Lines and Colors art blog
  • Eye Candy for Today: Klimt’s Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer

    Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer, Gustav Klimt
    Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer (detaile), Gustav Klimt

    Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer I (also sometimes called “Woman in Gold” or “Lady in Gold”), Gustav Klimt; gold leaf, silver leaf, and oil on canvas; 55 x 55 inches (140 x 140 cm); in the collection of the Neue Galerie, New York.

    Link is to the file page for the Neue Galerie version of the image on Wikimedia Commons.

    This and The Kiss are the most widely recognized works by 19th century Austrian symbolist painter Gustav Klimt.

    Both paintings are from Klimt’s “Golden Phase”, in which — inspired by the use of gold leaf in Byzantine mosaics in Venice and Ravenna — he began to incorporate gold leaf into his paintings. This is the most elaborate of his works from the period, incorporating not only the metal leaf, but bas-relief created with dimensional applications of gesso.

    It is titled “Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer I” because Klimt painted a second, much less complex and dramatic portrait of her.

    There is a Wikipedia page devoted to the painting that goes into more detail, including the sexual subtext of its imagery and the story of its disposition and seizure by the Nazi regime.

    You will find many images of this work that are much brighter, more saturated and shifted in hue — even on the Wikipedia article about the painting.

    However, if you follow that link to Wikimedia Commons, as I did, you will find a very different, darker and considerably more subdued version of the image as supplied by the Neue Galerie. The Wikimedia editors indicate the Neue Galerie image has superseded the brighter version as the recommended version of the image.

    The bright version looks to me like it suffers — as do so many online art images — from someone throwing the image into Photoshop and cranking up the brightness and saturation because the more faithful image isn’t “pretty” enough.

    However, at the risk of being hoist on my own petard, I have slightly increased the exposure on the version of the Neue Galerie’s image that I’m showing here.

    it has been my experience in regard to images with which I’m personally familiar, that many museums and galleries post images of works in their collections that are darker than the real object. (Why this is so still eludes me.)

    I have not had the pleasure of seeing this painting in person, but my guess is that the appearance of the real work is somewhere between the two versions, and closer to the Neue Galerie version. If someone who has seen the work in person can correct me, please do. I’ve based my adjustment on images of other works by Klimt from the same time period.



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  • Charles Leickert (revisited)

    Charles Leickert
    Charles Leickert

    Belgian born 19th century painter Charles Henri Joseph Leickert spent most of his career living and painting in the Netherlands. He is noted for his winter scenes, particularly of activity on frozen rivers, and his cityscapes, rich with the textures of brick and stone.

    When I first featured Leickert on Lines and Colors back in 2009, there were fewer images available of his work on the web, and I was also not including as many images in my posts as I am now.



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Robert Spear Dunning still life

    Still life with Orange and Plum, Robert Spear Dunning
    Still life with Orange and Plum, Robert Spear Dunning (details)

    Still life with Orange and Plum, Robert Spear Dunning; oil on canvas, roughly 8 x 10″ (20 x 25 cm); link is to image file page on Wikimedia Commons; as far as I know, the original is in a private collection.

    19th century American painter Robert Spear Dunning gives us an elegantly simple painting of an orange and a plum. His exposure of the interior of the orange, and his meticulous eye for texture and color, lend the painting a feeling of complexity comparable to a more elaborate composition.

    Though he also painted landscapes, Dunning’s primary subjects were arrangements of fruits or vegetables, occasionally augmented with dishware.

    Dunning was sometimes criticized for continuing traditions from the middle of the century into a later period when they had fallen out of favor, a characteristic for which I admire him.



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  • Adrian Tomine

    Adrian Tomine, New Yorker cover, Dec 7, 2020
    Adrian Tomine, New Yorker cover, Dec 7, 2020

    Originally from California, Adrian Tomine is an illustrator and cartoonist living and working in Brooklyn, NY. Tomine has taken to his adopted city so well that he has become a reader favorite contributor to the New Yorker.

    His New Yorker covers, as well as many of his other illustrations and drawings, have that wonderful combination of evocative artwork and wry observation that exemplify the best of the magazine’s cover art. His artwork uses a streamlined line and color fill approach, reminiscent of the European ligne claire style of comics art.

    As a case in point, his cover for the new December 7, 2020 issue of the New Yorker (images above, top) pretty well catches the whimsical side of the 2020 zeitgeist.

    The New Yorker has a wonderful new online feature called Cover Story in which they give you background on the creation of the current issue’s cover; here is the one for Tomine’s December 7, 2020 cover.

    Tomine is the author/illustrator of a number of books of drawings and comics, many of which are published by Drawn & Quarterly, and the latest of which is The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Cartoonist (Bookshop.org link).

    There is a video overview of some of his titles by “panellogy 080” on YouTube.

    Tomine’s website contains examples of his illustrations and information about his books and comics, as well as offering prints and original art for sale.

    Unfortunately, his online gallery is of the wearisome “pop up and close, pop up and close” variety, which discourages casual browsing, and the images offered are small. You might find it helpful to augment your visit to his website with this Google image search I’ve set up for Tomine’s work on newyorker.com.



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  • Deborah Paris

    Deborah Paris landscape paintings
    Deborah Paris landscape paintings

    Deborah Paris it a painter based in Texas who works in a tonalist manner — with controlled palettes, restrained values and soft edges — though she sometimes incorporates more directly naturalistic elements and occasionally works with a brighter palette.

    Her favored subjects are woodlands, streams and fields, painted with a sensitive eye to mood, atmosphere and the power of visual suggestion.

    Paris offers online instruction in painting through a separate dedicated Landscape Atelier website along with painter Robert Wellings, who also works in a tonalist manner. They offer online classes, private lessons, critiques and mentorship.

    In addition, Paris is the author of a recently published book, Painting the Woods: Nature, Memory and Metaphor that is both a personal account of her experiences while spending a year in Lennox Woods in northeast Texas and her creative process while painting the landscape there. (Bookshop.org link, Amazon link).

    Also available is a book from 2014, Deborah Paris: Lennox Woods – The Ancient Forest that is also about those experiences but was apparently authored by other writers. (Bookshop.org link, Amazon link)

    Under the “Blog” navigation link on her website, you will find three blogs; one current, one archived and one devoted to the teaching atelier.

    There is an interview with Paris as part of the Savvy Painter podcast.



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  • A few paintings from 1880

    Thomas Eakins, 1880
    1880 paintings, Thomas Eakins, Claude Monet, Frank Duveneck, Julien Dupré, Arnold Bocolin, Carl Rudolf Huber, Edouard Manet, Frans Wilhelm Odelmark, Helen Allingham, Gustave Caillebotte, Gustav Schonleber, Emile Auguste Carlous-Duran

    The late 19th century is one of my favorite periods for art. Not only were a great many of my favorite artists active in that time but I’m constantly discovering artists from the period who are wonderful and new to me.

    Wikimedia Commons, that cornucopia of images provided by the Wikimedia Foundation, has a number of wonderful ways to explore images, such as lists of artwork by medium, artist, subject, location, genre, and time period.

    One of the the choices I favor for exploring is Paintings by Year. In particular, I find I can choose almost any year in the late 19th or early 20th century and hit paydirt right away.

    I posted an article like this previously in which I featured a few paintings from 1879.

    This time I picked 1880. To keep it simple and make it easy for those interested to find larger reproductions of the paintings shown, I’ve limited myself to works accessible from these two Wikimedia Commons pages: 1880 paintings and 1880 oil on canvas paintings.

    You can find jumping off points on those pages that will take you right down the rabbit hole into wonderland, so I will issue my customary Timesink Warning.

    (Images above, with links to Lines and Colors posts: Thomas Eakins, Claude Monet, Frank Duveneck, Julien Dupré, Arnold Böcklin, Carl Rudolf Huber, Edouard Manet, Frans Wilhelm Odelmark, Helen Allingham, Gustave Caillebotte, Gustav Schönleber, Emile Auguste Carlous-Duran)


    1880 paintings, Wikimedia Commons
    1880 oil on canvas paintings, Wikimedia Commons
    Related posts:
    A few paintings from 1879

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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