I like very much some of Renoir’s landscapes, particularly those in which he has not lapsed into such a profusion of soft edges as to make the landscape seem melted.
At his best, Renoir’s landscapes can be richly colored, atmospheric and rendered with a subtle range of values. There are paintings in which Renoir uses his proclivity for softness to advantage, contrasting it with more sharply focused passages.
The links I give below are to general resources for Renoir images on the web; you’ll have to dig through them to find landscapes, particularly those landscapes in which Renoir is at his best. But if, like me, you have a tendency to dismiss Renoir from seeing too many weak portraits and figures, you may find his best landscapes worth seeking out.
Those who just love love love Renoir can feel free to flame me in the comments (grin).
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Eye Candy for Today: Adélaïde Labille-Guiard chalk drawing

Study of a Seated Woman Seen from Behind (Marie-Gabrielle Capet), Adélaïde Labille-GuiardOriginal is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
A beautiful drawing by the 18th century French painter, and a wonderful example of the expressive possibilities for creating naturalistic portraits and figures in the “trois crayon” method of using three chalks — red, black and white — on toned paper.
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Emmanuel Malin (update)

Emmanuel Malin is an illustrator, art director and concept artist for the gaming industry based in Paris. I initially profiled Malin here on Lines and Colors back in 2010.Malin creates fascinatingly textural images with layers of shapes within larger shapes defining his compositions. He works with both bright and muted color palettes, often contrasting low chroma complementary pairs with brighter clashes of more intense color.
Malin frequently divides his larger forms into sub-forms with slight variations in color or value, and fills many of his spaces with visually appealing textural patterns. On top of these elements, he creates foreground elements that swoop and swirl in curvilinear fashion, the whole often suggesting not-quite-recognizable biological forms.
On his website you’ll find highlights on the home page, along with two short animated sequences, and then galleries devoted to illustration, video games, sketches and comics.
I particularly enjoy a series in the video games section for a gaming project he titles Alice Return in Madness (I think the eventually released game was titled Alice: The Madness Returns in the U.S.).
Malin has a blog on Tumblr, the older version of which is on Blogger. In addition, you can find galleries of his work on Behance and CGHub, as well as some older entries as a participant in the Gorilla Artfare group blog. There is a brief interview with Malin on ImagineFX.
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Antti Rautiola

Antti Rautiola is a painter and art director living in Helinski, Finland.On his website and his blog you will find examples of his work in plein air landscape and studio paintings, including paintings of his family.
On his blog, in particular, you will find larger versions of his paintings, showing his loose, confident brushwork. He also has a number of process sequences, and frequently posts images of his plein air work in progress on location, something I particularly appreciate as I enjoy seeing how plein air painters select and develop their composition for a landscape.
Rautiola has a wonderfully restrained use of color and value. Some of this may be in his response to the subtle light characteristic of the northern latitudes, but his interpretation of it gives much of his work a particularly strong feeling of color harmony.
You can see some similarity in the character of the light in the paintings of fellow Finnish painter Arto Isolatalo, who I profiled in 2012 here on Lines and Colors, and from whose website links I found Rautiola’s work.
Antti Rautiola currently has a solo window exhibition at Postikatu 1, Helsinki.
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Eye Candy for Today: three Howard Pyle drawings

Today marks the birthday of the great American painter, illustrator and master of pen and ink, Howard Pyle.These three drawings, illustrations for one of Pyle’s own books, are in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which has high-resolution images of them. I’ve provided the titles and links to the images on the Met’s site below.
I’ve taken the liberty here of adjusting the images to compensate for the age darkened board, bringing the background up to white.
Dover Books has inexpensive reproductions of many of Pyle’s books, including The Wonder Clock, for which these illustrations were created. The reproduction is not the most sensitive to Pyle’s extremely fine lines, but they’re certainly good enough to enjoy.
For more, see my previous posts on Howard Pyle here on Lines and Colors.
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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











