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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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Little Fluffy Clouds

When I first saw the recent animated McDonald’s ad for their Aisian Salads (“Queen for a Day”), with its retro-sixties animated movie credits style images, I was reminded of the nicely crafted eSurance ads created by the Ghostbot animation studio (see my previous post on Ghostbot).The McDonald’s ad is the creation of a studio that’s new to me called Little Fluffy Clouds (named after the deliriously repetitive ambient piece by Orb), founded by English director/producer Betsy De Fries and Dutch animation director Jerry van de Beek.
When I checked them out, I found a nice range of 3-D CGI and 2-D animation for a variety of clients.
I can’t give you links to individual pieces because the interface in in Flash. Go to “Montage” to see their demo reel, which will give you an overview of their work (with an emphasis on CGI).
You’ll find the McDonald’s piece (possibly done in Flash) in the “Spots” section, along with others for Verizon, Budweiser and Coke.
In the “Shorts” section check out their self-promo, Neptune, named for the Gustav Holst piece from The Planets that it interprets as an underwater fantasy.
There is an HTML version of the site, with a Site Map, that has more background information (but less images) than the Flash version.
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Kelly Freas
The 1950’s was a time when interest in science fiction and fantasy flowered. Pulp science fiction magazines and inexpensively printed books became increasingly popular and along with the stories came an increased demand for illustration.Frank Kelly Freas, who generally didn’t use his first name professionally (and whose last name is pronounced “freeze”), started in 1950 became one of the most prolific, popular and respected science fiction artists of the era. His wild, colorful, fantastic and wonderfully fun illustrations of robots, aliens, spaceships, strange landscapes and colorful characters delighted generations of science fiction fans.
In addition, Freas was a regular contributor to Mad magazine, creating numerous covers and interior illustrations, including wonderful parodies of Norman Rockwell style Saturday Evening Post covers. Although Will Elder drew the first drawing of what was to become Mad’s signature character, Alfred E. Neuman, it was Freas (and later Norman Mingo) who defined him.
He could move back and forth between “serious” illustration and humorous illustrations that were like painted cartoons. Freas also did medical illustration and album covers as well as painting the Skylab I insignia for NASA.
His official site contains links to merchandise, but a limited number of images, and doesn’t seem to have been updated since his death in 2005.
There is an illustrated biography on the Bud Plant Illustrated Books site, a gallery (in French), a gallery of some of his Mad covers and a listing of some of his work online on the Artcyclopedia site.
The latter includes links to 5 galleries of Kelly Freas art on the ImageNETion site. I recommend these only with a strong caveat. These galleries are linked to multi-page pop-ups, pop-unders and the kind of aggressive JavaScript code the opens multiple full-screen ad windows. That being said, if you are armed with a strong pop-up blocker the images in the galleries are worthwhile, large and a nice selection: Gallery 1, Gallery 2, Gallery 3, Gallery 4, Gallery 5.
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Fred Wessel
After taking a trip to Italy to view the art of the Renaissance, Fred Wessel was inspired to explore not only Renaissance painting techniques but the idea, common in that time but almost unknown now, of the painting as a precious object.His sharply incised portraits, nudes, flower studies and still lifes are often set against patterned backgrounds, at times prepared with gold leaf, combining realist painting with the decoration of surface and the use of precious materials. They are also often displayed in elaborate frames, again with gold leaf as was also a common practice in the Renaissance.
Wessel’s site contains a Technique section in which he steps through the process of creating an egg tempera portrait of his daughter in the traditional Renaissance painting methods outlined by Cennino d’Andrea Cennini’s Il Libro dell’ Arte, one of the respected painting manuals from the middle ages that is still used by artists today. Wessel goes through the process from the base drawing in ink to the terre verde grisaille to the application of warm skin tones layered thinly over the greens to produce the final portrait.
Wessel also conducts workshop tours of Italy, along with watercolorist Jeremiah Patterson, in which he teaches such traditional Renaissance techniques as egg tempera painting, gold leaf guilding, and silverpoint drawing.
Wessel’s site also provides links to some resources including The Society of Egg Tempera Painters, where you will find more information about technique and history of the medium as well as a gallery of artists.
Link via Art Knowledge News.
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Elizabeth Shippen Green
Sometimes who we encounter as a teacher can have a dramatic effect on our development as an artist, and even who we are as a person. Elizabeth Shippen Green encountered Howard Pyle.Green began her study of art at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, drawing from plaster casts of classical sculpture for a year before moving on to life drawing. Among her teachers there were such notable artists and teachers as Thomas Anshutz, Robert Vonnoh and Thomas Eakins.
Even before graduating from the Academy she had begun working as an illustrator in Philadelphia, illustrating newspaper articles and then creating advertising illustrations for the large Strawbridge and Clothier department store.
After graduating she decided to continue her study and enrolled in Howard Pyle’s illustration classes at Drexel. (The Academy had actually declined Pyle’s offer to teach there, snobbishly refusing to have classes in illustration at the fine arts school.) Green had learned some of the technical side of illustration, which had to be prepared for reproduction by engravers, from her father, Jasper Green, who was a former Academy student and an artist/correspondent for Harper’s during the Civil War.
Under Pyle’s tutelage Elizabeth Shippen Green developed into a superb illustrator. It was also at Pyle’s classes that she met Jessie Wilcox Smith, and Violet Oakley. The three young women were to become lifelong friends and would spend much of their lives sharing studios at Cogslea and The Red Rose Inn, both outside of Philadelphia. All three would achieve a striking degree of success in the overwhelming male profession of illustration. (Pyle was notable for the serious training of women illustrators at a time when women were thought of as likely to drop their interest in such things when they found a husband and thus their “proper place” in life.)
Green worked in charcoal, a medium favored for drawing at the Academy (even to this day), and in pen and ink, creating drawings strongly influenced by her mentor. With the advent of color printing, Green, along with Smith, developed a multimedia approach to illustration. The initial illustration would be a charcoal drawing to which fixative would be applied, allowing for the addition of color with watercolor or thin glazes of oil. Additional layers of charcoal, fixative and color could be added. The result is a beautiful marriage of painting and drawing that carries much of the appeal of both. There is a good description of her working methods here.
Green was also in advance of her contemporary illustrators by being one of the first to utilize the new medium of photography, to which she was introduced at the Academy, to create reference images for her illustrations, something that is now a common practice.
Green eventually married Huger Elliot, a professor of architecture, (signing her later works Elizabeth Shippen Green Elliot) and left the studios she had shared with Smith and Oakley and moved to New England, New York and eventually back to Philadelphia. All the while she continued to produce notable work and left a rich legacy of beautiful images.
I’ll point you to some resources, in particular Paul Giambarba’s wonderful “Elizabeth Shippen Green; An Appreciation” on his consistently excellent blog, 100 Years of Illustration and Design. (See my previous posts about 100 Years of Illustration and Design and Howard Pyle.)
There is also a very good online resource about Green and her work from an exhibition mounted by the Library of Congress in 2001, A Petal From The Rose: Illustrations by Elizabeth Shippen Green.
I will highly recommend a book on the three artists, Green, Smith and Oakley, by Alice A. Carter: The Red Rose Girls : An Uncommon Story of Art and Love. It is a fascinating personal story, an informative look at a key period in American illustration and is, of course, beautifully illustrated.
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Dust Art

Just for a little amusement on a Friday morning, and to point out that anything that allows you to make a mark can be a medium for visual expression, here’s an article from the Austin American-Statesman about Scott Wade, who draws reasonably complex images in the road dust that accumulates on the back of his Mini Cooper.Wade uses his fingers, as you might expect, but also paintbrushes, to lightly smear or lift off the dust, and popsicle sticks, I assume for a “palette knife” effect.
Talk about temporary art.
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Flight 3

Yesterday was Wednesday, the day when most comic shops get their new comics for the week. I stopped into Between Books, the unique little bookstore/comics shop in Delaware where I buy my comics, and was delighted to find a shiny new copy of Flight 3 waiting for me.Flight 3 is the third and much-anticipated installment in the Flight series of comics anthologies. The Flight books are about the potential – more than that, the realized potential – of alternative comics, of the revitalization of the anthology as a viable comics format, of the transition of comics artists from the web to print and of the artistic voices of a new generation of comics creators.
If you find superhero comics unappealing (or just a bit tiresome), or if you are just curious about what else the comics art form has to offer, here’s a great place to start: 26 independent comics artists gathered in one volume with fresh, vital and individualistic visions of what comics can do and say.
Among the creators in Flight 3 are a number of artists that I’ve profiled in previous posts here on lines and colors, including Rad Sechrist, Kean Soo, Michel Gagné (also here) and Kazu Kibuishi (also here), who is the driving force behind the Flight anthologies.
For more information see the the Flight blog, and Kibuishi’s Bolt City. Also see my previous post on the preview for Flight 3.
The Flight blog features a terrific Flight 3 Preview section with lots of sample artwork. (There is even a Flight 4 mini-preview on Newsarama.)
Here is an Amazon link for Flight 3, as well as the previous volumes, Flight 1 and Flight 2.
Even if you think you don’t like alternative comics, or especially if you think you don’t like comics at all (I’m talking to the fine art contingent here), try to find a copy in a comics shop or bookstore and just leaf through it. You may be surprised at how you take to Flight.
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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











