Lines and Colors art blog
  • Claude Lorrain

    Claude Lorrain
    Landscape has always had a place in Western art, but it wasn’t until the 17th Century that it came to the foreground, so to speak.

    French master Claude Lorrain is one of history’s great landscape painters. His name was actually Claude Gellée. He is better know by Lorrain, from Lorraine, the region of his birth, and is often simply called “Claude” (like “Elvis”),

    He essentially created the concept of the “classical landscape”, a form that was to dominate landscape painting for over 200 years. Based on the Roman Compagna, the low-lying countryside around Rome, that was essentially littered with the ruins of classical structures at the time, classical landscapes are views that often contain elements of the architecture of antiquity and an attempt to present nature in an idealized way.

    Lorrain really loved the actual study of nature, however, as revealed by his numerous detailed drawings and studies done from life, a practice uncommon until then. In both his paintings and ink and wash drawings, Lorrain is not only painting landscape but space, and the way both form and space are defined by light.

    His earliest known work Landscape with Cattle and Peasants, is in the Johnson Collection here in Philadelphia in the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

    To allow for the expectations of patrons at the time, Claude would soon populate his canvasses with gods and mythical events, but the figures were small in relation to their surroundings and you could tell it was really the landscape itself that was the focus of his interest.

    Lorrain’s figures are almost like decorations for the landscape, in a reversal of the traditional role of landscape as a background for figures, as in the image above, Landscape with dancing Figures, sometimes called The Mill (large version here, detail here), of which he did two versions, the other being called Landscape with the Marriage of Isaac and Rebekah (large version here).

    In fact there has been some suggestion that he would hire out the work of painting in the people in some of his paintings to other artists. The story goes that he would tell patrons he was selling them the landscape, and the figures were thrown in for free.

    Lorrain became so popular, and his work so much in demand, that copies and forgeries of his paintings became a problem. In response, he created a remarkable book called Liber Veritatis (Book of Truth) containing almost 200 drawings, copies he made of his own works, catalogued by date and annotated with the name of the patron and the place where the painting was to hang, copies of which were circulated through the major art buying centers of Europe (and here you thought the whole copy protection thing was something new).

    Lorrain was influential on generations of landscape painters, including greats like JMW Turner.

    For those who live in the northeast of the U.S. there is an exhibition called Claude Lorrain: The Painter as Draftsman at the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute in Massachusetts, which runs from now until April 29, 2007. It then is supposed to move to the National Gallery in D.C. for a run from May 27 to August 12, 2007, but I can’t find a listing for it on the NGA site.

    Although the exhibition features 13 of his remarkable oil paintings, it is the 90 drawings, many of them pulled form the great collection of the British Museum, that most interest me. These, to me, are Lorrain at his finest and most personal. Like Rembrandt, Lorrain loved nothing more than to immerse himself in the beauty of nature by drawing from life.

    Link via Art Knowledge News


    Claude Lorrain on Web Gallery of Art with bio
    ARC (with bio)
    Ciudad de la pintura (ES)
    Insecula (FR)
    CGFA
    Claude Lorrain: The Painter as Draftsman
    Artcyclopedia (links to Lorrain in museums and other resources)

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  • Forget the film, watch the titles

    Forget the Film Watch the TitlesWhat a great idea this is. The Submarine Channel, a web based launching point for independent film and multimedia producers, has started a new feature called Forget the film, watch the titles.

    This is the start of an ongoing collection of animated film titles, featuring examples of both opening and closing film credits divided into sub-genres like Animation (meaning animated characters), Motion Graphics (animated graphic design), 3-D (animated 3-D computer graphics) and Mixed (title sequences that use multimedia or mix the previous techniques).

    Film titles are an art in themselves, usually done by a different creative team than that of the main movie, and often much better than the movie itself. (A case in point are Jamie Caliri’s wonderful closing titles to Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events, which are unfortunately not part of this collection.)

    Don’t be disappointed, as I was initially, that Forget the Film Watch the Titles. is not yet a huge compendium in which you can look up your favorite title sequences and classics like the Saul Bass gems. The project is just in its infancy, and the collection is small (maybe 20 or so in all at the moment). It’s an ongoing project and it’s going to take a while because they’re trying to do this by the book and secure permission to display the title sequences, a laborious process to say the least.

    Think of it like a new blog, just starting, but promising and fun to check in periodically to see what’s new and watch the collection progressing. There are enough titles here for you to get a feeling for what they’re doing, and they do have some good ones (images at left, top to bottom: Nanny McPhee, Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, Made in Yu, Moog).

    Link via Cold Hard Flash

     


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  • Glen Orbik

    Glen OrbikSomewhere there is a place where the dark corridors and smoke filled rooms of pulp noir crime fiction meet the cape filled skies of comic book super heroes. While there are a number of illustrators and comic book artists who regularly visit that intersection (Jim Steranko comes to mind), most are transients. Glen Orbik is a resident.

    Even in his numerous comic book covers for Marvel and DC Comics, you can see the influence of terrific paperback and poster artists like Robert McGinniss and Gil Elvgren, and, in particular, Fred Fixler, with whom Orbik studied.

    Fixler was a noted illustrator of movie posters and a widely respected teacher. Fixler studied with Frank Reilly and Robert Beverly Hale at the Art Student’s League (where his classmates included James Bama) and later established his own school, The California Art Institute. When he retired from teaching, Orbik took over his classes.

    In addition to the major comic book companies, Orbik’s clients include Warner Brothers, Universal Pictures, Sony, Avon Books, Random House and others.

    Orbik has a web site, which he shares with his partner and fellow teacher, illustrator Laurel Blechman. The gallery is arranged in one of those PHP gallery modules that can seem a bit awkward and unresponsive, but is navigable. However, once you’re into Orbik’s galleries, it’s easy to miss the fact that you need to come back out to the home page to access Blechman’s work, which you will find at the bottom of the home page and is definitely worth looking for.

    The bulk of the galleries are devoted to Orbik’s work, though occasionally you will find works, marked with and asterisk, on which the two artists collaborated. There are sections devoted to Orbik’s pulp noir book covers (which include covers for books by Stephen King and Ray Bradbury) that are steeped in the feeling of classic pulp covers and movie posters. Orbik loves to play with restricted palettes that are almost monochromatic or duotone, where the overall color dominates the mood of the piece, at times punctuated with a vibrant bit of a contrasting color.

    His comic book work, largely covers and posters, leans either toward the mythically heroic style of movie posters, ideal for characters like Superman, or to the intimate chiaroscuro of pulp novel covers, a perfect fit for characters like Batman or Catwoman, or his wonderful pulp cover take on the DC Comics’ character Azrael (left, top).

    You will also find some unexpected treats in the galleries: storyboards for ads, comic character model sheets, lenticular art, and several sections of very nice figure drawings, studies and demos. Orbik’s figure drawings, not surprisingly, can often have a bit of melodramatic lighting and a pulp illustration feeling about them. Like I said, he lives there.

    Suggestion courtesy of Jack Harris

     


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  • Michael Phipps

    Michael Phipps
    I’m going to make an assumption about this artist, simply because I don’t know much about him, but I do know a couple of things. The assumption I’m making is that he is relatively young and just beginning his career.

    The reason I might assume this is because the list of credits on his web site is not long, and there are only a few of his illustrations displayed; but his illustrations are so compelling and he is so obviously talented that this could only be because he is just getting started.

    Here is what little else I do know at this point. Michael Phipps is an illustrator currently living in Utah. He has a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Illustration from the University of Utah and his clients include Musea Records, Diversified Metals, Wyndam Hotel, Kameleon Design, Progressiveears.com, Musclemag International, Duo, Sceyence Records and Cedar Fort, Inc.

    His work is featured in the 2006 Commuincation Arts Illustration Annual, and Illustrators 45, the Society of Illustrators Juried Annual.

    He paints primarily in acrylic, although there is some colored pencil work on his site. The site itself only showcases 8 of his illustrations on the main page, and a few more are shown at a smaller size on the Original Art page, where you can purchase the originals.

    Phipps has a fascinating treatment of dimensionality in his paintings. Objects hang in space, materials like clouds assume solidified form, waves are treated like two-dimensional stage props, and tree limbs twist and turn in on themselves like three dimensional puzzles. He has a knack for using subdued color and often plays with repeated forms.

    The other thing I know is that I haven’t seen nearly enough illustrations by Phipps, and the small taste on his site has left me hoping we’ll see much more from him.

    But I think that’s a fairly safe assumption.



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  • Daryl Cagle’s Professional Cartoonist Index

    Daryl Cagle's Professional Cartoonist Index
    After yesterday’s rant I think I need some cartoons to lighten up, but I’m still feeling snarky enough to want some cartoons with bite, so lets head on over, as I often do, to Daryl Cagle’s Professional Cartoonist Index.

    For many years now, Cagle has had a presence on the web showcasing the work of professional cartoonists. It started as one of those large compendiums in which there was an attempt to list all of the professional cartoonists who had a presence on the web (a list I don’t think he maintains any more), that had a “front page” of some of the day’s featured editorial cartoonists. Over the years it has evolved into a showcase focusing more and more on editorial cartoons and now serves as a one-stop-shopping location for viewing the current and past work of a long roster of editorial cartoonists.

    Cagles’s political cartoonists feature used to be on the venerable online magazine Slate, but has since moved over to MSNBC. Slate, meanwhile, has recovered by creating their own political cartoon feature that is very similar in format to the one Cagle established.

    You may actually find the Slate version easier to deal with. The design of Cagle’s site, unfortunately, is incredibly busy, with banners and lists and ads trying to crowd each other off of every page, but it’s much more full-featured than the Slate cartoon section, and with a little perseverance you can find lots of great stuff.

    The home page acts a jumping off point for viewing recent cartoons from a number of cartoonists arranged by topic. This is really the highlight of the site and you can waste, er, spend a lot of time here, fascinated not only by the cartoons themselves, but by the comparison of how various cartoonists have tackled the same topic on the same day. At times there can be uncanny similarities between several of them, not because of plagiarism, I think that’s actually rare, but simply because some ideas are just “naturals” and suggest themselves readily in the context of a given situation. You’ll also find interesting variety and strong opinions from both sides of the political fence.

    For real variety, check in on the “Political Cartoons” page, which features Cagle’s selection for the day’s top cartoons, regardless of topic. On the left side of the page is a long list of American editorial cartoonists. At the bottom of this page, past the banner ads and another chance to view the cartoons by topic, is a list of Canadian and worldwide cartoonists. Like reading newspapers from England, Austraila, France and other places around the globe, viewing political cartoons from other countries can be eye opening. It’s astonishing how insular and self-consumed we can be in America. The rest of the world seems much more aware of what’s going on in the world as a whole. We seem oblivious to anything that doesn’t involve us directly.

    Cagle is himself a cartoonist and his own work is usually featured on this page. Cagle maintains a blog, Daryl Cagle’s Cartoon Weblog, which you may have seen listed on the lines and colors blogroll. It focuses, logically enough, on editorial cartooning.

    There is also a page on the site where you can order reprints of political cartoons for a fee, searchable through an extensive database. There is a Teacher Guide, accessible from a link on the home page, that provides lesson plans for using political cartoons in classes on Social Sciences, Art, Journalism and English.

    Back on the home page, in addition to the long row of topic highlights running down the right side, and the extensive text list of further topics at page bottom, there is a set of “Year in Review” links on the left. These gives you access to collections of cartoons that let you re-live your favorite debacles, disasters and diabolical deeds from recent years.

    Ah, the memories.



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  • The Continuing Saga of the Thomas Eakins Gross Clinic Art-as-Commodity Scandal


    For background on this post, please see my previous post: Eakins’ The Gross Clinic – Held for Ransom?.

    It looked as if the potentially tragic loss to Philadelphia of the Thomas Eakins materspiece by clandestine sale to Wal-Mart heiress Alice Walton, for her artificial island of culture in Arkansas, The Crystal Bridges Museum, was going to be avoided. Prompted by outrage among the local art community, city leaders and the ranks of their own students, teachers and alumni, Thomas Jefferson University’s board of directors agreed to delay their “get-capital-quick” scheme for long enough for other city institutions to cough up their ransom demands and raise $68 million to purchase the painting and keep it here in Philadelphia.

    The Philadelphia Museum of Art and my old alma mater, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, where Eakins studied and taught (see my post on Thomas Eakins), sponsored a joint fund-raising campaign to allow The Gross Clinic to stay in the city and be jointly owned by the PMA and the Academy’s Museum of American Art.

    Unfortunately, there is further fallout and the attempt to keep one great painting in the city has resulted the loss of another.

    In order to meet the Jefferson board’s deadline, the museums arranged a loan through Wachovia bank to secure the painting. The fundraising campaign has fallen short, however, and has lost its momentum. The Academy may have stepped in a little over its head on this one, and has just announced the hasty and unfortunate sale of another great Eakins work, The Cello Player, to an unnamed private individual to help cover their share of the debt.

    The Cello Player can be considered a “lesser work” than The Gross Clinic, which is one of the acknowledged masterpieces of American art, but it is a beautiful painting and is certainly the finest of the Academy’s three finished Eakins paintings. The purchaser has apparently promised to loan the painting back to the Academy for display to some degree, but there is no disclosure of who has bought the painting or where it will eventually go.

    Herbert Riband, the vice chair of the board of the Academy has promised that the buyer is not Alice “I wanna buy me sum Kulture” Walton [my words, not his], but he also states the the Academy doesn’t know the identity of the purchaser and is making that statement on the word of an intermediary who is evidently brokering the sale.

    For more interesting detail on the matter, see Lee Rosenbaum’s post on on the subject on her CultureGrrl blog (part of the Arts Journal site). Rosenbaum was on Radio Times with Marty Moss-Coane this morning on WHYY, the Public Radio affiliate here in Philadelphia (when you follow the link, filter for February 5, 2007, it’s in Hour 2). If you’re at all interested in the issue of the “de-acquisition” of works by museums and other public institutions, or this instance specifically, this program makes a fascinating listen. There are three guests, but Rosenbaum in particular is articulate and fascinating (makes me kind of wish she had her own radio show or podcast).

    As Rosenbaum points out, this incident raises all kind of disturbing questions about who has the right to make these decisions about important works that are part of the cultural heritage of institutions and cities. Yes, museums “own” their works, except those on loan, and, barring stipulations made on gifts and bequests, can legally sell them; but these institutions exist partially on the basis of tax breaks and operating subsidies paid for with our tax dollars, (as well as our contributions) so in a real, as well as cultural sense, the public also “owns” these works.

    To my mind, that’s one of the reasons we support our museums; so great paintings like The Gross Clinic and The Cello Player can be displayed in the cities where they have been a part of the cultural legacy for hundreds of years, and their fate is not left to the egotistical whims of priveledged megalomaniacs who need to make themselves feel cultured by robbing the treasures of other cities, or self-serving members of institutional boards (I’m talking about Jefferson’s board here, not the Academy’s) who treat those treasures like grist for expedient garage sales, simply because they’re too lazy to do actual work of fund raising.


    CultureGrrl post
    Radio Times with Marty Moss-Coane (Filter for February 5, 2007)
    Eakins’ The Gross Clinic – Held for Ransom? (pervious post with additional links)
    Thomas Eakins (previous post)

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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