Lines and Colors art blog
  • Web Gallery of Art

    Web Gallery of Art
    The Web Gallery of Art (WGA) is one of the best and most extensive of the “online museums” on the web.

    The WGA is more specific than some, with a focus on European Art from the Gothic to the Romantic periods (1100 to 1850). The gallery has a search function, as you would expect, as well as an alphabetical Artist Index (at the bottom of every page).

    Clicking on an artist’s name in the index brings up either a page of thumbnails, or, if the artist’s listing is extensive enough, text links to two or more sections, each of which has a page or more of thumbnails.

    Clicking on a thumbnail opens a pop-up with a large version of the image. (I’ve experienced some problems with this when using Safari for Mac, try refreshing the window if it’s blank. The popup feature works more reliably in IE and Firefox). The popup has a choice of images sizes, though 100% seems optimal for quality.

    There is also a column in the thumbnails pages with an “I”; clicking on this gives you a page with a medium size image and text details about the image (date, size, medium and description or background information). The artist thumbnail pages and image detail pages also have a link at page top to the artist’s biography.

    An interesting feature of the WGA is the “Dual Mode” (a link at page top), which makes use of frames (a browser feature that allows for the display of more than one web page in the same window) to allow you to either search a list in one frame and have the results display in the other (the default), or, if you deselect that choice at the bottom of the frame, you can search two lists independently, bringing up two different selections side by side for comparison. (In the image above I’ve chosen to compare Titian’s Man With the Blue Sleeve to one of Rembrandt’s self portraits.)

    As usual with frames, it’s often possible to find yourself a bit confused and you may need to back out to the front page and start over, but it’s a nice feature if you get used to it.

    The Web Gallery of Art has an extensive database of over 20,000 images, lots of information about the artists and the individual works, and nicely includes many drawings and graphics as well as paintings. This can be a terrific resource, and/or a major time-sink.

    Enjoy.



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  • Mark A. Garlick

    Mark A. Garlick
    No, It’s not fireworks, at least not of the terrestrial variety.

    (For the benefit of those in other parts of the world, I’ll point out that today, July 4th, is Independence Day here in the U.S., a holiday usually associated with fireworks displays.)

    The fireworks shown here are celestial, in an interpretation of a supernova, the explosion of a large star that has collapsed in on itself when it can no longer sustain the fusion reaction necessary to hold its current form against the crush of its own gravity, in a painting by U.K. space artist and scientific illustrator Mark A. Garlick.

    Garlick has a doctorate in astrophysics, giving him the scientific background to understand the phenomena he is portraying from the inside out. He has a site devoted specifically to his space art at space-art.co.uk, and another more general portfolio site in which he has galleries of earth sciences illustrations, paleo art, science fiction illustration and additional space art.

    Garlick was working in traditional media, and some of the images are done in gouache, acrylic or pastel; but the majority of his recent work is done digitally, painted in Photoshop, sometimes with the addition of 3-D CGI in 3DS Max, Terragen or Bryce. He will also mix traditional and digital techniques.

    Though he works in a variety of genres, it is his space art and earth science illustrations that I find most appealing. His bright color palette and sense of precise but lively realism give a feeling of immediacy that photography often doesn’t. Of course, one of the things space artists can do is show us views that telescopes and probes cannot. (See my post on pioneering space artist Chesley Bonestell.)

    Garlck’s clients include Scientific American, Asimov’s Science Fiction, New Scientist, The Guardian, Astronomy Magazine, Sky and Telescope and others. He is also a fellow in the International Association of Astronomical Artists, an organization devoted to promoting the genre.

    Garlick is also the author of five popular books on astronomy.



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  • Guy Billout

    Guy Billout
    Guy Billout seems fascinated with patterns, whether of hedgerow mazes, the multiple columns of colonnades, tiled floors or repeated structures; particularly those patterns that lead us to one conclusion, only to be presented with another.

    Billout is a French illustrator who deals in quiet irony. His images are still and contemplative, even when portraying dramatic events like a ship being turned upside down under the crest of an enormous wave, lightning strikes being reeled in by a man on a roof with a boat hook or the prehistoric filling of the Mediterranean Sea as viewed by modern tourists at Gibraltar.

    He invites you into a seemingly normal scene, in which he quietly but firmly pulls the rug out from under your expectations as you notice the details.

    Lighthouse lights bend to surmount cliffs, or provide a walkway for the operator, a couple warm themselves by a fireplace, which on closer inspection contains the fire of a city being bombed, people walk on parts of an image, the sky line or horizon line, a white dune is climbed on one side by a desert traveller, on the other by an arctic hunter, bridges stop and resume in mid-crossing or are constructed by rolling out girders like duct tape in midair.

    Billout has been a long time contributor to the Atlantic Monthly and other major publications, as well as doing a variety of commercial work. He is a faculty member of the Parsons Illustration Department and his books include The Frog Who Wanted to See the Sea, Bus 24 and a new collection, Something’s Not Quite Right

    At times his reminds me of Magritte, twisting our preconceptions of how the world is arranged, sometimes of the juxtaposition of multiple worlds by magic realists like Rob Gonsalves; at other times he can bring to mind the over the edge humorous rearrangements of reality by Saul Steinberg or B. Kliban.

    Like all of those artists, Billout excels at that aspect of art that brings us to a refreshingly different point of view on the world. He lays out a a geometric grid of stillness to quite our minds, and then drops a pebble of irony into the pool, allowing it to gently ripple through our unconscious mind until it dawns on us that, indeed, something’s not quite right here; but not quite right in a most delightful way.

    It’s unfortunate that most of the images available are somewhat small, because the devil, as they say, is in the details.



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  • Illusionistic 3-D painting on sidewalks and walls

    Illusionistic 3-D painting on sidewalks - Kurt Wenner
    I’ve written before about the illusionistic 3-D sidewalk “paintings” in chalk by artists like Kurt Wenner and Julian Beever, as well as the large scale illusionistic murals by Eric Grohe.

    Web Urbanist has posted a nice overview, Amazing 3D Art from the Best Street Artists, with a selection of work by Wenner (image above), Beever, and others; including Edgar Muller and Manfred Stader, Tracy Lee Stum, Eduardo Relero, Rod Tryon and Anthony Cappetto, giving you a quick look at some highlights of this apparently growing phenomenon. It also features muralists like Grohe and Greg Brown, and even a 3-D graffiti artist known as Diam.

    Some of the pavement chalk art takes the form of large scale reproductions of famous works by artists like Da Vinci, Vermeer, Rembrandt and others.

    Much of the work that has made this a phenomenon is based on anamorphoses, images that are distorted in such a way that they only look “right” form a certain vantage point. The limitation is a trade off for the illusionistic power the images can have to appear three dimensional when seen from that viewpoint. You can see an example of how this works here.

    Anamorphosis has been used in art for centuries; you can see a particularly striking example of it in Hans Holbien the Younger’s famous double portrait The Ambassadors, which contains the anamorphic apparition of a skull.

    The new urban sidewalk artists have used this approach to create images of objects and environments that, when viewed from the correct vantage point, appear to extend above or below the pavement on which they are painted.

    Wenner has gotten new, upscale website since I wrote about him, casting himself as available for corporate commissions and highlighting his architectural designs. Beever is still coasting along like a street artist, with a homemade looking, 90’s style site, but he has added additional images.

    Wenner’s site includes some videos of him working, and there are some others on YouTube of a short documentary, Masterpieces in Chalk.

    If you look around, you’ll find a few not covered in the Urbanist article, like Cuong Nguyen.

    Muralists like Grohe or Brown are in the long artistic tradition of “trompe l’oeil” (French for “trick the eye”), in which artists have created images that appear to have dimensionality beyond the surface on which they are painted, relying less on anamorphosis and more on realism. This tradition includes some of the fantastic dome paintings in which the vault of heaven, filled with angels and religious figures floating in apparent disregard for gravity, is projected on the interior of a dome.

    Of course, if you step back and think about it, the modernists were right; all representational art is an illusion.



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  • John Ottis Adams

    John Ottis Adams
    John Ottis Adams, often referred to as “J. Ottis Adams”, was an Indiana painter, generally known as an American Impressionist, who studied in London at the South Kensington School of Art and in Germany at the Muinch Academy.

    Traveling to Europe to study was not uncommon for American artists in the late 1800’s, and Adams was one of a number of them who came away impressed with the European avant-guard painters of the time, i.e. the Impressionists.

    On his return, Adams settled in Muncie and devoted himself to the portrayal of the landscape of Indiana, as well as painting the lake area in Michigan, where he vacationed, and Florida, where he wintered.

    Adams helped to found and became an instructor at he Herron Art School, now the Herron School of Art and Design in Indianapolis.

    He was a member of the Hoosier Group, along with painters William Forsyth, Richard Gruelle and Theodore Steele; and he and his wife shared a house called The Hermitage in Brookville, Indiana with Steel and his wife. The area was a focal point for the group and the artists thought of it as the Barbizon of Indiana.

    Adams and Forsyth were also influential on the American Impressionist painter Francis Focer Brown.

    In some of Adams’ earlier work, you’ll find echoes of European traditionalist painters, figurative subjects, still life and a darker palette.

    The work for which he is best known is brighter and dappled with the textures of impressionist brushstrokes, though Adams generally preferred a more reserved and naturalistic palette than the European Impressionists and many of their American counterparts.

    I particularly enjoy the overall texture his brushwork gives to the surface of his paintings and his handling of streams and small rivers.


    John Ottis Adams on The Athenaeum (click for detail, and again for larger image)
    ARC
    Bios on Wikipedia, Suite 101, and RAM
    Artcyclopedia

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  • Stephan Martiniere (update)

    Stephan Martinier
    Since I wrote about Stephan Martiniere a couple of years ago, he has updated his site, and his career, with numerous additions.

    Martiniere is a concept artist, art director and science fiction artist with a fertile imagine, superb skills as an artist and long, impressive resumé. In addition to his many stunning book covers and beautiful concept work for films like The Fifth Element, Star Wars II and III, I Robot and Star Trek XI; he has moved headlong into the gaming industry, “shapeshifting” his career, as his current bio puts it.

    Martiniere has worked for three years as visual art director at Cyan, on their visually lavish games like Uru: Ages Beyond Myst, Uru: The Path of the Shell and Myst 5. He has now assumed the role of Creative Visual Art Director for Midway Games.

    His expanded web site is a cornucopia of strikingly imaginative works in all of his areas of endeavor, including work for animated cartoons and theme park environments. Martiniere has a fresh crisp drawing style in his sketches and roughs, and a remarkable talent for projecting scale, atmospheric distance and detail in his more finished works. You can see where he has been influenced by greats in the field like John Berkey and Syd Mead.

    There are two collections of his Martiniere’s work available, Quantum Dreams: The Art of Stephan Martiniere and the recent Quantumscapes: The Art of Stephan Martiniere, as well as the more specific Art of Midway: Before Pixels and Polygons.

    If you are fond of concept art or science fiction illustration, be aware that his site can be a major time-sink. It’s easy to get happily lost in Martiniere’s dazzling visions of other worlds.



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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
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