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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
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- Lisa Stone Design, interior designer, Main Line and Philadelphia, PA
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Daryl Cagle’s Professional Cartoonist Index

After yesterday’s rant I think I need some cartoons to lighten up, but I’m still feeling snarky enough to want some cartoons with bite, so lets head on over, as I often do, to Daryl Cagle’s Professional Cartoonist Index.For many years now, Cagle has had a presence on the web showcasing the work of professional cartoonists. It started as one of those large compendiums in which there was an attempt to list all of the professional cartoonists who had a presence on the web (a list I don’t think he maintains any more), that had a “front page” of some of the day’s featured editorial cartoonists. Over the years it has evolved into a showcase focusing more and more on editorial cartoons and now serves as a one-stop-shopping location for viewing the current and past work of a long roster of editorial cartoonists.
Cagles’s political cartoonists feature used to be on the venerable online magazine Slate, but has since moved over to MSNBC. Slate, meanwhile, has recovered by creating their own political cartoon feature that is very similar in format to the one Cagle established.
You may actually find the Slate version easier to deal with. The design of Cagle’s site, unfortunately, is incredibly busy, with banners and lists and ads trying to crowd each other off of every page, but it’s much more full-featured than the Slate cartoon section, and with a little perseverance you can find lots of great stuff.
The home page acts a jumping off point for viewing recent cartoons from a number of cartoonists arranged by topic. This is really the highlight of the site and you can
waste, er, spend a lot of time here, fascinated not only by the cartoons themselves, but by the comparison of how various cartoonists have tackled the same topic on the same day. At times there can be uncanny similarities between several of them, not because of plagiarism, I think that’s actually rare, but simply because some ideas are just “naturals” and suggest themselves readily in the context of a given situation. You’ll also find interesting variety and strong opinions from both sides of the political fence.For real variety, check in on the “Political Cartoons” page, which features Cagle’s selection for the day’s top cartoons, regardless of topic. On the left side of the page is a long list of American editorial cartoonists. At the bottom of this page, past the banner ads and another chance to view the cartoons by topic, is a list of Canadian and worldwide cartoonists. Like reading newspapers from England, Austraila, France and other places around the globe, viewing political cartoons from other countries can be eye opening. It’s astonishing how insular and self-consumed we can be in America. The rest of the world seems much more aware of what’s going on in the world as a whole. We seem oblivious to anything that doesn’t involve us directly.
Cagle is himself a cartoonist and his own work is usually featured on this page. Cagle maintains a blog, Daryl Cagle’s Cartoon Weblog, which you may have seen listed on the lines and colors blogroll. It focuses, logically enough, on editorial cartooning.
There is also a page on the site where you can order reprints of political cartoons for a fee, searchable through an extensive database. There is a Teacher Guide, accessible from a link on the home page, that provides lesson plans for using political cartoons in classes on Social Sciences, Art, Journalism and English.
Back on the home page, in addition to the long row of topic highlights running down the right side, and the extensive text list of further topics at page bottom, there is a set of “Year in Review” links on the left. These gives you access to collections of cartoons that let you re-live your favorite debacles, disasters and diabolical deeds from recent years.
Ah, the memories.
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The Continuing Saga of the Thomas Eakins Gross Clinic Art-as-Commodity Scandal

For background on this post, please see my previous post: Eakins’ The Gross Clinic – Held for Ransom?.It looked as if the potentially tragic loss to Philadelphia of the Thomas Eakins materspiece by clandestine sale to Wal-Mart heiress Alice Walton, for her artificial island of culture in Arkansas, The Crystal Bridges Museum, was going to be avoided. Prompted by outrage among the local art community, city leaders and the ranks of their own students, teachers and alumni, Thomas Jefferson University’s board of directors agreed to delay their “get-capital-quick” scheme for long enough for other city institutions to cough up their ransom demands and raise $68 million to purchase the painting and keep it here in Philadelphia.
The Philadelphia Museum of Art and my old alma mater, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, where Eakins studied and taught (see my post on Thomas Eakins), sponsored a joint fund-raising campaign to allow The Gross Clinic to stay in the city and be jointly owned by the PMA and the Academy’s Museum of American Art.
Unfortunately, there is further fallout and the attempt to keep one great painting in the city has resulted the loss of another.
In order to meet the Jefferson board’s deadline, the museums arranged a loan through Wachovia bank to secure the painting. The fundraising campaign has fallen short, however, and has lost its momentum. The Academy may have stepped in a little over its head on this one, and has just announced the hasty and unfortunate sale of another great Eakins work, The Cello Player, to an unnamed private individual to help cover their share of the debt.
The Cello Player can be considered a “lesser work” than The Gross Clinic, which is one of the acknowledged masterpieces of American art, but it is a beautiful painting and is certainly the finest of the Academy’s three finished Eakins paintings. The purchaser has apparently promised to loan the painting back to the Academy for display to some degree, but there is no disclosure of who has bought the painting or where it will eventually go.
Herbert Riband, the vice chair of the board of the Academy has promised that the buyer is not Alice “I wanna buy me sum Kulture” Walton [my words, not his], but he also states the the Academy doesn’t know the identity of the purchaser and is making that statement on the word of an intermediary who is evidently brokering the sale.
For more interesting detail on the matter, see Lee Rosenbaum’s post on on the subject on her CultureGrrl blog (part of the Arts Journal site). Rosenbaum was on Radio Times with Marty Moss-Coane this morning on WHYY, the Public Radio affiliate here in Philadelphia (when you follow the link, filter for February 5, 2007, it’s in Hour 2). If you’re at all interested in the issue of the “de-acquisition” of works by museums and other public institutions, or this instance specifically, this program makes a fascinating listen. There are three guests, but Rosenbaum in particular is articulate and fascinating (makes me kind of wish she had her own radio show or podcast).
As Rosenbaum points out, this incident raises all kind of disturbing questions about who has the right to make these decisions about important works that are part of the cultural heritage of institutions and cities. Yes, museums “own” their works, except those on loan, and, barring stipulations made on gifts and bequests, can legally sell them; but these institutions exist partially on the basis of tax breaks and operating subsidies paid for with our tax dollars, (as well as our contributions) so in a real, as well as cultural sense, the public also “owns” these works.
To my mind, that’s one of the reasons we support our museums; so great paintings like The Gross Clinic and The Cello Player can be displayed in the cities where they have been a part of the cultural legacy for hundreds of years, and their fate is not left to the egotistical whims of priveledged megalomaniacs who need to make themselves feel cultured by robbing the treasures of other cities, or self-serving members of institutional boards (I’m talking about Jefferson’s board here, not the Academy’s) who treat those treasures like grist for expedient garage sales, simply because they’re too lazy to do actual work of fund raising.
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Christian Pearce
King Kong was on HBO last night, the lavish 2005 Peter Jackson version, not the 1933 classic or the unbelievably bad remake from 1976. (A King Kong remake without dinosaurs? What were they thinking?)Anyway, watching the recent version was a good reason to take another look through The World of Kong, A Natural History of Skull Island, a book set up as if it was a report on species found on subsequent scientific trips to Kong’s home, profusely illustrated by the talented concept artists from Jackson’s Weta Workshop special effects company.
When I first looked through the book, I was struck by the terrific concept paintings, particularly of dinosaurs, which I just love, by a number of artists who were obviously accomplished, but whose work I hadn’t encountered before (discoveries from the uncharted and mist-enshrouded South Pacific mystery island of New Zealand). I did a post on one of them, Greg Broadmore, back in November.
One of the others who immediately caught my eye was Christian Pearce. His paintings of dinosaurs (and other bizarre Skull Island creatures) have a freshness and breezy handling of color and texture that make them stand out, both as concept art and paleo illustration (noting that the King Kong “dinosaurs”, while freely adopted from real species, are usually made up species that never actually existed).
In addition to King Kong, Pearce has worked on the Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe and the proposed, but unfortunately on hold, live action version of the popular anime Neon Genesis Evangelion. Pearce has also done illustration for children’s books, trading cards, games and comics.
His gallery on the Weta Workshop site, contains some of his professional work. Unfortunately the profile on that site is frivolous and uninformative. There is a little bit more of a bio on the home page of his own site, and the galleries there have both professional work and paintings done for his own amusement.
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Jan van Eyck
15th Century painter Jan van Eyck was the first great master of oil painting, though he was not, as was commonly believed, the originator of the practice of oil painting.When oil based paint was first formulated it was used for practical or craft-like applications on objects, because it was more durable in that role than the (usually egg-based) tempera paint traditionally used by artists during the middle ages. (By durable, I mean resistant to abrasion, there are extant examples of tempera paintings that are almost 2000 years old.)
Tempera dries very quickly and is often applied in quick, thin layers, or small cross-hatch strokes. The ability of the medium to carry pigment is limited, as a result so is the saturation of color. Oil paint is fundamentally different. It dries much more slowly, and the qualities of linseed oil that allow it to hold the pigment suspended in beautiful transparent layers gave artists like van Eyck the freedom to create smooth blended tones and luxuriously layered glazes, saturated with vibrant color.
Van Eyck must have been the special effects genius of his day, dazzling anyone who encountered his work with a virtuoso display of the capabilities of this remarkable painting medium, along with the ability it gave him to create works that were painted with astonishing levels of realism and an almost insane degree of detail.
Figurative painting in some respects grew out of a tradition of decorating objects. In medieval painting in particular there is a tendency to treat the painting as both an image and a decorative object, filled with elaborate details of decorative elements. Van Eyck is a central point where this tradition meets the beginning of the more image-centric traditions of the Renaissance and the results are an uncanny mix of realism and detail.
I have often stood in the Philadelphia Museum of Art, magnifying glass in hand, marveling at the incredibly fine details in the foreground objects and background scene in van Eyck’s St Francis of Assisi Receiving the Stigmata. If you see this painting in reproductions, you assume it must be bigger than its actual size of 5 x 5¾” (12.7 x 14.6 cm).
For all his uncanny realism, van Eyck still displays (at least to my eye) some of the primitivism of medieval painting in the form of lapses in perspective and proportion. His figures’ hands, for example, often seem flattened and disproportionately small. Perspective sometimes seems off in his super-detailed backgrounds, but his display of painting virtuosity and the astonishing levels of detail make you forgive him almost anything.
Take a look at his larger work, The Virgin and Child with Nicolas Rolin, and a detail from the background of the same painting. (it was common for the powerful patrons who commissioned paintings at the time to have themselves portrayed cozying up with saints and other religious figures.) Van Eyck’s truly large works, like the famous Ghent Altarpiece, must have taken people’s breath away and seemed like miracles in and of themselves.
The painting shown here, Portrait of Giovanni Arnolfini and his Wife is also filled with detail. Images like this were also charged with symbolism. Almost everything in the painting, from the formal arrangement of the couple, their dress, hand positions, the shoes, the carpet, the oranges on the windowsill, means something. For a more elaborate and scholarly interpretation than I can possibly go into here, see Craig Harrison’s Jan Van Eyck, The Play of Realism. (There is also a teen-novel based around this painting, The Wedding: An Encounter with Jan van Eyck by Elizabet Rees.)
There are other interesting things about this work in particular, notably in the question of who is “here” in the scene. The couple seem unaware of us as observers, but the dog at their feet is looking directly at us (perhaps imbued with an uncanny 6th sense that allows him to know he is being watched by observers from another time).
Among the fascinating details in the room is a convex mirror on the wall behind, and between, the couple. In the reflection in the mirror we can see, past the backs of the main figures, two more individuals, one in red, the other in blue, who are witnesses to the scene (and presumably the actual subject of the dog’s attention). The mystery figures are, in fact, standing where they would have our view of the scene and we, as observers of the painting, are taking their place in the room.
There is also a gargoyle, part of the furniture in the background, but positioned as if sitting on the joined hands of the couple. (There are no accidents here.)
The mirror is flanked by a whisk broom on one side and a set of glass prayer beads on the other. Above it is a date (1434) and the artist’s signature. Van Eyck was the only Northern painter of his day to sign his work, but even then the signature was usually subdued, or perhaps even part of the frame.
Here, indicating that van Eyck was somehow more personally involved in this image than others, it is painted as if inscribed on the wall itself, like some elaborately penned example of 15th Century graffiti. The inscription is Latin for “Jan van Eyck was here.”
Indeed he was.
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The Mysterious Geographic Explorations of Jasper Morello
Silhouette animation is a form of cut-out animation. The latter is familiar as the style used to give that extra-cheezy feeling to South Park. If you were to take South Park style cut-outs and light them from behind, rather than the front, so that surface colors and textures were eliminated leaving only black silhouettes, you would have silhouette animation.Despite the crude image this analogy conjures up, silhouette animation can be used artfully and effectively, particularly if great attention is given to the detail in the silhouetted shapes. The oldest surviving full-length animation, in fact, is a silhouette animation called The Adventures of Prince Achmed, created by German animator Lotte Reiniger and released in 1926.
Today, it’s almost a lost form except in experimental shorts. An exceptional example of this is The Mysterious Geographic Explorations of Jasper Morello. This is a series of wonderfully done short animations that have been nominated for an Academy Award and already won awards at Annecy, AFI and various festivals in several countries.
Directed by Anthony Lucas and written by Mark Shirrefs, this “triolgy” (actually 4 episodes) follows the adventures of a Jasper Morello, airship navigator from the city of Gothia. The films are set in a somewhat dystopian world with a decidedly steampunk look and feel. It’s in the graphical representation of that world, full of arcane Victorian machinery, elaborate airships, cranes, gantries, gears and attendant intricate objects that the silhouette format becomes a brilliant choice. Though not strictly limited to silhouettes, the backgrounds can be rich with detail at times, the characters are all simply black cut-out shapes, with the eerie exception of one characters glasses. The detail in the backgrounds is handled with a subdued chromatic range and blended with the silhouetted characters to make a harmonious whole.
There is a site devoted to the films, The Gothia Gazette, done in period style and fun to explore. It includes a trailer and you can order all four stories on DVD. Much better than the trailer, though, in demonstrating how effective these stories are, is the availability now of the entire first short, Jasper Morello and the Lost Airship, on YouTube. You can see all three segments of that short pulled together on the Wired blog Table of Malcontents.
Given that the characters are simply black silhouettes, the piece is remarkably effective, and affecting, even if a bit gruesome. The design, drawing and production values of these shorts have a unique look and feel and enough atmosphere to put many feature movies to shame.
Link via Wired
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Roberto Parada

Roberto Parada is an American illustrator who specializes in editorial illustrations with portraits of rock music luninaries, sports stars, movie and TV personalities and political figures.At times his portrait images are quite straightforward, like his straight-on takes on John Stewart (above) or Michael Caine. Often, though, there is a nice twist or bit of wry commentary, like his portrait of Gary Shandling as Moby Dick (the whale, not Ahab), Jack Black as a Shakespearian actor in his Nacho Libre garb, or George W. Bush as Nero.
Parada can also be quite funny, and his paintings often make reference to art history, as in his “portrait” of Homer Simpson as a real person, as if painted by Andrew Wyeth, and his hilarious portrait of Canadian Billionaire Ken Thompson posed with his dog as a send-up of Da Vinci’s Lady With an Ermine.
Parada was born in a New Jersey suburb of New York and studied at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn. He started his career working in acrylics but gained the confidence to switch to oil by talking with illustrator Tim O’Brien.
Parada’s paintings in oil can be smoothly blended or, as in the case of the John Stewart image, quite painterly. (There is nice big reproduction of that image in the July 2006 Communication Arts Illustration Annual.)
In addition to the galleries, his web site features a selection of prints that can be ordered, and that section also includes images that are not seen in the other galleries. You will also find images painted from life in the Studio section.
In the About section of his site, Parada tells of his encounter at age 33 with a life threatening condition known as Severe Aplastic Anemia, or severe bone marrow failure. After undergoing drastic treatments of aggressive immune surpression, he was the fortunate recipient of an anonymous donor bone marrow transplant. The News page tells about his eventual meeting with the donor who saved his life.
There is a good chance that exposure to benzine, a toxic chemical found in paint thinners and other art materials, was the trigger for his condition. Parada still works in oils, but is vigilant about the use of non-toxic art materials, including his paint thinners, and has become concerned with raising awareness about the dangers of toxic art materials as well as awareness of bone marrow donation.
A personal note: Although I don’t have any first hand knowledge of bone marrow transplants, I am myself the fortunate recipient of a kidney transplant (14 years as of last September), and I encourage you to take a look a the links that Parada provides to the National Bone Marrow Donor Program and other resources.
You may have also noticed my constant links on the lines and colors right sidebar to the Donate Life site, and the Gift of a Lifetime site. The latter is a fascinating web documentary on organ and tissue donation. I was glad to be a member of the team, coordinated by FusionSpark Media, that created this site. I did the illustration and programming for the Flash module called The Interactive Body, which uses animation and interactivity to inform about the organs and tissues that can be transplanted. There is also information on the Gift of a Lifetime site about bone marrow donation.
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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











