Lines and Colors art blog
  • Jim Kay

    Jim Kay, illustration, Harry Potter, A Monster Calls
    Jim Kay is a British illustrator know for his illustrations for A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness, and the pop-up book, Bugs with George McGavin, and lately — in particular — for his work on the new Illustrated Editions of the Harry Potter series.

    The first in that series, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone: The Illustrated Edition is due to be released in the U.S. on October 6, but pre-release previews are already bringing Kay well-deserved attention.

    His take on the stories is unique and different — no mean feat for a series with a visual look already firmly entrenched in popular culture by the wildly successful movies. His approach, however, has a visual charm and quirky character that make me wish the movies were animated in that style rather than live action.

    Kay’s other work is similarly idiosyncratic, with lots of attention to mood and texture.

    Unfortunately, his website gallery is a bit more limited than one might like, and his website is hampered by a terrible navigation system — in which everything must be accessed by a drop-down menu hidden under an uninformative “home” link that doesn’t even look like a menu (sigh).

    However, once you find your way to them, his site does provide some large images (there is a separate Harry Potter section), as well as a brief description of his process. Kay works in ink (much of it “thrown or blown on”), watercolor, pencil and monoprints, as well as collage and some compositing in Photoshop. He does a lot of preliminary and alternate versions, and says that less than 15% of his working output makes it to the final book.

    You can find additional previews of the Harry Potter Illustrations on io9, Tor.com and Scholastic.

    [Via io9]



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Pieter Claesz Peacock Pie

    Still Life with Peacock Pie, Pieter Claesz
    Still Life with Peacock Pie, Pieter Claesz

    In the National GAllery of Art, DC, with zoomable or downloadable image, also downloadable image on Wikimedia Commons.

    It’s interesting to compare this large (30,51inches, 77x129cm), sumptuous still life to a similar composition in the collection of the Rijksmuseum that I featured previously, Still Life with a Turkey Pie.

    I love the reflections in the pewter flagon.



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  • Luigi Marchione

    Luigi Marchione, concept art, set design, digital plein air
    Luigi Marchione is an Italian concept artist, stage set designer and art director who brings to his work a wonderful feeling of Renaissance and Baroque art.

    Though he sometimes works in traditional media — such as soft pastel, charcoal and graphite powder on prepared paper — the majority of the pieces are digital painting done in Photoshop and Painter, including a number of examples of digital plein air painting.

    I particularly enjoy his beautiful interiors — rich with the feeling of interiors by the Dutch and Italian Baroque masters, filled with light and texture that, on closer examination, are briefly noted and masterfully suggested.

    To me, he appears to have a particular admiration for Dutch interiors, like those of Pieter de Hooch, which comes through in compositions in which doors open into additional rooms and spaces, each with its own character of light.

    Marchione’s practice of digital location painting informs his concept art and set designs, giving them an immediate, naturalistic feeling — even those in which he evokes the character of past centuries.



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Aegidius Sadeler rhino

    Fable of the Rhinoceros and Elephants, Aegidius Sadeler, etching, Rijksmuseum
    Fable of the Rhinoceros and Elephants, Aegidius Sadeler

    Etching, roughly 3 1/2 x 4 1/2 inches (96x112mm), 1608. In the Rijksmuseum.

    Today — I am informed in a tweet from the Rijksmusem — is World Rhino Day. In celebration they point to a selection of rhino images from their collection, from which I focused on this wonderful etching by Aegidius Sadeler.

    Not only is the exotic beast made more so by Sadeler’s marvelously textural line work, the fairly-tale like elephants and elegantly rendered tree are a bonus.



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  • Women Painting Women, RJD Gallery 2015

    Women Painting Women, RJD Gallery 2015: Whalen, Rebecca Tait, Nancy Boren, Pamela Wilson
    Women Painting Women is the title and subject of a group show at the RJD Gallery in Sag Harbor, NY, that runs from October 10 to November 4, 2015.

    The large example images on the gallery’s own website are watermarked to an extent that renders them essentially pointless. However, there is a selection of unmarked and zoomable images on the gallery’s Artsy page.

    (Images above: Yana Movchan, Andrea Kowch, Beth Sistrunck, Deborah Chapin, Teresa Elliott, Rae Whalen, Rebecca Tait, Nancy Boren, Pamela Wilson)



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  • Craig Drake

    Craig Drake, posters, Star Wars
    Craig Drake is an artist and designer who worked for a long time at Lucasfilm.

    He has recently created a series of posters of characters from Star Wars, as well as other movies and aspects of pop culture. These are rendered in a sleek, minimalist style, with precise but fluid lines and flat areas of carefully controlled color.

    You can see his admiration for the classic minimalist work of Patrick Nagel, particularly in some of the images that are not pop culture icons, just women’s faces.

    Drake has collected a number of his poster images into a book, simply titled Craig Drake: Volume I, that is available now for pre-order through Hero Complex Gallery for shipping the week of October 12. It will also be available in person at the upcoming 2015 New York Comic-Con.

    [Via io9]



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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
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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
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