Lines and Colors art blog
  • NFB Animated Shorts

    Over the years the film industry has evidenced support for short films, particularly short animated films, that is reminiscent of the kind of outspokenly warm and generous relationship that upper class Victorians reserved for out-of-wedlock children.

    The problem, of course, has been distribution. Since the demise of the practice of showing shorts before feature films to give the movie goer something else to come into the theater for (replaced by the much more sensible model of showing 30 minutes of ads), the theaters have wanted nothing to do with them. Likewise, Television has had no idea how to make money off of individual shorts. If it’s not a continuing shill for a line of toys and/or sugar-coated cereals, what good is it?

    That distribution problem finally changed, of course, with the advent of the Internet, and short animations have experienced a resurgence, but prior to that there were a few bastions of support that kept short animations viable. One of the most notable and reliable has been the National Film Board of Canada whose support for short-form animation has been unswerving and is ongoing.

    The NFB site is currently focusing on their history of support for animated shorts and has placed 50 of them online for your viewing pleasure.

    They have also posted information about the history of the NFB, the techniques used by the filmmakers and the NFB animation studios.

    Images at left, top to bottom: Richard Condi: The Big Snit, Jamie Mason: The Magic of Anansi, Yuan Zhang: Roses Sing on New Snow.

    Link via Boing Boing

     


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  • Rembrandt 400

    Rembrandt
    Now here’s an occasion worth celebrating.

    Today marks the 400th anniversary of the birth of Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn, the rootenist, tootenist, high-falootenist six-brush packing hombre ever to put lines and colors on a surface! Yow!

    Rembrandt, as you might guess, is one of my very favorite artists of any kind, any time, any which way you look at it.

    He was perhaps the most fluid, facile and prolific draughtsman in the history of art and is often referred to as the finest of painters. I mean this guy was the man.

    His paintings have an immediacy and a presence that carry the impact of the most powerful of old master techniques, with incredibly realized faces glowing out at you from the lusterous depths of layers of transparent glazes, combined with a stunningly modern application of paint in bold physical splashes. I mean big, thick chunks of white for highlights right on top of layer after layer of smooth, painstakingly painted tones, Rembrandt was both a culmination of the traditions that came before him and a leap into the future.

    Rembrandt’s paintings are quiet, rowdy, calm, violent, introspective, boisterous, dramatic, soothing, jarring, dark and brilliant.

    And his drawings… ah, Rembrandt’s drawings… what a world they invite you into. Seemingly simple quick strokes of reed pen and bistre ink that captured the world in front of his eyes like a magic lantern, brilliant scribbles that are towns, houses, trees, people and animals created out of so few lines and such expressive strokes that it could only be the result of some kind of artistic alchemy, Rembrandt’s drawings are the place where pen and paper fell in love.

    Did I mention that he was a master of chiaroscuro, the creation of form though strong contrasts of dark and light, giving his work extraordinary drama and power? No? Well, I should mention that. Did I mention that he was astonishingly prolific, leaving us over 600 paintings, 300 etchings and more than 2000 drawings (and God knows how many have been lost)? No? Well, I should mention that. And did I mention that he was probably the finest etcher that ever lived? No? Well, I should mention that too.

    Rembrandt’s paintings, etchings and drawings are impressive enough in books and online reproductions, but you must see them in person to understand.

    I am very much looking forward to a major exhibit: Strokes of Genius: Rembrandts Prints and Drawings at the National Gallery in Washington this November.

    See my post about the Rembrandt vs. Caravaggio exhibit for more information on the celebration of his 400th in Amsterdam, including special exhibits, events and even stage plays, and my post about Rembrandt’s Drawings for more of my effusive ramblings about how cool he was.

    Then go to Jonathan Janson’s amazing site devoted to the artist and his works: Rembrandt: life , paintings, etchings, drawings and self protraits, specifically to the page listing museums that have Rembrandt works in their collections, look up a museum near you and visit a Rembrandt today.

    Addendum:
    Lok Jansen writes to add that the Rijksmuseum has superb, high-resolution images online of many Rembrandt works. Choose an image from the thumbnail scroller and click on it to view that image, then click on “Enlarge” for the hi-res version.



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  • Bernhard Vogel

    Bernhard VogelI’m not always fond of artists who engage in the loose application of watercolor. Too often it results in a feeling of formlessness and lack of control over the materials.

    German watercolorist Bernhard Vogel manages to make his application of the paint seem as loose as can be while still exercising the kind of restraint that makes his images feel strongly composed and skillfully drawn.

    Also, unlike those who try to force geometry onto forms in an attempt to induce some kind of awkward Cubist quality, Vogel employs light lines and bands of color to point out hidden geometry in his forms, without losing the forms themselves.

    One of the most appealing things about Vogel’s work is his application of textures, apparently applied with resists, scrapings and spatters, that give his paintings a lively quality and an appealing variety of surface.

    At times some of his forms can almost dissolve but there always seems to be enough underpinning of draughtsmanship to keep them solidly planted in this world.

    The more defined defined forms in his landscapes, for example, are often rimmed by suggestions of buildings and trees, with blocks and wedges of textured color suggesting rather than representing landscape elements.

    The majority of his work seems to be landscape, but I was particularly taken with his still life paintings. Many of them are of somewhat typical subjects, wine bottles, fruit, plates, etc, but enlivened by Vogel’s touch for suggestion, interpretation and abstraction (in the true sense of “abstract”, which means “to distill the essence of”, rather than “to create something non-representational”).

     

    Link courtesy of Cliff Drane



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  • Marcos Mateu-Mestre

    Marcos Mateu
    There are some people who draw in a way that looks like they load their pens with pure liquified fun.

    Concept artist Marcos Mateu-Mestre has a wonderful character of line and a jaunty, casual style that makes it look like the lines danced out and created the image of their own accord.

    His loose, relaxed application of color, which careens between brilliant lights and rich, atmospheric darks, just adds to the visual treat.

    Mateu-Mestre started out doing adventure comic strips for a newspaper in his native Spain. He went to work in London doing backgrounds and layouts for Amblimation-Universal Pictures and then moved to LA and worked on Dreamworks’ The Prince of Egypt and The Road to El Dorado.

    He now has his own studio and has done production design for animated films like The Three wise Men for Animagic Studios and Totó Sapore for Lanterna Magica.

    His site is filled with production design drawings and paintings, character designs, background renderings, storyboards and even a couple of comics pages. You’ll be delighted by the variety of approach, color scheme and materials handling throughout the galleries. There is a wonderful consistency, though, in his elastic, confident linework, excellent draughtsmanship and vivid imagination.

    Mateu-Mestre’s drawings have just the right touch of exaggeration to give them extra visual appeal; lines are given an extra spring, forms bent out just a bit, and figures swirled into motion in a way that gives everything a sense of verve and life.

    Along with Marcelo Vignali and Armand Serrano, who I recently profiled, Matau-Mestre is also part of Sketchclub and is a participant in the El Pacifico collaborative improvisational comic book experiment.



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  • Regino Gonzales

    Regino GonzalesI’ve talked before about some art forms that are disrespected by the art establishment and artistic community, like comics, architectural rendering, medical illustration, botanical illustration and paleontological reconstruction art. None of them, however, collect the artistic disdain reserved for that intentionally lowest of lowbrow art forms, tattoo art. Yowsa!

    Regino Gonzales appears to be a tattoo artist by trade, but his site also includes paintings, illustrations, sketches, fashion graphics and digital comic coloring. Some of his sketches and studies would seem at home on the web site of a more traditional illustrator or painter. Gonzales may be an interesting artist to allow those put off by the very idea of tattoo art to creep across the border into outsider territory and take a peek at what the other side creates.

    Some of Gonzales’ tattoo images are of what you might consider “typical” tattoo subjects, skulls, snakes, dragons, etc., while others are more unusual, with Aztec themes, rendered images of the Buddah, naturalistic plants or faces and figures that look almost classical. Some are heavily rendered and over-the-top, but some of them are graphically spare, nicely drawn and would elicit a very different reaction from us if they were presented on paper in a frame and matte rather than on the sweaty arm of the drummer from the thrash band down the block.

    Many of his images, the tattoo images in particular, are intentionally unsettling, created to provoke a reaction, and are probably successful at that.

    There seems to be a certain mindset in much of the tattoo culture, a carry over from the biking and punk subcultures, that says that if a tattoo isn’t depraved enough to send Mom-n’-Pop-n’-Buddy-n’-Sis from whitebread middle-class America screaming back to their Barc-A-Loungers in mindless panic, it isn’t a proper tattoo.

    At its most basic, however, a tattoo is a graphic image, pattern or decoration applied to a surface. The fact that that surface happens to be human skin is enough to bother many people in itself, but people in various cultures have been decorating their bodies in both temporary and permanent ways since the dawn of recorded history, and probably long before.

    The fact that the surface, or “canvas” if you will, is a human body presents other challenges for an artist in addition to the obvious ones. The human body is composed of curved surfaces. Not only is this challenging in terms of working on the drawing, but the design and proportions must compensate for the curves in order to be perceived correctly as a coherent image.

    I know a couple of tattoo artists, and the good ones work as hard at their craft as any illustrator I know. I even designed a simple tattoo myself, at the request of someone I know, and did not find it simple to do. Like the 19th century illustrators whose work had to be interpreted for printing by woodblock engravers, I had to design for someone else to create the final piece. I also had to consider that someone would make this drawing a permanent part of their body, a sobering thought. It was enough to give me some respect for tattoo artists and what they do.

    So start with Gonzales’ Studies and Sketches, look through the Paintings and Sketchbook and, when no one’s looking, take a peek through the fence at the Tattoos.

     


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  • Hergé (Georges Remi)

    Herge
    You will occasionally hear me rant about the misuse of the term “graphic novel” in reference to trade paperback collections of comic books in America. (Watchmen is a graphic novel, Akira is a graphic novel. The last six issues of The Uncanny X-Men collected into a squarebound paperback isn’t any kind of a novel. It may be a graphic album, a collection or, if you’re lucky, a graphic story, but a novel it’s not.)

    Belgian comics creator Hergé (a pen-name based on the French pronunciation of “RG”, Georges Remi’s initials in reverse) was a pioneer and master of the long form comics story, i.e. graphic novel. Though he created a number of characters and features, his major work is a series of stories of The Adventures of Tintin, which began in 1929.

    Tintin is as familiar in Europe as Superman or Mickey Mouse is in America and is one of the most popular European comics of the last century. Basically a super-adventurous boy scout whose travels spanned the globe rather than the local woods, Tintin along with his dog, Snowy (Milou, originally) and his companion Captain Haddock, fascinated readers through a series of adventures to places like Russia, China, America (an exotic place to someone in France), India and fictional countries in the Balkans, South America and South East Asia.

    His stories, while primarily adventures peppered with humor, carried echoes of the political and social world at the time, some of which were naive and kind of silly in their treatment of non-European races and cultures, and some of which, as time went on and Hergé matured, were astute and sensitive to the appreciation of other cultures, particularly China.

    Hergé’s ligne claire, or “clear line”, style has been tremendously influential on European and Japanese comics artists and American newspaper comics artists from the early and mid 20th Century. His characters are simply and effectively drawn, while his backgrounds occasionally are quite detailed and often reflect careful research into real places and landmarks.

    His stories have been translated into dozens of languages and if you scope around the net, you’ll find a great deal of Hergé and Tintin material, toys, posters, fan sites and webrings as well as mention of the Tintin movies and stage plays.

    Hergé created 24 Tintin stories, the last one of which was left incomplete on his death in 1983. My favorite of them is Tintin in Tibet, in which Tintin’s unrelenting search for his Chinese friend Chang is an echo of Hergé’s own lost contact with his good friend of the same name during the Second World War.

    The PBS program POV is due to air a story on Tintin called Tintin and I tonight (Tuedsay, July 11) at 10pm. (It’s certain to be repeated.)

    There are wonderfully inexpensive albums of the Tintin stories available on Amazon or in most bookstores and comic stores worth their salt.

    Tintin.com gives a nice, colorful overview of the characters and stories. Discover Tintin is a good fan site. Tintinologist.org is a kind of central point for links to other Tintin resources.



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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
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The Art Spirit
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Rendering in Pen and Ink
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Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective
Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective

World of Urban Sketching
World of Urban Sketching

Daily Painting
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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