Lines and Colors art blog
  • Eye Candy for Today: Watteau trois crayon figure drawing

    Seated Young Woman,  Jean-Antoine Watteau, Black, red and white chalk drawing on buff paper
    Seated Young Woman, Jean-Antoine Watteau

    Black, red and white chalk on buff paper. Roughly 10 x 7 inches (25 x 17 cm). In the collection of the Morgan Library and Museum, NY. Image can be zoomed or downloaded.

    French Baroque painter Jean-Antoine Watteau was a wonderful and prolific draftsman and master of the “trois crayon” (three chalks) technique, in which three colors of chalk, black, red (sanguine) and white are used to draw the subject on a middle ground toned paper.

    This is a remarkably effective technique for rendering the figure, allowing for a great range of value and almost naturalistic color with simple materials.

    Here, Watteau has just used delicate traces of white as his highlights, allowing the tone of paper to carry most of the lighter values. The drawing is beautifully gestural and fluid, while retaining the solid geometry of the artist’s knowledge and observation of anatomy.


    Seated Young Woman, Morgan Library

    Categories:
    , , ,


  • Chris Seaman

    Chris Seaman, illustration
    Chris Seaman is an illustrator working in the gaming industry. His fantasy-themed illustrations are highly rendered, but always keep a feeling of cartoony verve and springy stylization, and often contain fun little touches in the details.

    Seaman works in acrylic. There are a couple of brief process videos on his website, where he also has both originals and prints for sale..

    I particularly enjoy his take-offs on famous images. like Holbein’s portrait of Henry VIII, and J.C. Leyendecker’s Arrow Shirt ad (images above, bottom three).



    Categories:


  • Adair Payne

    Adair Payne, landscape painting
    Adair Payne is a California painter whose landscapes are richly textural, often deeply atmospheric and highly evocative of place, season and time of day.

    Payne uses a restrained palette, emphasizing the value relationships and textural elements in his compositions. Though many of his subjects are identifiably west coast landscapes, many resonate for me with creeks and forests of the Eastern Seaboard, and I believe Payne was located in the eastern US for a time.

    I particularly find resonance with some of his deep woods subjects and the creeks and woods of 19th century master William Trost Richards from the Brandywine and Wissahickon Valleys here in Pennsylvania.

    Though he is equally at home in brightly lit fields and hillsides, I find Payne to be most fascinating when he is exploring the subtle light and color of shadowed streams and misty woods. In those subjects, the visual appeal of his finessed textures and naturalistic foliage emerges slowly, entrancing you much as the real environment would.

    There is a brief interview with Payne on YouTube that gives you a feeling of the scale of his work, and another here, as well as on his website, in which he discusses how he hopes to communicate with his work.



    Categories:


  • Ron Monsma

    Ron Monsma, pastel and oil, figures and still life
    Though he works in oil as well, Ron Monsma creates his figures and still life primarily in pastel.

    He has a refined approach, with subtle attention to edges and values and a Baroque sensibility for composition and light. I particularly enjoy those pieces in which he appears to revel in the textural characteristics of his subjects.

    Monsma ia an Associate Professor of Fine Arts at Indiana University South Bend, and is represented by Miller Gallery in Cincinnati, OH.



    Categories:


  • Eye Candy for Today: Dore illustration for Fables of La Fontaine


    Shepherd Wolf, Gustave Doré

    Link is to WikiArt, from this page.

    19th century illustrator and printmaker Guatave Doré is noted primarily for his dramatic illustrations for Dante’s Devine Comedy and Inferno, Milton’s Paradise Lost and Cervantes Don Quijote, as well as The Bible.

    Less well known are his illustrations for Shakespeare plays, other epic poems and a number of fables and fairy tales.

    This wonderfully sly example is from his illustrations for Fables of La Fontaine (link is to Dover book of just the illustrations).

    I love the delicately rendered plants, the wonderfully casual hatching in the handling of the clouds and foreground, and the “WTF?” expression on the foremost sheep. As always, Doré and his engraver exhibit a mastery of establishing value with cross hatching.

    I’ll leave it to you to wonder if there is any connection to current events.



    Categories:
    ,


  • Julian Alden Weir (revisit)

    Julian Alden Weir
    Julian Alden Weir was an American painter and printmaker active in the later 19th and early 20th centuries.

    He was one of the the painters loosely known as “American Impressionists”, and more relevantly, was a member of “The Ten” — a group of influential painters in Boston that included Frank W. Benson, Thomas Wilmer Dewing, Childe Hassam, Willard Leroy Metcalf, Robert Reid, Edmund C. Tarbell, and John Henry Twachtman (links to my posts).

    Julian Alden Weir is the younger brother of John Furgeson Weir, also a well-known painter, with a somewhat more conservative style in keeping with the Hudson River School and later in his career, with the Barbizon School.

    I first wrote about Julian Alden Weir back in 2008, since then more resources and better reptoductions of his work have become available on the web, though his paintings still seem to suffer in reproduction more than some of his contemporaries.



    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