Lines and Colors art blog
  • Emmanuel Malin (update)

    Emmanuel Malin
    Emmanuel Malin is an illustrator, art director and concept artist for the gaming industry based in Paris. I initially profiled Malin here on Lines and Colors back in 2010.

    Malin creates fascinatingly textural images with layers of shapes within larger shapes defining his compositions. He works with both bright and muted color palettes, often contrasting low chroma complementary pairs with brighter clashes of more intense color.

    Malin frequently divides his larger forms into sub-forms with slight variations in color or value, and fills many of his spaces with visually appealing textural patterns. On top of these elements, he creates foreground elements that swoop and swirl in curvilinear fashion, the whole often suggesting not-quite-recognizable biological forms.

    On his website you’ll find highlights on the home page, along with two short animated sequences, and then galleries devoted to illustration, video games, sketches and comics.

    I particularly enjoy a series in the video games section for a gaming project he titles Alice Return in Madness (I think the eventually released game was titled Alice: The Madness Returns in the U.S.).

    Malin has a blog on Tumblr, the older version of which is on Blogger. In addition, you can find galleries of his work on Behance and CGHub, as well as some older entries as a participant in the Gorilla Artfare group blog. There is a brief interview with Malin on ImagineFX.



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  • Antti Rautiola

    Antti Rautiola
    Antti Rautiola is a painter and art director living in Helinski, Finland.

    On his website and his blog you will find examples of his work in plein air landscape and studio paintings, including paintings of his family.

    On his blog, in particular, you will find larger versions of his paintings, showing his loose, confident brushwork. He also has a number of process sequences, and frequently posts images of his plein air work in progress on location, something I particularly appreciate as I enjoy seeing how plein air painters select and develop their composition for a landscape.

    Rautiola has a wonderfully restrained use of color and value. Some of this may be in his response to the subtle light characteristic of the northern latitudes, but his interpretation of it gives much of his work a particularly strong feeling of color harmony.

    You can see some similarity in the character of the light in the paintings of fellow Finnish painter Arto Isolatalo, who I profiled in 2012 here on Lines and Colors, and from whose website links I found Rautiola’s work.

    Antti Rautiola currently has a solo window exhibition at Postikatu 1, Helsinki.



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  • Eye Candy for Today: three Howard Pyle drawings

    Howard Pyle, The Wonder Clock
    Today marks the birthday of the great American painter, illustrator and master of pen and ink, Howard Pyle.

    These three drawings, illustrations for one of Pyle’s own books, are in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which has high-resolution images of them. I’ve provided the titles and links to the images on the Met’s site below.

    I’ve taken the liberty here of adjusting the images to compensate for the age darkened board, bringing the background up to white.

    Dover Books has inexpensive reproductions of many of Pyle’s books, including The Wonder Clock, for which these illustrations were created. The reproduction is not the most sensitive to Pyle’s extremely fine lines, but they’re certainly good enough to enjoy.

    For more, see my previous posts on Howard Pyle here on Lines and Colors.



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  • Anders Zorn: some highlights

    Anders Zorn
    In my previous post on the brilliant Swedish painter Anders Zorn here on Lines and Colors, I concentrated on the exhibition currently at the National Academy Museum in New York (until May 18, 2014).

    I wanted to follow up with a more general selection of some of Zorn’s wonderfully painterly works, and some general resources for Zorn images on the web, which I’ve listed below. [Note: a number of Zorn’s paintings may be considered NSFW — depending, of course, on where you work.]

    My intention is to follow up with another post on Zorn’s etchings, which are amazing in their own right, and yet another on the “Zorn palette”.



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Bernard Hall still life

    After Dinner, Bernard Hall
    After Dinner, Bernard Hall

    Link is to zoomable image on Google Art Project. Downloadable high-resolution image on Wikimedia Commons. Original is in the Art Gallery of South Australia.

    Any one of the smaller groupings here would have made a superb still life — the bowl and lemon, the decanter and creamer, the teacup and apertif glass — but especially the oranges and their wonderful pedestal bowl.

    Beautiful.


    After Dinner, Google Art Project

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  • Lynn Boggess

    Lynn Boggess
    In writing about painters who work with thick impasto (such as Antonio Mancini), I have sometimes used “troweled on” as a metaphor to describe the heavy application of paint. In the case of West Virginia painter Lynn Boggess, however, “troweled on” literally applies to his painting method.

    Boggess works in a manner associated with painting knives; and though he does use large painting knives at times, he works at such a scale that cement trowels of varying sizes are among his most commonly used tools for the application of paint.

    Boggess’ approach is also unusual in that he paints his large canvasses on location, seeking out his subjects in the Appalachian woods and countryside. He has even constructed a special plein air painting platform that allows protection for his large canvasses when working in difficult weather.

    You can see both the platform and his tools on the “On Location” page of his website, and even better in a video from 2009, available on YouTube, and another devoted to The Setup as well as the painting technique. The videos also give a sense of the scale of his work. (I love the fact that his equivalent of a plein air wet panel carrier is mounted to a trailer towed behind his Jeep.)

    Ordinarily, as much as I like the effect of painting knives when used in conjunction with brushes, I find too many artists who work only with knives (or similar tools) have a limited vocabulary of marks — making their work feel too uniform in texture. Boggess is the antithesis of this; his trowels and knives are used to dash, slab, stroke, feather, scumble and scrape in a marvelous variety of marks and textures. In addition, the textural elements of his work give a sense of movement and liveliness to his paintings, sweeping your eye through the composition in zig-zag paths.

    For all of his attention to surface texture and paint application, much of Boggess’ work is characterized by a naturalistic sense of color, something that he pursues with the considerable effort required to take his painting approach into the field.

    Given the size at which he works, the textural elements of Boggess’ paintings are best appreciated in close-ups, as I’ve tried to highlight in detail crops accompanying the top three paintings above.

    Unfortunately, his own website provides a poor display of his work, with inexplicably small images confined to an awkward interface. I recommend his website for information on the artist, but his work is best viewed on the websites of some of the galleries in which he is represented, particularly Evoke Contemporary, which has the largest expanded views of his work I’ve found. I’ve listed other galleries below.



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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