Lines and Colors art blog
  • Etch-A-Sketch at 47

    Etch-A-Sketch drawing by George Vlosich
    Short of crayons, maybe the Etch-A-Sketch, which turns 47 this week, has earned it’s tagline of “World’s favorite drawing toy”.

    We’ve all done it, right? Artists and non-artists alike, twirling the little plastic knobs, trying to make diagonals and curves, which was a little like patting your head, rubbing your stomach and chewing gum at the same time, trying not to backtrack, striving to make something cool out of that single continuous line, and, finally, resolving ourselves to drawing things like buildings and robots that looked good in straight lines.

    Of course, you could always turn it upside-down, shake the mysterious gray stuff (which turns out to be powdered aluminum), to “reboot” your Etch-A-Sketch, erasing all signs of failure, and have at it again.

    Well, some of us persevered, learned the curves, and mastered the thing. A striking case in point is George Vlosich, etch-A-Sketch artist extraordinaire, who demonstrates on his site that he can do a lot more than draw diagonals and curves, creating detailed portrait drawings with complex compositions and rendered tones.

    Lest we doubt that these drawings were, in fact, created with the aforementioned knob-twirling device, Vlosich has a demo video on YouTube in which you can see a time-lapse movie of him in action.

    Ohio Art, the company to whom inventor Arthur Granjean sold the idea for the Etch-A-Sketch after being turned down by several of the major toy companies, doesn’t seem to be making much of the anniversary, but there is an article on Wired with a gallery of Etch-A sketches by Vlosich and others (including a computer adapter – “machine draws with machine, film at 11”).

    You can also look at the World’s Largest at SIGGRAPH 2006 or try your hand a a virtual Etch-A-Sketch,like this one from BabyGrand.com or Etchy.org (note that these allow you to use the keyboard). Of course the Etch-A-Sketch has a presence in the Blog-O-Sphere, at blogs like The Etch-A-Sketchist, which has a list of other links.

    [Link via Wired]



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  • The Venice Chronicles (Enrico Casarosa)

    The Venice Chronicles (Enrico Casarosa)I’ve mentioned Enrico Casarosa before. A multi-facetied artist who does storyboards for Pixar, but is also a character designer, comics artist, designer, illustrator, blogger and dedicated sketcher. Casarosa is the instigator of the Sketchcrawl drawing events.

    Last summer Casarosa took a trip to Veince, that most magical of Italian cities, and instead of just making travel sketches as most artists might, decided to chronicle his trip in the form of a comics journal.

    As always, available time became a factor and, while he couldn’t document his entire trip during his stay, he decided to continue telling the story after the fact, extending his narrative into the next winter and beyond. The result is a wonderful stream-of-consciousness style story, not only of his stay in Venice and his visit to his childhood home in Genova, but of his attempt to chronicle the story in comics form, artistic blocks and all.

    His story wanders from cut-away views of a Venitian apartment to similar views of his parent’s home, to the streets of both cities and the canals of one, to his ruminations on Hugo Pratt’s famous comics series, Corto Maltese, which takes place in Venice.

    The artwork varies from quickly suggested cartoon-like characters to nicely drawn images of scenes he encountered in Venice and Genova, to renditions of the masterworks he saw in the Gallery Academia.

    From the introductory page, click to launch the story in a pop-up, which you can then click through in sequence until you get to the limit of that section’s thumbnails, at which point you will no longer have a forward arrow available. You must then close the pop-up and click to the next page of thumbnails to continue.

    [Link via Bolt City]



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  • Tristan Schane

    Tristan Schane
    Tristan Schane began his art career doing comic book illustration for companies like Marvel, DC, First Comics and Continuity Comics. He began to do more painted covers and moved into more general illustration, producing work in watercolor, gouache, acrylic and oil for covers, posters, promotional art and merchandise.

    He eventually moved into doing paintings specifically for gallery display and now concentrates on his gallery paintings and has also been working in life-size sculpture, working in oil clay and casting from rubber molds in materials like gypsum cement and plastic resins.

    Schane has a penchant for portraying the grotesque and bizarre in his sculpture, and in his painting works with subjects that have a connection to his work as an illustrator and concept artist, but carry them forward with an eye to classical painting tradition.

    You can see influences of Dali, as well as science fiction and fantasy illustration and movie concept art stirred together into a rich stew of phantasmagoric imagery, painted in oil in compositions that are often, interestingly, in a square format. Square compositions are difficult to handle and are often the result of the demands of particular illustration tasks, but Schane takes them on in his gallery art and seems to revel in the challenge.

    His online galleries include painting, drawings, sculpture, concept art and illustrations.



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  • Basil Wolverton

    Basil WolvertonWhat has skin like the cratered and mountainous surface of an alien planet, teeth that look like diseased barnacles, popping bloodshot eyeballs that would have made Big Daddy Roth grimace in envy and, of course, carefully combed hair and a pearl necklace?

    Why, it’s one of Basil Wolverton’s charming beauties, of course!

    Wolverton was a cartoonist active in the middle part of the 20th Century. He started doing work for newspaper comics and then in comic books. In the mid-40’s, Wolverton created Powerhouse Pepper, a little guy who could out-muscle bullies and strongmen twice his size. The strip ran in comics for 10 years.

    In 1946 he won a contest for the best image of “Lena the Hyena”, a character spoken of, but never seen, in Al Capp’s Lil Abner newspaper comic. Lil Abner was so popular at the time that the contest was judged by a celebrity panel composed of Boris Karloff, Frank Sinatra and Salvador Dali, and Wolverton’s winning entry was featured on the cover of Life Magazine.

    He eventually developed a specialty for the portrayal of perfect ugliness, a celebration of the grotesque and counter-pretty that has never been matched. He found a likely outlet for these talents in the E.C. horror comics of the 1950’s and on the covers of Mad comics. In the early 50’s, Mad was a comic book rather than a magazine, and was a bastion of outrageous, against-the-grain humor (and had not yet devolved into the faded remnant of its former glory that you see on the shelves today). In the 1970’s he continued the tradition for Plop!, a short lived, anemic version of Mad comics from DC.

    Wolverton retired from comics and devoted most of his remaining years to illustrating The Bible Story, for which he provided hundreds of illustrations, some of which are just bizarre, particularly in his interpretation of The End. There is a selection of those drawings here, originally in black and white, but colored by his son Monte Wolverton.

    There are a few books available with Wolverton’s work. Some are out of print but should be available with a little digging.

    Wolverton’s exaggerated weirdness was an inspiration for the original 1950’s Mad comics artists (See my posts on Wally Wood, Will Elder and Jack Davis), the early 60’s Kustom Kar Kulture artists like Ed Roth, the mid 60’s Undergound cartoonists like Robert Crumb, S. Clay Wilson and Robert Williams, the lowbrow/”Pop Surrealism” artists of today and numerous cartoonists in between.



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  • Sarah Mensinga

    Sarah Mensinga
    Sarah Mensinga is an illustrator and concept artist living in Texas. The brief bio on her site indicates that she is a graduate of the Sheridan College classical animation program, and has worked on various animated TV shows and films, including The Ant Bully.

    You can see some of her work for that film in the Film section of her online Galleries, which also include sections for Illustration and Character Design.

    Mensinga has a stylized approach with lots of exaggerated thick to thin variation in her forms, giving her drawings a springy, cartoonlike energy well suited to animation concept design.

    She is currently using the comics-like quality of that style on a children’s book called Dragon Girl (image above), for which you can see a preliminary version, realized in line and tone drawings, on her site. Her drawings for this have a nice feeling of classic fairy tale animation. Even though these are not intended to be final illustrations, I really enjoy both the loose, informal feel of the drawings and the underappreciated chram of monochromatic tone drawings.

    Mensinga also has a blog called Sarah’s Sketches on which she writes about about progress on the book and posts sketches for other projects as well as drawings done just for fun.

    [Link via the Flight blog]



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  • Rembrandt on The Power of Art

    Rembrandt self-portrait
    Rembrandt is the subject of the PBS/BBC program The Power of Art being broadcast tonight on most PBS stations here in the US.

    I’ve had plenty to say about Rembrandt in the past, so I’ll leave you with those posts and the subject of the first of them, www.rembrandtpainting.net, which is probably the most comprehensive Rembrandt site on the web, and a self-portrait, above, from 1640 (larger version here), which shows Rembrandt as an artist confident of his mastery, and perhaps comparing his ability to that of Hans Holbein the Younger.

    We’ll have to see what Simon Schama does in trying to tell his story with off-kilter camerawork and melodramatic, grimacing actors.



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