Lines and Colors art blog
  • Fred Lynch, Drawings From the Road to Rome

    Fred Lynch, Drawings From the Road to Rome
    There is something special and wonderful about pen and wash drawing, in particular when done with brown or reddish brown washes, that gives it much of the power of painting while simultaneously keeping the unique visual charm of drawing.

    I’ve occasionally pointed out particular favorites from history, but it’s great to have contemporary practitioners of the form.

    Fred Lynch is an artist, illustrator and teacher who I have written about previously on Lines and Colors, and was one of the artists I highlighted in the article on ink drawing I wrote for the Spring 2014 issue of Drawing Magazine.

    Since then, Lynch has continued to delight with his location drawings in Italy, chronicled on his blog as Drawings From the Road to Rome.

    Lynch uses the beautiful range of value and texture available in his medium to capture the expression of sunlight on aged walls and streets of Italian towns, delighting in the play of highlight and shadow revealed in the interlocked geometry of the architectural forms.

    Lynch’s careful observation also includes lots of visually fascinating details, balanced with the open and textural areas of his compositions. I never get the impression, however, that he puts a lot of preliminary thought into composing his drawings, rather that he follows his artistic instincts, honed over years of location drawing, picking out what to include and what to leave out based on what appeals to him in his subject.

    As you go back in time through the blog, you will find the images get smaller, but you can find additional images on his Flickr stream and in his contributions to the Urban Sketchers group.

    In his role as a professor at Montserrat College, Lynch teaches a class on Journalistic Drawing in Italy as part of a four-week residential program in Viterbo, and posts some of the student’s work on a blog titled Drawing Viterbo.

    Lynch also has other presence on the web, listed below and in my previous article.

    [Addendum: Fred Lynch was kind enough to let me know that he also has a set of Pinterest boards, one of which features his own work, and the other 163(!) of which are resources on classical and contemporary artists, illustrators, sketchers, cartoonists, art genres and artistic concepts, including many boards on various artists sketching and painting in Italy. Timesink warning!]



    Categories:
    , ,


  • Eye Candy for Today: Daubigny landscape

    Les peniches, Charles-François Daubigny
    Les péniches, Charles-François Daubigny

    Image on Wikimedia Commons; original is in the Louvre.

    Sometimes I think history could have just bypassed Impressionism, and gone straight from Daubigny to contemporary plein air styles.


    Les péniches, , Wikimedia Commons

    Categories:
    ,


  • Francisco Goya

    Francisco Goya
    The life and career of Spanish master Francisco José de Goya y Luciente bridge the end of the 18th century and beginning of the 19th, a time in Spain of wars, upheaval, inquisition and radical change.

    Goya chronicled much of it in a mercurial style — from elegantly finessed to slashingly rough — that reflected the tenor of the times, and in many ways, anticipated and influenced the directions of such diverse future art movements as Realism, Expressionism, Surrealism and Modernism.

    Goya painted portraits, landscapes, still life, historical scenes and genre scenes, but was known in particular for his depictions of war and conflict — ostensibly in a manner of historical record, but the assumption is (and I think it’s pretty clear), that he was commenting on the misery, tragedy and madness of conflict in a manner that would not have been approved of by the established powers of the time.

    He painted what is considered the first straightforward life-size female nude in Western art that did not have some religious, allegorical or mythological narrative to excuse it, The Naked Maja, and a companion painting of the same figure in the same pose, but dressed, as The Clothed Maja (images above, middle). In some ways, the bold position and confrontational stare in the latter is more provocative than the nude version. Both were confiscated from the patron at one point by the Spanish Inquisition.

    At various times Goya painted genteel portraits and explosive, dramatic scenes of violence and despair. He was also a master draftsman and printmaker, depicting in one series Caprichos, or visual fantasies of social commentary on the follies of society (The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters, shown above, top), and in another The Disaster of War.

    Late in his life, his health and mental state failing, he painted a mysterious series of darkly themed paintings on canvas and directly on the walls of the house in which he was living, that have come to be known at the “Black Paintings“. Most of the wall paintings were transferred to canvas, but with little relative success. These were never meant by Goya to be sold or displayed, but were a personal outpouring of his own grief or rage. The most famous of them is Saturn Devouring his Son (above, forth from bottom), which is assumed by many to be an allegory of civil war couched in narrative of myth.

    There is currently an exhibition of Goya’s work at the Museum of Fine Arts Boston, Goya Order and Disorder, that is on view until January 19, 2015. There is a small preview on the museum’s site, but once again, as with the current exhibit of the work of illustrator Mac Conner in New York, the British newspaper The Guardian does a better job of previewing and promoting an American exhibition than the museum itself (images from the show, above top, down to the self-portrait of Goya painting).


    Goya Order and Disorder, MFA Boston, to 1/19/15
    Preview on The Guardian
    Image resources:
    Francisco Goya on The Athenaeum (note multiple pages at top)
    Web Gallery of Art
    Google Art Project
    Wikimedia Commons
    Met Museum, Timeline of Art History
    Wikipedia
    Artcyclopedia, many links and resources, note the tabs for “Museums” and “Image Archives”

    Categories:


  • Eye Candy for Today: Escher’s Three Worlds

    Three Worlds, M.C. Escher
    Three Worlds, M.C. Escher

    Lithograph, roughly 14×10 inches (36x25cm). Image on Wikiart, larger here.

    While it’s not one of Escher’s more obvious brain twisting visual conundrums, it’s a teaser nonetheless — also beautiful, subtle, and one of my favorites.

    In addition to the thought provoking subject, superb drawing and beautifully handled reflection and surface perspective, I love the way the composition transitions graphically from dark against light at the top to light against dark at the bottom.



    Categories:
    , ,


  • Casey Childs

    Casey Chiilds
    Casey Childs is a painter based in Utah who focuses on portrait and figurative subjects.

    His approach to paint handling varies from brusque to refined, in keeping with the feeling generated by his subject and composition. Often his figures will be painted in the context of room interiors, in the course of which he also works with still life subjects.

    While not exactly narrative, there always seems to be an element in Childs’ paintings of something unseen happening, whether suggested in the position of his subject, hinted at in the way your eye is lead through the composition or reflected in the expression in a face.

    Childs’ website has portfolios of his work in various categories of painting and drawing.

    In a recent project, Childs created charcoal portrait drawings of 25 Influential Figures, which have been released as a box set of prints.

    Working from historical photographs of figures as diverse as Louis Pasteur, Helen Keller, Frederick Douglass, Mark Twain and Frank Lloyd Wright (examples above), he has created a series of penetrating portraits that make wonderful use of lost and found line, paper grain expressed as texture and delicate value changes.

    [Via Vasari Oil Colors]



    Categories:
    ,


  • Eye Candy for Today: Canaletto’s drawing of the Porta Portello

    The Porta Portello with the Brenta Canal in Padua, Canaletto (Giovanni Antonio Canal), drawing in pen and brown ink with brown and gray washes
    The Porta Portello with the Brenta Canal in Padua, Canaletto (Giovanni Antonio Canal)

    On Google Art Project, high-res downloadable file on Wikimedia Commons, original is in the Albertina, Vienna.

    In pen and brown ink with brown and gray washes. Unfortunately, neither the museum or Google Art Project give the dimensions. To me it has the look of a fairly large drawing; I might hazard a guess at perhaps 24 inches across (60cm), but that’s only a guess.

    It’s worth either zooming the Google Art version or downloading the Wikimedia version to see the image details in larger views. The crops I can provide here don’t do the drawing justice.

    I just love Canaletto’s ink and wash drawings, perhaps second only to Rembrandt’s, which is saying something. Not that they’re particularly similar, just that they just have such wonderful qualities that I could stare at them for extended periods, slack-jawed with admiration.

    Canaletto manages to be simultaneously sharp and precise in his draftsmanship but loose and sketch-like in his rendering — a combination that just tickles my brain and makes it giggle like a happy baby. I think it has much to do with his delineation of straights with that beautifully wavy, broken line of his.



    Categories:
    , , ,


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
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

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