Lines and Colors art blog
  • Daniel Dos Santos

    Dan Dos Santos
    Dan Dos Santos is a Connecticut illustrator who has done work for a variety of commercial and editorial clients, including Boeing Aircraft, Scholastic, Ace Books, Penguin, Tor Books, UpperDeck and Wizards of the Coast.

    His refined realist style allows him to create convincing images of fantastic subjects, including lively dragons, startling monsters, convincing wizards and fascinating and sometimes very human characters of all kinds.

    He often uses a muted, carefully chosen palette, often with the color of the composition held within a controlled range, occasionally punched up with bright accents. Sometimes he will use a more intense palette, as in the image above.

    The gallery on his site contains illustrations, sketches and gallery paintings. There are free wallpaper images in the “misc” section. Gallery thumbnails often have small links beneath them to details or preliminary sketches. Also, the “painting” gallery (but not the others) is linked to a second page with the “more” button at bottom.

    There is an extensively detailed 17-page oil painting tutorial in PDF format in the “methods” section. In addition to the step-by-step walk through, it includes the palette, information on the selection of brushes and medium and even his process for photographing the finished work.

    Dos Santos collaborates with Irene Gallo in running the Art Out Loud demo sessions at the Society of Illustrators.



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  • Paris Breakfasts (Carol Gillot)

    Carol GillotAh, Paris, city of light, city of culture, city of romance, city of… breakfasts? But, of course!

    Paris Breakfasts is a delightful blog by watercolorist Carol Gillot. Part deja-travelog, part sketch-blog, part paean to sweets and the sweet life, it meanders from food to travel to watercolor technique, often in the course of the same post.

    And of course, there are the breakfasts. You’ll find photos of breakfasts, watercolors of breakfasts, and photos of watercolors of breakfasts, often arranged with real breakfasts on and around them, at times apparently holding down the paper while the colors dry.

    Parisian breakfasts are quite different from American breakfasts, as many American tourists discover to their dismay when traveling in Europe. No seared piles of breakfast meat, heaping bowls of milk-soaked, sugar-covered grain or stacks of syrup-drenched pancakes, despite the French reputation for crêpes.

    Breakfast in France is a small, sweet affair, usually a croissant, or bread and jam, with juice and coffee or, if coaxed, tea. Not the fare for Denny’s fans, but perfect for quick watercolor sketches of white china glistening with reflected color, shiny coffee pots reflecting colorful jams and berries, steaming cups of le chocolat chaud and the rich hues of candies and pastries.

    Paris Breakfasts has lots of these fresh, bright, on-the-spot watercolors, as well as more studied travel images, many from Venice and rural areas of France, lots of photos, along with discussions of watercolor technique and other art related topics. Gillot lives in New York, but has traveled often, has a distinct passion for Paris, chocolate and ice cream, and apparently has lots of photographs and lots of travel sketches to show for her travels.

    Gillot’s professional watercolors, some of which you can see on her main web site, Carol Cillot Vineyard Impressions, are often devoted to images of wineries, both for promotion of the vineyards and as editorial illustrations for food and wine magazines.

    The largest repository of her work on the web is actually her Flickr galleries, which include many more travel paintings, sketches, sketchbook pages, photos of food (largely sweets), a fascinating section devoted specifically to watercolor color matching experiments, and, of course,… breakfasts.

     


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  • Anthony J. Ryder

    Anthony J Ryder
    Tony Ryder is a contemporary realist who does still lifes and, in particular, figure and portrait paintings and drawings, with meticulous attention to detail and superb draftsmanship.

    His site offers galleries of both paintings and drawings, as well as information about his teaching schedule and workshops.

    Ryder is the author of the well-regarded book The Artist’s Complete Guide to Figure Drawing (more info here), and has also written articles for artist’s magazines.

    His site includes an extensive, multi-page, multi-image portrait painting demo that can be viewed image-by-image or as a series of slideshows. It starts with a “poster study” of blocked-in areas of color, moves to the initial charcoal drawing for the final piece, progresses through the wash-in of colors, modeling and details.

    Ryder studied with painter Ted Seth Jacobs. Jacobs also trained Jacob Collins, who I profiled here on lines and colors.

    Ryder has a long history of teaching realist art at schools and ateliers in New York, Texas, Hawaii, and Florida and now maintains his own school, the Ryder Studio School, and teaches workshops at The Andreeva Portrait Academy, both in Sante Fe, New Mexico.

    Link via Jeff Hayes.



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  • The Art Department (Irene Gallo)

    Irene Gallo, art director
    As in almost any field of endeavor, the quality and character of art directors runs the gamut. At their worst, they fulfill the cliché as a source of headaches and the butt of jokes for designers and illustrators.

    At their best, however, art directors play a significant role in the course of design and illustration, seeking out the finest artists, finding and nurturing upcoming talent, going to bat for illustrators in conflicts with their own employers and forging new directions in the types and styles of art presented to the public. As a whole, the contributions of art directors to the field of illustration are seldom acknowledged.

    Irene Gallo is one of the best. She has been the art director at Tor/Forge Books since 1992 and Starscape Books since its launch in 2002. This has placed her directly in the center of contemporary science fiction illustration.

    Books under her auspices have garnered numerous awards for art and design. Gallo has received the prestigious Chesley Award (named for renowned space artist Chesley Bonestell) for Best Art Director three times, most recently this year.

    She has worked with many of the finest artists in the field, including several I’ve profiled here on lines and colors, like Donato Giancola, Todd Lockwood and Jon Foster, among others.

    Gallo has recently started a terrific blog called The Art Department in which she talks about illustration and art direction, posts images of work in various stages by illustrators of many backgrounds, gives convention reports and comments on the state of the art from a point of view we don’t often hear, that of an experienced art director.

    She also gives insights from that point of view that would be of interest to any beginning illustrator or illustration student, like: “How do I get my work in front of an art director?” and “What do I put in my portfolio?“.

    Another feature on her blog is “Thumbnails: 30 Second Interviews”, with artists like Todd Lockwood, Vincent Di Fate and Bruce Jensen.

    Last year, Gallo teamed up with Arnie and Cathy Fenner, authors of the Spectrum collections of contemporary fantastic art, and the Society of Illustrators to mount an exhibition of some of the best modern fantasy and science fiction illustration. There is an interview with Gallo on that topic on Sequential Tart.

    Gallo is on the board of the Society of Illustrators and, along with Daniel Dos Santos, has created a series of illustration technique and painting demos called “Art Out Loud” that take place at the Society’s offices in New York. The next one is on October 7, 2006 and features Donato Giancola and Todd Lockwood. (I’ll post more details in a subsequent post.)

    Link courtesy of Greg Manchess.



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  • Thomas Nast

    Thomas NastThomas Nast has been called the father of American political cartooning, and rightly so. He is responsible for the initial portrayal of the Republican and Democratic parties as elephant and donkey and created the familiar image of Uncle Sam to represent the US as a whole (with a little help from English illustrator Sir John Tenniel, who added the beard). He also created the famous pen and ink image of a holly-crowned Santa Claus, with clay pipe and arm full of toys (including a sword), that is still used today.

    Tenniel, creator of the definitive illustrations for Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, had a major influence on Nast’s style, as did English illustrator and Punch cartoonist John Leech. Nast also probably took inspiration from the drawings and graphics of Gustave Doré. Nast’s drawings were often lavish, highly rendered pen and ink tableaux, with side drawings and additional panels.

    Nast was also influential on other artists. Harper’s has a showcase site for his work, The World of Thomas Nast, that emphasizes the influence he had on Vincent Van Gogh (who also used to collect Howard Pyle illustrations) and Edgar Degas.

    Nast had a distinct effect on the politics of his day and the course of American history. He was an active adversary of slavery during the Civil War and Abraham Lincoln is said to have credited Nast as “our best recruiting sergeant”.

    Nast’s most famous and effective series of cartoons is directly credited with helping to bring down William “Boss” Tweed, the corrupt and enormously powerful political leader of New York City in the mid 1800’s. Nast did most of his work for Harper’s Weekly, which withstood intimidation by the Tweed organization and the loss of book contracts with the NY school system during the campaign. Nast himself turned down a bribe of $500,000, an enormous sum at the time and one hundred times his salary from Harper’s.

    Boss Tweed was eventually ousted and fled to Spain, where officials reportedly used a Nast cartoon to identify him and return him to the US to face corruption charges.

    Nast was also a pioneer in the use of exaggerated caricature in his cartoons, the tradition in English political commentary drawings had been straightforward portrayals of the individuals.

    Nast was friends with Ulysses Grant and a strong supporter of the Republican party, but in 1884 he supported the Democratic candidate, Grover Cleveland and helped get him elected.

    While he had a history of supporting the abolition of slavery and supporting Chinese Americans and American Indians, he exhibited overt bigotry in his treatment of Irish Americans, who he associated with Tweed’s power base, and expressed anti-Catholic sentiment in many of his cartoons.

    Guess he just had a nasty streak.

     


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  • Matthias Grünewald

    Matthias Grunewald
    Little is known about German Renaissance painter Matthias Grünewald. Few of his paintings and drawings survive, and there is very little biographical information. His name, in fact is not even Matthias Grünewald, but Joachim von Sandrart, but his miss-identification as Grünewald by a writer in the 1600’s stuck.

    What is known, however, is the undeniable visual and emotional power of his work. At a time when the European artist’s role was largely in service to the church, and needed to visually impress the doctrine upon a congregation that could not read it for themselves, Grünewald’s emotionally charged images did so with a vengeance.

    The images shown here are from Grünewald’s undeniable masterpiece, the Isenheim Alterpiece, originally done for the hospital chapel of Saint Anthony’s Monastery in Isenheim in the Alsace region of France, and now in the Musée d’Unterlinden in nearby Colmar near the current French German border.

    The altarpiece is a multi-leveled construction, unfolding in three levels. I’ve seen it, and similar multi-leveled altarpieces, referred to as the Renaissance equivalent of hyper-media.

    The top layer of 4 panels shows the crucifixion, concentrating on an agonizingly visceral portrayal of suffering. It opens into a striking series of panels portraying the nativity, some painted into a dramatically detailed trompe l’oiel architectural framework, and the stunning image of the resurrection shown above right, in which the holy aura is portrayed in almost psychedelic intensity, with the force of it hitting the soldiers in the foreground like a wave of special effects in a modern movie.

    It often occurs to me that paintings like this were the equivalent of modern special effects spectacle, even more so, to a populace that often lived in harsh circumstances and would only be exposed to painted imagery in the churches.

    When the second set of panels were opened, they revealed the innermost set, two panels and a sculpted relief in the center. The rightmost panel, directly under the panel of the resurrection, portrayed the temptation of St. Anthony (above, left) with an astonishing array of monstorous, demented figures that strongly recall the horrific visions of Hieronymous Bosch, another visionary artist about whom little is actually known.

    Grünewald was a mystic and the symbolism and messages inherent in all of the panels are still a matter of much scholarly discussion. Ruth Mellinkoff has suggested, in fact, that Grünewald has painted Lucifer as one of the angels in attendance at the nativity. Weird and fascinating stuff.


    Art Renewal Center (altarpiece and details begin on this page)
    Web Gallery of Art (text at bottom links to images)
    Webmuseum
    Artcyclopedia (links)

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