Lines and Colors art blog
  • Eye Candy for Today: Rembrandt’s Self-portrait with Two Circles

    Self-portrait with Two Circles, Rembrandt
    Self-portrait with Two Circles, Rembrandt

    We don’t have access on the web to an image at the level of high resolution available for the Rembrandt self-portrait at the age of 53 that I wrote about a few days ago, but we can see enough to appreciate more of the master’s superb painting skills.

    Rembrandt was adept at all aspects of painting: glazing, wet-into-wet, scumbling and even scratching out with the butt of a brush, as he has done here in the cloth just below the neck, and perhaps above the eye to our left (though I’m not sure those are entirely intentional marks).

    The scumbled brush strokes that make up his cap and the texture of his hair are remarkable for their economy and textural qualities.

    Everything here seems almost casual, flowing from the master’s hand as only years of experience can permit. The hand holding the brushes is just a gestural smudge. Whether Rembrandt intended to bring the painting to a more finished state is unknown, but for all its brusque economy, it works beautifully as a complete work.

    The two circles suggested against the plane of the background are something of a mystery; various speculations have been put forward, but Rembrandt’s actual intentions are unknown. Whether or not the circles have a purpose beyond compositional elements, they function brilliantly in that respect.

    We don’t have a date for this painting as closely pinpointed as some of his other portraits. The date is assumed to be between 1665 and 1669, putting Rembrandt’s age at between 59 and 63. It’s notable as one of the self-portraits in which he has portrayed himself working, rather than in costume.

    Rembrandt’s gaze here is more confident than in the portrait of 1659, resigned, perhaps, to his misfortunes, but continuing to exert his mastery of painting.

    Both this and the self-portrait from 1659 on display as part of the exhibition Rembrandt: The Late Works, at the National Gallery, London until 18 January 2015.

    This image can be downloaded from the Rijksmuseum page devoted to the same exhibition, which will move there in February of 2015. (There is also a large image accompanying an article on the painting on Wikipedia, but it’s oversaturated and poorly focused.)

    The original is in the collection of Kenwood House, London (which does not have a website as far as I know).

    Art writer Jonathan Jones of The Guardian has called this the greatest painting in Britain.



    Categories:
    ,


  • Stephanie Hans

    Stephanie Hans, comics art and illustration
    French illustrator and comics artist Stephanie Hans is known in particular for her painted style comics covers and interior panel illustrations.

    She excels at dynamic comics covers, many for American titles, that involve women characters in forceful or emotional roles.

    Her website is in French, but it’s easy enough to navigate for for those who don’t read French. The portfolio has sections for cover art, comics (bande dessinée), and illustration, along with a bibliography.

    You can find more of her work on her deviantART gallery and Tumblr, as well as the site of her U.S. artist’s rep, Shannon Associates.



    Categories:
    ,


  • Eye Candy for Today: Grimshaw’s Stapleton Park

    Stapleton Park near Pontefract Sun, John Atkinson Grimshaw
    Stapleton Park near Pontefract Sun, John Atkinson Grimshaw

    On WikiArt. The original is in a private collection.

    Grimshaw loved to do these scenes of softly lit Autumn evenings with a lone figure, usually a woman seen from behind, walking down an empty stretch of road. See also my previous Eye Candy post of Grimwhaw’s Evening Glow.



    Categories:
    ,


  • Wayne Haag

    Wayne Haag, concept art and science fictio illustration
    Wayne Haag is an Australian matte painter and illustrator whose film credits include The Fifth Element, Lord of the Rings, The Wolverine, Maze Runner and Gods of Egypt, as well as the television series Farscape.

    Haag works both in digital and traditional media, but prefers when possible to paint science fiction subjects in oil. As you look through his website portfolio and Archives, you may find images that you would assume are digital — given the preferences in contemporary illustration circles — but are in fact, done in traditional oil painting.

    In addition to his website, you can find his work, in general reproduced somewhat larger, on his Behance portfolio, and his blog, which also includes detail crops, and other images that shed some light on his process.

    His illustration paintings take from his matte painting skills a deft handling of atmospheric perspective and the suggestion of scale, as well as a controlled evocation of filtered light.

    His website section under “Art Archive” for “Landscape and other paintings” includes plein air and studio landscape painting and portrait subjects.

    I particularly like his painting of Karan Sculling on the Maribyrnong River (images above, bottom), which recalls Thomas Eakins’ paintings of scullers on the Schuylkill River here in Philadelphia.

    [Via Concept Art World]



    Categories:
    ,


  • New Draw Mix Paint painting instruction course

    Draw Mix Paint, online paintinf instruction course from Mark Carder
    As I reported in 2013, well regarded painter Mark Carder, who some years ago created a specific instruction method for those learning to paint, had put much of his former course into a series of new videos and made them freely available on his site Draw Mix Paint.

    Carder has recently taken those videos, added a good deal of supplementary web based material, and arranged them into a more formal course, guiding the student through step-by-step.

    In addition to the basic teach yourself course, Carder is offering a new premium version that is essentially an online class — with longer, more detailed videos and personal interaction with Carder.

    Students following the free course can work from life, from their own photographs, or from laminated photographic reproductions of still life arrangements or portrait subjects prepared by Carder (these are available to those not taking the paid course, along with the deluxe videos, on a separate purchase basis).

    The more detailed course, in which Carder interacts with the student, is based specifically around the pre-composed subjects of the photographic prints, so that instructor and student are on the same page. Students select one as included in their enrollment.

    I’ll point out again that this course is not so much about a method of painting as a method of learning to paint, and by many accounts a very successful one.

    Those who are already further along the learning curve in painting may find it laborious, as it is based on careful observation and measurement with sighting tools, and incremental steps of value and color changes. For those just starting, however, Carder has provided a method for going from non-painting to painting in the context of a single course.

    Carder’s methods are based on traditional techniques, and are aimed specifically at painting straightforward representational realism in oil.

    I provided a more detailed description of his method in my previous article on Draw Mix Paint.

    The premium version of the online course, with interaction from Carder, is limited to 30 students per month. The initial registration step is to choose a subject photograph and the month for which you would like to register.

    To start the free version of the course (which should give a preview of the more in-depth version), look for the “Start without Enrolling” button from this page.

    Carder’s site also includes links to the original free instructional videos, his supply list and an active discussion forum.



    Categories:
    ,


  • Edward Kinsella

    Edward Kinsella, illustration and portraits
    Edward Kinsella III is a St. Louis based illustrator whose client list includes The New Yorker, Rolling Stone, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Playboy, The Boston Globe, Wired, Washington Post, Simon and Schuster, and Penguin, among others.

    His approach to his subjects, though sometimes straightforward, often includes a narrative twist. His visual approach plays with subtle variations in color and value, augmented with texture.

    His subjects are often rendered essentially in subdued monochrome, but offset with a background or single object of a more intense color.

    Sometimes, this is reversed, with the color on the highlighted subject, but always within deftly restrained value and color ranges.

    In addition to his website portfolio and a portfolio on the site of his artists’ representatives, Richard Solomon, Kinsella’s home page serves as a blog (there are links to additional pages at the bottom, though the icons seem to be missing).

    Kinsella also has a sketchbook, on Tumblr, in which he frequently plays with the deep chiaroscuro available in ink.

    The Richard Solomon site includes a page on Kinsella’s process.



    Categories:


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