Lines and Colors art blog
  • Eye Candy for Today: Church’s icebergs

    The Icebergs, Frederic Edwin Church
    The Icebergs, Frederic Edwin Church

    On Wikimedia Commons, larger here. Original is in the Dallas Museum of Art. There is an article about the painting on the Wall Street Journal. You can get a sense of the scale of the painting in this photo from Steve Doherty’s blog.

    Just in case you haven’t seen enough ice yet.


    The Icebergs, Wikimedia Commons

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  • Duane Keiser’s Transitory Paintings

    Duane Keiser's Transitory Paintings
    It’s not uncommon for artists to paint over, or scrape off and repaint, existing paintings. Oil paintings, in particular, lend themselves to this process, and a number of historical paintings have been shown by art forensics to have been painted over or repainted many times.

    Normally, the goal is a finished painting that is better in some way than the previous version. However, Duane Keiser, a painter I have written about previously here on Lines and Colors, has taken the concept of repainting in a different direction.

    Keiser has been engaged in a daily painting practice for a long time, and is in fact the originator of the “Painting a Day” phenomenon, as started on his blog of the same name back in 2004.

    In 2011, I reported on his video of a painting experiment called Peel, in which he painted a tangerine as he peeled it — showing the different stages of peeling the fruit in multiple images — on the same panel, painting and repainting over images that most other painters might have considered finished (and salable).

    I marveled at the artistic confidence involved in a process like that, and I marvel at it again in Keiser’s recent experimental Transitory Paintings.

    In these two separate panels, Keiser has painted a landscape and a room interior of his studio. In each case, he is repeatedly repainting the same panel to reflect changing conditions of his subject in different seasons, light and time of day.

    Keiser has a slowly changing slideshow of each painting in various stages on his website. Keep in mind while viewing these (and the screen captures I’ve posted above) that these are not a series of related paintings, but single paintings that are being repainted over and over.

    The landscape has actually been sold, to friends of the artist, with the understanding that Keiser will occasionally remove the painting, paint over it with a new version of the scene, and then return it to them — a constantly evolving painting.



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  • Matthew Cook (update)

    Matthew Cook
    In many ways, all art is about selection.

    Whether representational or non-representational, imaginary or abstracted from reality — visual art is about choices of what to show and what not to show.

    So, for that matter, is writing, music and all other forms of communication and expression.

    Ever since bottom-line mandates turned “news” into “infotainment”, and Justin Bieber’s latest pimple became more “newsworthy” than ongoing conflicts that affect millions, it’s been easy to forget how selective reporting can be, particularly within a cacophony of information sources.

    Significant numbers of American and British soldiers remain stationed in Afghanistan and Iraq. Life goes on in these places — conflict continues, people die, other people live. Those who live, both native and from outside, get on with their daily lives — buying groceries, fixing cars, checking the electronics on a remote controlled flying bomb.

    News organizations and individuals continue to report on what’s happening in these areas, but their information is often “selected” for the bottom of “what’s important”, because it’s not dramatic or new or exciting enough to attract a large viewership and thereby help sell Coke or Nexium or Dodge Durangos.

    It’s all about selection.

    Which brings me to the “reportage” art of Matthew Cook, who I profiled in 2013 here on Lines and Colors.

    Cook has the unusual position of reporting on events in these areas of conflict, as well as at home in the U.K., by way of drawings and paintings in ink and watercolor. A rarity in the age of ubiquitous photography, reportage art, particularly when it is as accomplished as Cook’s, reminds us of the power of the visual artist to select and present only the essentials.

    Yes, photographers select and compose, but their ability to do so is in some ways limited. A visual artist has absolute power of selection, everything but the essentials can be left out.

    Cook does that — stripping his images of daily life among the British military, and the local residents, down to their most powerful and visually appealing essentials — with such aplomb that it’s astonishing to me that this kind of visual reporting isn’t more prevalent and appreciated.

    That, I think, resonates with what I find most appealing in visual art — the power to make the ordinary extraordinary, to make what we pass by and ignore suddenly assume importance — the power to make us notice.

    It’s all about selection.



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  • Sargent’s portrait of Roosevelt

    Theodore Roosevelt by John Singer Sargent
    Theodore Roosevelt by John Singer Sargent

    Today is “Presidents Day” here in the U.S. — originally “Washington’s Birthday”, but now an all-purpose Washington and Lincoln birthday holiday, marked primarily by aggressively advertised sales of mattresses and cars. (Maybe that says something about U.S. presidents, I don’t know.)

    Though perhaps not one of Sargent’s most memorable paintings, this portrait of the 26th U.S. president certainly counts as one of the best official presidential portraits. For a full array of official portraits, see this slide show feature on whitehouse.gov.

    There is fairly large image of this painting on Wikimedia Commons.

    I’ve covered U.S. presidential portraits before here on Lines and Colors, including those by Gilbert Stuart (and here), Charles Wilson Peale and George Healy.


    Theodore Roosevelt, John Singer Sargent, Wikimedia Commons

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  • François Guerin

    Francois Guerin
    François Guerin is a French UI designer, art director and digital artist who likes to paint and sketch on his mobile devices, using Brushes for iPhone and Procreate for iPad.

    You can see his work in his Flickr set, a smaller set on Coroflot and prints on society6.

    [Via @ParkaBlogs]



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Giovanni Boltraffio portrait

    Giovanni Antonio Boltraffio
    Portrait of a boy as saint Sebastian, Giovanni Antonio Boltraffio

    Though the subject of this portrait by Giovanni Boltraffio may look feminine at first glance, the experts assure us by the title that it is, in fact, a boy.

    It might be pointed out, however, that the experts also attributed the painting to Leonardo da Vinci for a time, before reassigning it to Boltraffio, a skilled member of Leonardo’s studio.

    Personally, if I may be so bold, I would doubt an attribution to Leonardo simply because — to my eye — the anatomy of the head is not quite correct. Specifically the eye to our right does not seem to have the correct relationship to the turn of the head. I’m not an expert, of course, but I’ve noticed this as a weak point in a number paintings and drawings, particularly from the Middle Ages to the Early Renaissance. This is something that Leonardo never gets wrong. He literally understood human anatomy from the inside out.

    See my earlier post here on Lines and Colors in which I flip the Mona Lisa from left to right.

    Link below for Boltraffio’s portrait is to the Google Art Project; the original is in the the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts, Moscow. There is a high-resolution downloadable version on Wikimedia Commons.



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Vasari Handcraftes artist's oil colors

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
John Singer Sargent: Watercolors

Sorolla the masterworks
Sorolla: the masterworks

The Art Spirit
The Art Spirit

Rendering in Pen and Ink
Rendering in Pen and Ink

Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective
Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective

World of Urban Sketching
World of Urban Sketching

Daily Painting
Daily Painting

Drawing on the right side of the brain
Drawing on the right side of the brain

Understanding Comics
Understanding Comics

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
John Singer Sargent: Watercolors

Sorolla the masterworks
Sorolla: the masterworks

The Art Spirit
The Art Spirit

Rendering in Pen and Ink
Rendering in Pen and Ink

Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective
Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective

World of Urban Sketching
World of Urban Sketching

Daily Painting
Daily Painting

Drawing on the right side of the brain
Drawing on the right side of the brain

Understanding Comics
Understanding Comics