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Relevant Blogs
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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
- Platinum Paperhanging, wallpaper hanging, Main Line and Philadelphia, PA
- 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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Hopper Drawing

Hopper Drawing is a show at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York that pulls from a collection of over 2,500 drawings in the museum’s holdings, along with some of Hopper’s most iconic paintings, to examine both his process as a painter and his role as a draftsman.Though I have not yet seen the exhibition, I’m loooking forward to it. I particularly enjoy seeing both preliminary drawings for paintings and the finished paintings side by side; few arrangements are more revealing of an artist’s process.
The museum has an online feature showcasing the paintings and related studies, though it is hampered by one of those unnecessarily “clever” interfaces that gets in your way rather than making it easy to browse the images.
A new book, Hopper Drawing, accompanies the exhibition.
Hopper Drawing runs until October 6, 2013.
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Randy Gallegos

Randy Gallegos is an illustrator working in the realm of fantasy, largely for the gaming industry.In contrast to current trends, Gallegos prefers to work traditionally in oil whenever possible, though he can work digitally when the assignment requires it. He also uses digital media for preliminary sketches, though he also likes to work traditionally in that respect as well with charcoal sketches.
Much of his work has a feeling of having roots in classical mythology, though he also ventures into more modern subjects, as in his take on an astronaut as embryo (above, bottom).
On his website you will find three galleries of work, including one of sketches that features preliminary drawings for some of the finished pieces. The site also includes a blog and a section of prints and other available reproductions.
There is a brief interview with Gallegos on Lightspeed magazine.
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Eye Candy for Today: Whistler’s Purple And Rose

Purple and Rose: The Lange Leizen of the Six Marks, James Abbott McNeill WhistlerOn Google Cultural Institute: Art Project. Also visible as a single large image on Wikimedia Commons (5mb).
Original is in the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
I stop to be stunned by this beautiful painting every time I visit the museum. I never tire of it and I missed it when it was on loan.
Today is Whistler’s birthday.
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Laura Knight

Dame Laura Johnson Knight was a popular British artist known for her paintings of dancers, gypsies and circus performers, her wartime reportage, and her iconic painting of the Nuremburg Trials (images above, second from bottom), which she attended. Knight also painted landscapes and wonderfully incisive portraits.Knight, born Laura Johnson, had a mother whose own artistic aspirations were frustrated, but who enrolled Laura in art school at 13. Laura married artist Harold Knight and they shared studio space and a passion for painting.
Looking back through her work, which is best done on the BBC’s Your Paintings website (hover over the upper right of the images for links to enlarge), it seems what she most enjoyed was painting people, mostly women, working or otherwise focused and engaged in some activity.
Knight’s own portrayal of herself working, a self portrait in which we see her from that back, along with her model and her in-progress painting of the model (images above, bottom), was labeled “vulgar” and “regrettable” by some critics. Knight was often dismissed by critics through her career for being too light, too cheerful, too direct, etc. — though I think much can be attributed to the fact that she was a woman and a realist, not a modernist.
She gained recognition in her time, however, and was the first woman elected to full membership in the Royal Academy of Arts since its establishment in 1768.
A new exhibition of Knight’s work, including the notorious self portrait, opens today at the National Portrait Gallery in London, and runs until 13 October 2013.
Unfortunately the NPG doesn’t have much of a preview of the exhibition on their website, but there are reviews of the show on the Guardian and the Telegraph.
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Karen X. Cheng learns to dance (and be a designer)

What does learning to dance in a year have to do with learning to draw or paint? A lot, I think.From Jason Kottke’s blog, I was introduced to this time compressed video of Karen Cheng learning to dance over the course of a year.
She made the decision it was what she wanted to do and she devoted herself to it, saying: “I practiced everywhere. At bus stops. In line at the grocery store. At work — Using the mouse with my right hand and practicing drills with my left hand.”
As Kottke points out, the more interesting thing is that she applied the same approach to changing careers, teaching herself to become a graphic designer by searching out the necessary resources, and devoting herself to it until she was able to leave her job at Microsoft for a position with a design firm.
I’m reminded of the aphorisms “A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.” and “Make progress each day, even if it is by the thickness of a single sheet of paper.”
I’ll step aside now before I start to sound like a Nike commercial.
For a relevant subject, and some resources for learning to draw, see my previous post: Learning to draw: where to go from here.
[Note: the image above is not an embedded video, please use the links below.]
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Sarah Lamb

There are times, of course, when paintings can be arresting because of their color and drama; there are also times when paintings can be striking because of their subtleties.The refined, intimate still life paintings of Sara Lamb are a case in point.
Lamb uses a muted palette, carefully controlled value contrasts and deft variation in edges to evoke a sense of stillness and contemplation that invites you to stop, slow down and linger over her compositions.
I particularly enjoy the feeling of texture she creates, something that does not show in the small sample images I’ve shown above. Fortunately the images on her website are large enough for you to see some of the textural element in her surfaces.
To my eye, her still life paintings evidence an admiration for the work of Jean-Siméon Chardin and Emil Carlsen, as well as seventeenth century Dutch still life masters. (I also see in her portrayal of a dusty bottle — above, bottom — an interesting nod to a similar subject as handled by N. C. Wyeth.)
Lamb and her husband, painter David Larned, live in the Brandywine Valley. There is a PDF of a magazine article on Larned’s website that features both artists and their shared studio space.
In addition to her formal studies at Brenau Women’s College, Lamb had an early mentor in wildlife artist Sarah Brown, and had the later opportunity to study with both Ted Seth Jacobs and his protégé Jacob Collins.
Lamb’s website has galleries divided into Still life, Trompe L’oeil & Game, Landscapes and Commissions. In her landscapes, Lamb is a bit looser and more painterly, most likely painting on location, but still brings her skill with controlled value and color contrasts into play.
There is a short demo of her process on the Artists’ Network and a brief interview on Dilwyne Designs. There are several additional articles in PDF form in the Press section of her website.
Lamb’s work can currently be seen in a solo show at the Spanierman Gallery in New York that runs until August 2, 2013.
You can also see numerous examples of her work in her Spanierman Gallery portfolio, as well as the websites of the other galleries I’ve listed below.
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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











