Lines and Colors art blog
  • Hans Heysen

    Hans Heysen
    Hans Heysen is another of those wonderful turn of the 20th century Australian artists that we just don’t hear enough about here in the U.S.

    Born in Germany, Heysen came to Australia with his parents at the age of 7. He studied in Australia and for four year, in Europe.

    He worked in oil, charcoal and was a printmaker, but is renowned for his watercolors. Though his subjects included still life, figures and landscapes of many kinds, Heysen is known primarily for his luminous, beautifully handled scenes that incorporate the wonderful gum trees native to Australia.

    You can see his influence on contemporary Australian painters like John McCartin.

    There appear to be only a few sources online for images of Heysen’s work. The largest images I could find are on the National Gallery of Victoria and the Christies auction site. Images on the Art Gallery of New South Wales website are not as large, but still good sized. The Art Gallery of South Australia has a wide selection of images, though they are not large (scroll down on that page, if link doesn’t work, try a search).

    There is a collection of his work from 2008 that may be available used.

    [Via Making a Mark]



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Tiffany glass mosaic

    Garden Landscape, Louis Comfort Tiffany & Studio
    Garden Landscape, Louis Comfort Tiffany & Studio

    Favrille-glass mosaic, 103×114 in (263×290 cm); in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

    Tiffany may have made this in preparation for work on the even larger Dream Garden mosaic, here in Philadelphia, on which he collaborated with Maxfield Parrish.

    I love the subtle, painterly representation of the clouds.



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  • Shushana Rucker

    Shushana Rucker
    Like a musician who prefers the emotional tone of downtempo compositions, Philadelphia based painter and printmaker Shushana Rucker finds visual fascination in the muted contrasts of overcast skies and the overlooked subjects of industrial buildings, railways and related structures.

    Having had a fascination with railroads as a child, I particularly respond to her evocative portrayals of railroad tracks, along with the power lines, bridges and embankments that accompany them. In these, Rucker’s subtle palette and compressed values often emphasize the geometric and textural elements of her subjects.

    Her prints likewise emphasize strongly geometric compositions and textures in her depictions of industrial buildings, rail beds and bridges, as well as the kinds of houses that one finds along the railways here in southeastern Pennsylvania.

    Rucker’s work will be on display at the F.A.N. Gallery in Philadelphia in a solo show titled “Shushana Rucker – Connections and Observations“, that runs from today to October 31, 2015, with an opening reception tonight, October 2, 2015, from 5-9 PM.



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Botticelli idealized portrait

    Idealized Portrait of a Lady (Portrait of Simonetta Vespucci as Nymph), Sandro Botticelli
    Idealized Portrait of a Lady (Portrait of Simonetta Vespucci as Nymph), Sandro Botticelli

    Tempera on wood panel, 32×21 in (82×54 cm)

    Link is to zoomable version on Google Art Project; downloadable file on Wikimedia Commons; original is in the Städel Museum, Frankfurt. There is also an article devoted to the painting on Wikipedia.

    This exquisite 15th century tempera portrait is listed as “generally accepted” to be by the famous master Sandro Botticelli. I’m no expert, but it has the feeling of the few Botticelli’s I’ve had the pleasure of seeing, and certainly appears to be at that level of mastery.

    There is also a generally accepted assumption that the model for the painting was a well known Florentine noblewoman named Simonetta Vespucci, here in elaborate costume as a nymph (a spirit or minor goddess representing a place or aspect of nature).

    Though the face is in profile, as was often the custom in Renaissance portraits, the shoulders are turned three quarters toward us to display the medallion she wears, recognizable as cameo known as “Nero’s Seal“, that was in the possession of Lorenzo de’ Medici at the time.

    The zoomable and downloadable versions of the image are wonderfully large and allow us to see the precise but elegantly handled tempera technique up close.


    Idealized Portrait of a Lady, Google Art Project

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  • Sean Sevestre

    Sean Sevestre, concept art
    Sean Sevestre is a freelance concept artist and illustrator based in Edinburgh, Scotland. Beyond that I have little information about his background.

    His work, though primarily digital and modern, has a character of classical and Victorian art, with a nod to classic literature. On his Tumblog you will also find sketches and work done in traditional media, as well as digital location paintings.



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  • Rovina Cai

    Rovina Cai, illustration
    Australian illustrator Rovina Cai works primarily in graphite, defining her forms in curving linear textures that also sweep through atmospheric backgrounds.

    Her frequently gothic-themed illustrations also can have color — sparingly applied either digitally or in watercolor, but with an eye to allowing the gestural qualities of her graphite drawing to come through.

    The portfolio on her website is more extensive than it looks; many of the pieces are accompanied by multiple images that are large enough to appreciate her marvelous textural approach.

    You can also find additional pieces on her Behance portfolio and deviantART gallery, as well as a selection of giclée prints on inPrint.

    [Via Spectrum Fantastic]



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(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

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Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective
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