Lines and Colors art blog
  • Coraline Mystery Box

    Coraline Mystery Box
    Back in 2003, I stumbled across a promotion for the book The Da Vinci Code, little known at the time, in the form of a series of web-based clues, originating on author Dan Brown’s web site and leading through a series of automated emails and other web sites to an eventual puzzle solution that garnered the first group of participants free copies of the book. That initial Di Vinci Code “Webquest” was, I think, in no small part responsible for the web buzz that helped push the book into bestseller status.

    I couldn’t help but think of that again when I received a rather cryptic email from the folks at LAIKA, an animation studio in Oregon (983 miles from Hollywood, as a later missive points out), informing me that “Coraline is a fan of your work” and promising a mysterious gift, to be delivered by package carrier.

    This was a promotion for the new stop-motion animated film, Coraline, due in early February, adapted from the book by Neil Gaiman, and directed by Henry Selick, director of The Nightmare Before Christmas and James and the Giant Peach.

    (Stop-motion is a painstaking animation process in which small models are carefully positioned and re-positioned for each shot, one frame at a time, 24 frames per second of running film time. The models utilize hundreds of variations in faces to create mouth and eye movements and expressions. It is a filmmaking process that requires a Zen-like level of patience and an obsessive watchmaker’s devotion to detail.)

    I was expecting a small package with a simple promotional object, perhaps a booklet of postcards or something similar, but received instead a sizable box, well packed for shipping, in which was an astonishingly elaborate series of objects.

    The outermost was a wooden box, marked to hold seed packets, labeled “Ferry’s” and declaring that “Every Packet Dated”, “Flower Packets 10¢ (Except as Marked)” and “Vegetable Packets 5¢”.

    The box was complete with an inner label informing the vendor how to set up and arrange a seed packet display, below which was loosely glued an envelope, sealed with wax into which was set a black button. The envelope contained a note from the team at LAIKA. The note let me know that this was a one-of-a-kind collection assembled for me personally, a fact reinforced by details that let me know they were indeed familiar with Lines and Colors, the small metal plate on the lid of the box stating “Handmade in Oregon, 15/50”, as well as some references I’ve since found to other unique packages in the series, that were sent to other bloggers.

    Inside the box, under fancy patterned wrapping paper used as packing, was an array of objects: a large and antique-looking scrapbook, closed with cloth ribbons and a button (buttons being a key feature in the story), a heavy skeleton key attached to an old and worn looking luggage tag with a label of “Coraline dot com, Password: BUTTONEYES”, and a small ribboned gift box containing two large buttons, a needle and a spool of thread. The latter, one learns on investigating the story, is for replacing one’s eyes in order to remain in Coraline’s alternate world. Mmmmm….

    The scrapbook, though, was the main attraction, and offered surprises on par with my initial shock at the extravagance of the entire package.

    It opens, past patterned inside cover papers that match the wrapping paper used as packing, with a bookplate signed by director Henry Selick, declaring the volume to be Coraline – Magical Garden – Book No. 1 of 1.

    Under a sheet of sewing-pattern tissue that frames the pages front and back, the introductory frontspiece tells that: “Coraline Jones moves into a house situated on large, rambling grounds. In her real world and her other world, the pleasure of exploring such uninhabited nature is hers, and now yours. In this book, you can follow the exacting replicas of flora we hand-made to make Coraline’s fantastic garden come to life.”

    What follows is a beautiful series of images, with reproductions of production drawings and paintings as well as photographs of hand-made models, depicting various plants, flowers and odd flora, elaborate garden plans and related images from the film.

    As I leafed through the book (sorry, couldn’t resist), I was struck not only by the painstaking work that went into the design and creation of the flora for the film, but the unbelievable level of detail and attention that had gone into this package; which was indeed, as the initial email had promised, a gift, not merely a promotional gimmick. This is like a nice book of production art that I might purchase if it were available in a commercial printing, but far more than that, a hand-made one-of-a-kind art object, an assemblage with an attention to detail bringing to mind the obsessively designed book/object creations of Chris Ware.

    The images are printed on antique toned card stock, and hand-placed into traditional photo-album corners, some eighteen pages of them. They range from individual plant studies to production art for whole scenes. Many of them are exceptionally beautiful, all of them are delightful and indicative of the effort and imagination that has gone into the making of the film; visual ideas that have been carried out by a team of designers, illustrators, model makers, puppet makers and animators, evidently devoted to (obsessed with) crafting Coraline’s world with uncanny detail, visual texture and other-worldly delight.

    Missing, unfortunately, are credits for the images, particularly the illustrations. I know that the superb illustrator Tadhiro Uesugi has done a number of illustrations for the production of the film, and I believe the illustration I’ve chosen above, bottom, is reliably one of his, and I recognized some as the work of Chris Turnham, the others I’m less sure of. His own web site doesn’t seem to make mention of the project. Hopefully more of the actual production art will be made available, and eventually released as a book that everyone can buy.

    In the meanwhile, I’ve done something I essentially never do and posted a large number of images here from the “unboxing” of the Coraline Mystery Box, starting with the box itself and running through the pages of images. My apologies for the limited quality and lighting in my photographs, but I don’t have the facilities or time at the moment to do better, I’ll try to replace them in the future if I can.

    www.linesandcolors.com/coraline-mystery-box-images

    The one thing that was a bit anti-climactic after the amazing package, was the coraline.com web site, to which I (and you) now have a key (“BUTTONEYES”), that provides access to a short promo film showing the assembly of some of the models, and clips from the film, to the tune of early 1960’s “here is your modern kitchen” music.

    The password key is one of several, as I’ve found on looking up references to some of the other unique Coraline Mystery Boxes that have been received by other bloggers. Each different key opens the door to a different promotional video. The films are good, and well worth watching, but leave me looking for more (which, perhaps, is the idea).

    Hopefully, there is more to come as the movie release date approaches, and there is an option at the end of the clips to sign up for a mailing list.

    There is a currently more filled-out site devoted to the Coraline movie on FilmInFocus, with a Flash-based puzzle interface, that rewards the finding of clues with access to additional video clips, scenes from the film and info about the characters and story.

    Of course there is also the original book, and a graphic story adaptation with art by P. Craig Russell.

    You can see a number of the other fascinating and wonderfully varied Coraline Mystery Boxes that various bloggers have received on the ASIFA-Hollywood Animation Archive site, with links to the individual postings by the recipients detailing the contents. As a promotional campaign, this is certainly one of the most clever, imaginative, and work intensive I’ve ever encountered or heard of.

    If the Coraline film reflects the imagination, detail, artistry and obsessive effort exemplified by my encounters with the LAIKA team so far, it should be quite a treat.

    AddendumThe Coraline web site has been updated with a more extensive interactive site, and no longer requires of uses the passwords. The small trailers can still be accessed by exploring various sections of the site.



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  • Lindsay Goodwin

    Lindsay Goodwin
    It’s always interesting to look at the particular subject matter that artists find compelling. Some look to traditional subjects and perhaps put them into focus with their own point of view, others look for unique subjects, or variations and twists on traditional themes.

    Lindsay Goodwin is a young painter from California, who lived in Paris and travelled in Europe before returning to the U.S., who has a chosen to focus on restaurant interiors as subjects for her colorful, painterly images.

    It makes a lot of sense in terms of a choice of subject; restaurant interiors are intentionally designed to be interesting, welcoming and often utilize carefully chosen, attractive colors. In addition, restaurant interiors are arrayed with visually appealing objects like glassware, vases and flower arrangements.

    The subject also offers quite a range, from ornate and elaborate formal dining rooms to intimate bistros and informal bed and breakfast tables, as well as a range of location and nationality. (The image at top is of the restaurant in a hotel in Crillon le Brave in Provence, France; home to another artist I’ve written about on Lines and Colors, Julian Merrow-Smith).

    Goodwin’s subject matter also extends to related subject matter like hotels, opera houses and classic theaters, and includes dining rooms in private homes. There are also figurative and portrait pieces, and somewhat more traditional building exteriors.

    It’s easy to see influences from Sargent, Edmund Tarbell, William Merritt Chase, and other American Impressionists in her approach.

    Goodwin’s work has been featured in Southwest Art Magazine and the current issue of American Art Collector.


    http://lindsaygoodwin.com
    Bio and gallery at Ella Walton Richardson Fine Art
    Willow Gallery
    Jones-Terailliger Galleries
    Waterhouse Gallery (links at bottom to additional pages, and here)

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  • Scenes of the Season at Brandywine River Museum

    Brandywine River Museum, N.C. Wyeth
    There’s a tendency to think of landscape painting as primarily a summer activity, or at least one of diminished interest in the Winter, both because of the inconvenience of painting in the cold, and the expectation of less color in the winter landscape.

    Quite to the contrary, many painters and illustrators found great subjects in winter’s different range of colors and subjects, and some took particular delight in images of winter; and illustrators of course have a long tradition of portraying the Christmas holiday.

    For those in the area of southeastern Pennsylvania, there is a small but delightful show at the Brandywine River Museum of works from the permanent collection showcasing winter scenes and images of Christmas, that runs until january 11, 2009.

    The show includes prints by cartoonist Thomas Nast, who was in many was responsible for the image of St. Nicholas as a bearded, pipe smoking fellow with a sack of toys over his shoulder; as well as N.C. Wyeth’s colorful take on Kris Kringle (above, left) which owes more to J.C. Leyendecker’s interpretation of the Jolly One (see my post on Illustrators Visions of Santa Claus).

    N.C. Wyeth is nicely represented by several of his lesser known landscape paintings, and these are complimented by large, infrequently seen works in the Brandywine’s collection by Pennsylvania Impressionists Elmer Schofield and Edward Redfield.

    The show’s mix of illustration and gallery art includes prints by Winslow Homer and paintings by Ashcan School painter Everett Shinn, as well as illustrations by F.O.C. Darley, Frank X. Leyendecker (J.C. Leyendecker’s underappreciated brother), Maxfield Parrish and Jessie Wilcox Smith.

    Visitors to the museum can supplement their enjoyment of the show’s theme with other relevant pieces on view in other galleries, like Howard Pyle’s wintertime historical illustrations, N.C. Wyeth’s beautiful winter-themed illustrations for The Black Arrow (above, right) and son Andrew Wyeth’s winter scenes of the Brandywine Valley.

    For those not in the area, you might follow some of the links above, as well as looking into paintings by American artists who loved to paint in winter, like Edward Redfield and Fern Coppage (see my post on Fern Coppedge and George Gardner Symons, as well as my recent post on John F. Carlson).



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  • Giuseppe Arcimboldo


    According to a saying that became popular in the 1960’s, you are what you eat.

    Perhaps not as directly as in the marvelous and bizarre portrait heads created by 16th Century painter Giuseppe Arcimboldo out of arrangements of fruit, vegetables, tree roots, fish, birds and other natural forms, but a sobering thought nonetheless as most Americans prepare today for a traditional Thanksgiving Day turkey dinner.

    Born in Milan, Arcimboldo worked on frescos and tapestries in cathedrals in Italy and was also court painter to royalty in Vienna and Prague. Most of his traditional work has been lost, though a few examples survive, but his quirky and amusing portraits made from fruit, flowers and other elements of the natural world, as well as books and other man-made objects, remain, and attract attention to this day.

    Some of his fruit/vegatable portraits were less obvious, disguised in what were ostensibly paintings of arrangements of vegetables in bowls, in which the face was revealed when the images was viewed upside-down, a precursor of the popular optical illusions circulated in later centuries. These upside-down portraits, when viewed in their orientation as paintings of fruit or vegetables in bowls, were, along with more straightforward images sometimes attributed to Caravaggio, among the earliest examples of still life as isolated subject matter for paintings.

    The image above (large version here) is thought to be a likeness of Arcimboldo’s patron, Emperor Rudilf II, but it’s titular subject is Vertumnus, the Roman God of the seasons, whose penchant for changing his form to get what he wanted (like the favors of the goddess Pomona) personified the value of change in the practice of rotating crops to preserve the fertility of fields.

    Arcimboldo’s striking visions have inspired others to follow in a similar vein, like contemporary painter Andre Martins de Barros (link contains NSFW material).

    Arcimboldo’s paintings were celebrated by the Surrealists, who were always on the lookout for hallucinatory visionaries they could consider their precursors; and there has been some speculation that his inclination to see faces in arrangements of objects was the result of mental illness; a notion perhaps encouraged by his more disturbing images made of fish, birds and other animals, or the haunting images made of tree roots; but the truth is likely more prosaic. The Renaissance, a time of relative plenty and stability compared to the centuries that preceded it, not only provided the luxury of devoting more attention to art, but of indulging in puzzles, whimsies and amusement with the bizarre.

    The luxury to enjoy the fruits of life beyond the necessities of survival, in particular the bounty of art, is always something for which to be thankful.



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  • Larry Roibal

    Larry Roibal
    Larry Roibal is an illustrator known for his work in children’s books and romance novels. His portfolio has examples from those areas as well as landscapes and portraits.

    Roibal’s blog is often devoted to portraits of another sort, chronicling his practice of sketching character studies of people currently in the news directly on newspaper articles about those people.

    This is one of those cool ideas that obviously came about as the result of doodling and daydreaming (you know, the stuff you’re told not to do in school), and maintains some of that feeling of informal happenstance even though he’s been at it for a while.

    If the article isn’t from a corner of the paper that happens to include the date, Roibal clips out a dateline and pastes it on the piece. (I’m surprised he resisted the temptation to call this “Faces in the News” or something similar.)

    I picked a couple of significant events out of his recent crop, showing Obama drawn on an article about his victory in the presidential election, and ace Cole Hammels sketched over an article about the Phillies’ long-overdue clinching of the World Series (YAAAAAAAAAA!!!…er, sorry, where was I?…)

    Both the ephemeral nature of newsprint and the informal character of ballpoint pen give the drawings a sense of immediacy and make them feel like a natural part of the daily newsflow.

    This should be a syndicated feature.



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  • Max Fleischer’s Super Superman Cartoons

    Max Fleischer's Superman Cartoons
    I sometimes despair that people younger than a certain age will think that the generally terrible state of current television animation is what 2-D or hand-drawn animation is limited to.

    True, many of them have been introduced to the high-points of Japanese anime as exemplified by great directors like Hayao Miyazaki, but how many more think the warmed-over examples of anime available on TV are the height of that genre as well?

    It seems that everyone knows, through cultural osmosis if by no other means, about Bugs Bunny and some of the Disney classics, but how easily the actual achievements of great hand-drawn animation are submerged beneath the waves of over-hyped 3D features.

    Even more overlooked are some of the cinematic gems of the mid 20th Century that were shown as featurettes before feature films in the 1940’s, and later shown on television in the 1950’s.

    A shining case in point are the wonderful 8-minute Superman cartoons created by Max and Dave Fleischer’s studio. For more detail, see my previous post about Max Fleischer.

    As I mentioned in that post, the cartoons themselves can be viewed online via the Internet Archive or purchased on DVD. (You can also find some of them on YouTube in varying degrees of quality, or lack thereof.)

    Hans Bacher, on his terrific blog One1more2time3’s Weblog: Animation Treasures, which I also wrote about before, has posted a wonderful set of screen shots from 4 of those classics in an article titled up in the sky…, which allows you to stop and appreciate the beautiful drawing, backgrounds, composition, lighting, staging and “cinematography” that made these cartoons mini-masterpieces of animation.

    This is a film noir Superman, and still the best version of the character ever brought to the screen.



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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
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Daily Painting
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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