Lines and Colors art blog
  • Ito Shinsui

    Ito Shinsui
    Ito Shinsui was a Japanese printmaker who, like his contemporaries Hiroshi Yoshida and Kawase Hasui, was part of the Shin Hanga movement in the early 20th Century. (In writing these artist’s names, I’m using the Western convention of putting the given name first.)

    Shin Hanga was essentially a revival of the art of Ukiyo-e woodblock prints from the previous century (see my post on Hokusai), often combined with influences from Western art. Interestingly, one of the major European influences on the Shin Hanga artists was that of the French Impressionists, who, in turn, had been dramatically influenced but the brilliant colors and subtle compositions of Ukiyo-e prints.

    Unlike Yoshida and Hausi, who, in keeping with the majority of the Shin Hanga artists, concentrated on landscape and scenes of life in towns and cities, Shinsui focused on the depiction of people, in particular beautiful young women.

    His elegant compositions, in which the negative space is as vital as the primary shapes, are often 3/4 length figures with minimal space around them in the the frame. His beautifully dressed subjects, their decorative robes flowing about them in graceful waves, are frequently engaged in the application of makeup or preparation for the bath, and are warm with an understated eroticism. His forms are delicately modeled, with fine lines delineating areas enlivened with rich but subtle color.

    You can see some of the influence of European art in certain prints (in his later years, you can even see the influence of cubism), and the strong traditions of Ukiyo-e in others. Though his depictions of women are his most notable subjects, Shinsui also created beautiful, brilliantly colored landscapes, which are not to be missed. He was at one point awarded the status of “intangible living treasure” by the Japanese government.



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  • Edmond Alexander and Cynthia Turner

    Edmund Alexander and Cynthia Turner
    Even within the illustration community, which is itself often dissed by the fine arts world, medical illustration, like botanical illustration and architectural rendering, just doesn’t get the respect it deserves.

    Good medical illustration, to my eye, can be as exciting and visually fascinating as the most far out science fiction illustration or movie concept art and as bizarre and intriguing as the wildest surrealist imaginings. The striking thing about medical illustration when viewed in this light is to remember that it is essentially realism. It is realistic depictions of things that in many cases can’t be viewed with the unaided eye, but a form of realism nonetheless.

    I’ve found medical illustration to be a vastly underappreciated branch of illustration, but I’ve always liked it. (I’ve even done a bit myself, in a way, in the form of the illustrations and Flash animation for The Interactive Body feature in the Gift of a Lifetime web documentary.)

    Edmond Alexander and Cynthia Turner, who share a studio under the name of Alexander & Turner, have been notable names in the medical illustration field for over 20 years.

    Alexander seems to specialize in envisioning biological processes at the cellular, and sometimes molecular, level (image above, left). He utilizes intense color relationships and dynamic contrasts of value to make the processes snap into clear relief in a way photomicrography can’t. The result can be dramatic compositions filled with fascinating forms, often intertwining in dramatic relationships.

    Cynthia Turner works more often at the macroscopic level, portraying organs or other parts of the human body that need to be diagramatically sectioned or otherwise have elements accentuated, again in the service of making things clear and dramatic that would be difficult, if not impossible, with photography. Turner tends to work in a way that feels more traditionally illustrative, and I’m particularly fond of the illustrations in which she brings part of the painting or drawing to a high degree of finish and leaves other parts to blend out into the recognizable lines of the initial sketch (image above, right).

    The Alexander and Turner site has short bios of each artist and a gallery of their work. Unfortunately, like many artists who have posted their images on the web, and particularly those in the field of medical illustration, Alexander and Turner have felt compelled to mar their larger images with watermarking, in the vain hope that it will somehow protect them from being swiped.

    At the risk of being repetitive, I feel I have to point out again to artists on the web in general, that this will only protect images from the laziest of image swipers. If your work is in print, anyone with a $50 scanner can produce higher resolution files of your images that you will ever post on the web.

    I tend not to feature artists on lines and colors whose web based work is watermarked, but I found some unblemished examples of Alexander and Turner’s paintings on the Medical Illustration Source Book site for you to enjoy.

    When approaching medical illustrations as artworks, particularly those of microscopic terrains, try thinking of them as abstract at first, then let them resolve into realism. In the case of Turner’s work, look first at the drawings around the edges, in those images where where she has left them as part of the composition, and then move to the more rendered forms.



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  • Shaun Tan

    Shaun TanShaun Tan is an Australian artist who creates and illustrates “picture books“, which in his case usually means wonderfully bizarre and imaginative flights of fancy that look, at least at first, like somewhat dark children’s fantasy, but are often aimed at both younger and older readers.

    He sometimes works with a writer, as in the award winning The Rabbits (image at left, bottom), written by John Marsden, and sometimes writes the stories himself, as in The Lost Thing (image at left, top), which is also a theatre production and in development as a short animated film (more information here).

    Tan starts his paintings with thin layers of acrylic over white lines on a dark background, working from dark to light and continuing with oil for the final rendering. He also works in other media, including sctatchboard, pen and ink , pastel crayons, gouache and watercolor, collage, assemblage and digital media.

    You can see the multi-media and assemblage techniques in many of his illustrations which employ a stratified and multi-planed approach, with areas broken into smaller images within a larger whole, unified by textures and patterns playing across their surface.

    Tan also mixes design elements with more painterly areas, and also works in a more straightforward painterly approach at times, creating a fascinatingly varied array of work.

    Tan’s books have been translated into multiple languages and have received book awards in several countries. Tan is also involved in other interesting projects, including murals, theatre productions and a children’s “Art Trail”.

    Some of his books, like The Red Tree (image at left, middle), feature experimental narratives, or absence thereof, leaving the reader to wander amid the images and form their own narrative, almost like a Surrealist collage-novel.

    Link and suggestion courtesy of Jesper Svedberg

    [Update, 2011: See my more recent posts on Shaun Tan.]

     


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  • Adam Rex

    Adam Rex
    Adam Rex is an illustrator living here in Philadelphia who does fantasy themed and children’s book illustration for clients like Harcourt, Penguin, Knopf and a number of periodicals. Rex received the the Jack Gaugan Award for Best Emerging Artist, named for the noted Science Fiction artist, in 2005. He has also done a number of imaginative illustrations for Wizards of the Coast’s Magic: The Gathering collectable card game.

    He often employs brusque textures and mottled patches of color to give his images a rough-hewn appearance. Edges are deliberately left ragged and thin layers of color are scumbled against background colors. At other times, when the subject calls for it, the finish is more refined, though never to the point of being without some suggestion of texture.

    His fantasy genre paintings frequently feature complex compositions with intricate backgrounds and multiple figures, and often carry a suggestion of Renaissance settings as in “Novice Griffin Rider” (above).

    The galleries on his site feature examples of his work sorted by genre, Kids, Bigger kids, Teen/Adult and Fantasy. There are additional illustrations on the page that lists some of the books he has illustrated. (You can also find many of them with an Amazon search.)

    Rex works mostly in oils, often over acrylic and opaque ink backgrounds; but he occasionally uses gouache, brush and ink, scratchboard, even Sculpey modeling, and a few digital touches, as in his bestselling children’s book, Frankenstein Makes a Sandwich (which is actually titled Frankenstein Makes a Sandwich and Other Stories You’re Sure to Like, Because They’re All About Monsters and Some of Them are Also About Food. You like Food Don’t You? Well, All Right Then).

    His work for children’s books, including Tree Ring Circus, another for which he is the author a well as illustrator, carry forward that feeling of rough edges and also seem to have a hint of strangeness, as if to say that life has rough edges and we should revel in it rather than denying it with glossy fantasy.



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  • Thomas Paquette

    Thomas Paquette
    When I first saw Thomas Paquette’s small gouache paintings on the web a couple of years ago, my initial thought was that I wanted to see them bigger. I didn’t realize at the time that I was looking at them almost life size.

    His gouache paintings (image above, bottom row) tend to be quite small, in the range of 2×3 inches (5x8cm), even smaller than the postcard size paintings that are becoming more common with the advent of the “painting a day” phenomenon. Even so they feel remarkably rich and detailed; not in the sort of forced or artificial detail sometimes found in miniatures, but more like sketchbook paintings that have been fully realized. The size and shape of them, once I knew how small they were, seemed oddly familiar. I eventually realized that they are of similar size and proportion to many small etchings I’ve seen.

    The etching comparison is an interesting one, in that Paquette’s paintings deal with line, but in an oblique way. He doesn’t actually use drawn line in the paintings, as many artists will do, but his areas of color are often discreet and sharply defined, sometimes with a dark edge that forms a line against another color.

    That characteristic of highly defined edges of color, which may be a natural extension of the flat color areas for for which gouache is noted, has been carried over and developed in Paquette’s larger works in oil (image above, top). The result is a painting style that has some of the intensity and rich color of impressionist technique, blended with the visual charm of the line and color combinations of Japanese woodblock prints or certain styles of illustration.

    I missed my chance to see Paquette’s work in person the last time he had a solo show here in Philadelphia, so I was glad I caught the recent American Arcadia group show at the Gross McCleaf Gallery (also featured in the current issue of American Art Collector).

    This show didn’t feature any of his small gouache paintings, but I had the chance to see several of his oils, large and small. It may just be because I had so recently been to see the Daniel Garber show at the Academy, but I couldn’t help but see a comparison, particularly in the surface of the paint. Close up the texture and appearance of the paint on the canvas, in both Paquette’s and Garber’s work, reminds me of the rough mounds of oil paint, rich with the physical sensation of paint as a three dimensional substance, found in some modernist work.

    Paquette’s oils are often broken up into a sort of latticework, composed of paint edges and the lines of the natural forms he is painting, tree limbs, the dark spaces between rocks, or rough seams in serrated bark. He seems to find suggestions of line everywhere, even though he rarely uses line in an overt way. Frequently, the effect is the result of an under-painting, often in a complementary color, the edges of which are allowed to show; another area in which I couldn’t help but make the comparison to Garber.

    Paquette’s web site has examples of his oils, large and small, and his small gouache gems. A beautiful small book has been published, Thomas Paquette: Gouaches, in which the images are printed very close to the size of the original paintings.

    Those in the Philadelphia area may be able to catch the last couple of days of the American Arcadia show at the Gross McCleaf, which ends tomorrow. Beyond that, the Gross McCleaf is one of the galleries that represents Paquette on an ongoing basis; there in a selection of his works on their site.

    Paquette lives in upstate Pennsylvania, which is the location for the majority of his recent work. In addition to shows, he is also represented by galleries in Maine and Colorado.



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  • Al Parker

    Al Parker
    As the Golden Age of Illustration waned in the middle of the 20th Century, and color photography became the dominant force in magazines and newspapers, illustration itself, along with the rest of the art world, went through some major shifts.

    One of the pioneers of this changing landscape was Al Parker, an American illustrator and painter who got his break with a contest-winning illustration for a cover of House Beautiful. Parker would go on to make a career of creating dynamic, ground-breaking and precedent setting illustrations for magazines like Collier’s, Ladies Home Journal, Cosmopolitan, Good Housekeeping, McCalls, The Saturday Evening Post, Sports Illustrated, and Vogue.

    Parker started out of the traditions of the Golden Age illustrators, but was soon moving into modern, and modernist, territory. Rendered forms gave way to more and more stylized abstractions of shapes. Flat areas of color replaced modeling and design came to the fore. Negative shapes, the areas in an image around and between objects, became prominent.

    Parker became extremely popular and in demand. With packs of lesser illustrators nipping at his heels with imitations of his popular style, Parker kept changing his style, pushing into new territory and in the process defining mid-century modern illustration to a great degree. He once created every illustration for an entire issue of Cosmopolitan using different styles, and pen names, for each illustration. He was also influential on the generation of women who comprised a large part of his audience, making it a point to array his models in the latest fashions and helping to make those fashions part of the culture of the time.

    I was surprised that I didn’t find more of Parker’s art readily available on the web, considering how influential he was on a generation of artists (he was also one of the founding members of the Famous Artists School), but I did find a few gems.

    Paul Giambarba has come through, as always, with excellent illustrated posts about Parker on his terrific blog, 100 Years of Illustration and Design, with: Al Parker’s ads for American Airlines and Even more Great Al Parker Illos, and Leif Peng of Today’s Inspiration has an article about a illustrator Will Davis who had A Visit with Al Parker, and he has also posted a great Al Parker Flickr set and also has a page devoted to Al Parker on his site.

    Addendum: The curator at the Norman Rockwell Museum was kind enough to leave a comment on this post to let us know that the museum will be holding a major exhibition of Al Parker’s work, “Ephemeral Beauty: Al Parker and the American Women’s Magazine 1940-1960” from June 9 to October 27, 2007.


    Al Parker’s ads for American Airlines and Even more Great Al Parker Illos from 100 Years of Illustration and Design
    A Visit with Al Parker from Today’s Inspiration
    Al Parker Flickr set from leifpeng of Today’s Inspiration
    Al Parker Bio on Illustration House

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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