Lines and Colors art blog
  • Jacob Kerssemakers

    Jacob Kerssemakers
    Most painters who buy canvas by the roll cut off rectangles in common sizes. Dutch artist Jacob Kerssemakers, in contrast, cuts his 30 foot rolls lengthwise into horizontal strips, 10 to 20 inches high, to accommodate his novel approach to plein air painting on long scrolls.

    There is a short film by Roland Kemp on YouTube of Kerssemakers working at a plein air event in Kenya that shows his process — and the custom easel and spindle arrangement he’s created for deploying his rolls in easy-to-mange sections (screen caps, first seven images above).

    In the video, he works through in an initial pass — drawing with light washes, rolling and unrolling from the right as he goes — then makes a second pass for final painting in oil and acrylic.

    Kerssemakers initially developed his penchant for working this way while working in the studio with markers on blotter paper. (I remember my own experiences as teenager making long scrolling pen drawings on small rolls of adding machine paper, so I can understand the appeal.)

    He moved from there to ink on rolls of watercolor paper and then to watercolor, before developing his process for oil and acrylic.

    Kerssemakers says that a light touch and care not to roll or re-roll repeatedly allows the use of oils without too much lifting from the back of the canvas.

    There are additional videos of Kerssemakers and his work on YouTube, though the ones that pan through his paintings do so too rapidly.

    Kerssemakers has a website. Unfortunately it’s one of those multi-artist cookie-cutter sites, and suffers from poor presentation, particular for Kerssemakers’ unique format. His work would benefit from a specifically designed interface that would allow viewers to scroll through his long works at their own pace.

    Similarly, Kerssemakers has had to find sometimes makeshift ways to physically display his unusually sized works (images above, bottom two), at times simply resorting to taping the longer ones to gallery walls.

    I encountered Kerssemakers on the Outdoor Painter site, which has a more extensive article on the artist and his process.



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Piranesi architectural fantasy

    Part of a spacious and magnificent harbor for the use of the ancient Romans opening onto a large market square..., Giovanni Battista Piranesi
    Part of a spacious and magnificent harbor for the use of the ancient Romans opening onto a large market square…, Giovanni Battista Piranesi

    Etching, engraving, drypoint and sulphur tint, 16×21″ (20x54cm). From a portfolio titled Various Works of Architecture, perspectives, grotesques, and antiquities; designed and etched by Giambattista Piranesi, Venetian Architect. In the collection of Metropolitan Museum of Art. Use the Fullscreen link and zoom controls or download arrow.

    In addition to his more famous series of “Imaginary Prisons“, eighteenth century architect and artist Giovanni Battista Piranesi created a stunning series of graphics depicting actual Roman ruins, and others showcasing his fantastic imaginings of potential Roman architectural glory.

    In all three ranges of subjects, Piranesi was fascinated with structures of enormous scale (far anticipating the exaggerated scale of imaginary environments favored by contemporary science fiction, fantasy and visual development artists).



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  • Carla Falb

    Carla Falb
    New Jersey based artist Carla Falb finds inspiration in the roller coasters that tower above that state’s Atlantic Ocean beachfront resorts.

    Her portrayals, based on her own riding experience and photographs, are at times more or less abstract. In their swing toward realism, blurred with speed and imbued with the disorienting sense of chaotic motion, at the other end of that spectrum, calm and sculpturally geometric.

    There are two series on Falb’s website (accessed from a hidden pop-out menu at left), one of roller coasters, the other of nightlife and exotic dancers.

    Paintings from both series have been selected for an exhibition titled Euphoria: New Paintings by Carls Falb at the Alumni Sales Gallery of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, here in Philadelphia. The show is on display until July 28, 2013.

    The recent storm damage to the New Jersey coast prompted a more straightforward representation of a roller coaster from Falb that is currently the frontspiece of her website, depicting the Jet Star coaster that was washed out from Seaside Heights (above, second from bottom).



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Jean-Etienne Liotard portrait

    Portrait of Marie Fargues, Jean-Etienne Liotard
    Portrait of Marie Fargues, Jean-Étienne Liotard

    In the Rijksmuseum. Use zoom controls at bottom, of create a free account and download images for “Personal Use”.


    Portrait of Marie Fargues, Jean-Etienne Liotard

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  • KIm Jung Gi

    KIm Jung Gi
    Despite some glaring flaws in its presentation, this time lapse video of Kim Jung Gi drawing a complex panorama in markers, across two walls at 90° and apparently without preliminary sketch, is fascinating.

    Starting with a driver’s face, he goes on to draw cars, bikes, scuba divers and a variety of animals and people, including a self portrait (in red) near the end.

    Though there is music initially, it quickly ends, and the video runs an hour and a quarter. James Gurney suggests listening to podcasts while watching.

    Unfortunately, the video is marred by a presentation that includes a line advertising a website that features Kim Jung Gi’s work (along with other artists), that is unnecessarily overlapping the image and annoyingly animated.

    In addition the video (frustratingly, inexplicably) ends abruptly without a good view of the finished image, and I haven’t been able to find a still of the final piece.

    There is another, much shorter drawing demo here. I’ve included links to Kim Jung Gi’s other sites below.

    Watching this kind of stream of consciousness drawing reminds me a bit of a time I got to watch Jean “Moebius” Giraud draw convention sketches for an hour or so — seemingly effortlessly.

    [Note: some of the images on the linked sites (though not in the video) are distinctly NSFW and not suitable for children.]

    [Via Gurney Journey]



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Emil Carlsen still life

    Still Life with Fish, Emil Carlsen
    Still Life with Fish, Emil Carlsen

    In the National Gallery of Art, Washington; use “Zoom” control.

    Early in his career, the Danish-American painter spent six months in Paris, where he studied the still life paintings of Jean Siméon Chardin, apparently to great effect.


    Still Life with Fish, Emil Carlsen

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Vasari Handcraftes artist's oil colors

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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)

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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
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Daily Painting
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Drawing on the right side of the brain
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