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Promoting some friends and some clients of my website design business
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Frank Cho (Liberty Meadows)
Frank Cho is a comics artist and illustrator best known as the creator of the Liberty Meadows newspaper comic strip, one of the best drawn syndicated strips in recent years. Cho’s wonderfully precise pen and ink work shows the influence of great pen and ink illustrators like Gibson, Cole and Booth and comics artists like Williamson, Wood and Frazetta.The strip archive is on the Creators Syndicate site. The Liberty Meadows site is devoted more to Cho himself and his various projects. The home page functions as a news page and is linked to a news archive, both chock full of illustrations in pencil, ink and color. The site includes a gallery of uncensored versions of strips the newspapers wouldn’t run (Frank likes to joke about, well…, um… sex.)
In addition to galleries of strips, sketches and covers, the site features a checklist of Cho’s published work, an illustrated FAQ, fan art and links to a Frank Cho discussion board (on the World Famous Comics Community discussion board site).
The Frank Cho Sketchbook features both sketches and finished ink drawings, often showing the progression of a drawing from initial sketch to refined pencil drawing to finished ink rendering, which I really enjoy.
The FAQ includes some information on his tools, including his choice of pencils, pens (Pigma Micon felt tips!) and board, as well as the dimensions of his daily and Sunday strips.
There are several volumes available of Liberty Meadows collections, as well as a trade paperback of the Shanna, The She-Devil series he recently did for Marvel Comics.
There is also a Frank Cho Gallery on Budd Root’s Basement Comics featuring Cavewoman and dinosaurs (gotta love it).
Note: Both sites contain some mildly suggestive nudity. Avoid them if you’re likely to be offended.
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John Sibbick

I’ll say right off that I just love dinosaur art: beautiful paintings and drawings of fantastic animals that actually existed. Wonderful. I loved it when I was a kid and I love it now. (I have my own book of Dinosaur Cartoons, in fact.) Nothing like a nice colorful dinosaur picture to start out your day.Good Paleo art requires more than beautiful painting or drawing; it’s actually “paloeontological life reconstruction art” and, like all scientific illustration, must be scientifically accurate.
John Sibbick is one of the foremost dinosaur and paleo life artists in the field. In addition to his illustrations of dinosaurs, prehistoric sea life (including wonderfully weird trilobites) and other amazing prehistoric animals, Sibbick also creates sensational fantasy illustrations and beautiful scientific illustrations of modern animals.
He works most often in gouache, which lends itself well to his use of detailed textures and vivid colors. The Sketches Gallery on his site also includes renderings in pencil, colored pencil and pen and ink. His masteful use of texture, in all of the media he works in, is of particular interest.
Sibbick has illustrated some of the best books on prehistoric animals, including My Favorite Dinosaurs (aimed a kids, but wonderful illustrations). Dinosaurs a Global View, The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Pterosaurs and, in particular, the Illustrated Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs. (Out of print, but still around. Look for the edition that combines the latter two books in one volume.)
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Hayao Miyazaki (Studio Ghibli)

Hayao Miyazaki is arguably the greatest of all directors of “anime”, Japanese animation. He is noted for such classic animated films as Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind, Laupta: The Castle in the Sky, My Neighbor Totoro, Kiki’s Delivery Service, Porco Rosso, Princess Mononoke, Spirited Away and, most recently, Howl’s Moving Castle (Amazon links).If you’re not familiar with most or any of those, it’s the fault of a narrow-minded American movie distribution system and/or Disney, who has the rights to distribute and promote Miyazaki’s films in the US, but apparently doesn’t have a clue how to do so. (To their credit, they’ve done a pretty good job with the packaging of the US DVD versions).
Miyazaki’s films are among the all-time most popular in his native Japan, and deservedly so. Filled with beautiful drawing, splendorous settings, engaging characters, adventure, mystery, charm and wit, his movies refuse to settle for clichéd “evil” villains, simplistic black and white visions of morality and the tired formulas that cripple many Hollywood animated features.
Don’t expect the super-fluid animation of classic Disney or Warner Brothers animation, it’s not a priority in Anime, instead look for amazing settings, wonderful characters, intelligent writing and a much broader range of subject matter than you will find in western animation.
My favorite of Miyazaki’s films is My Neighbor Totoro (Tonari no Totoro) (image above), a wonderful, magical animated story. For me it evokes certain aspects of childhood better than any other film (animated or otherwise): the “goes on forever” quality of a late summer afternoon, the deep fascination children can have with simple things, quiet moments that seem to reveal unspoken worlds, the terrible urgency of a lost sibling or sick parent and the blurred line between what is real and what is imagined and the (indistinguishable) wonder and delight inspired by both.
If you’re interested in Totoro, don’t buy the 20th Century Fox fullscreen edition, wait for the Disney widescreen 2-disk set due in March of 2006. There are also multi-disk sets of Miyszaki DVDs, a three pack (Spirited Away/Castle in the Sky/Kiki’s Delivery Service) and a six-pack (Castle in the Sky/Kiki’s Delivery Service/Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind/Porco Rosso/Princess Mononoke/Spirited Away).
Miyazaki established Studio Ghibli, a production house that produces most (but not all) of his films. Here is a link to the Studio Ghibli site (in Japanese) and the Google BETA translated version which is rough, but navigable.Unfortunately the Studio Ghibli site doesn’t have a lot of easily accessible images. Here are some official movie sites: Princess Mononoke, Spirited Away, Howl’s Moving Castle and the (poorly done) Disney: Studio Ghibli site that is the official site for the others.
Here are some fan sites that have images:
A selection of Miyazaki film images from Planet Zot: Totoro , Kiki’s Delivery Service, Princess Mononoke, and Porco Rosso.
From WingSee’s Anime Haven: Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind, Porco Rosso, Laputa: The Castle in the Sky , Kiki’s Delivery Service.
And some Totoro images from totoro.org.
The Studio Ghibli site isn’t very practical for non-Japanese speakers. For us the best source of general information on Miyazaki and Studio Ghibli is an unofficial, but excellent and extensive site called The Hayao Miyazaki Web at Nausicaa.net.
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Rembrandt: life, paintings, etchings, drawings and self portraits

Rembrandt: life, paintings, etchings, drawings and self portraits is the sister site to the amazing Essential Vermeer site I wrote about back in November. Both are created and maintained by artist Jonathan Janson.Rembrandt! What can you say about someone who is often billed as “the greatest artist in the history of Western art”, or (sometimes in the company of Valezquez) “the greatest of all painters”? Labels like that become masks that are difficult to see past. We see the legend and the name, not the artist; but clichés are hard to avoid when they contain truth.
We have little writing from Rembrandt. We know him from his remarkable artistic legacy and a fascinating visual biography in the form of over 90 self-portraits; but where he reveals himself most, I think, is in his drawings. Over 1,400 of his drawings survive, conservatively estimated at less than half of what he produced. (For most great artists we’re lucky to have a few dozen. For Vermeer and Franz Hals we have none.) Also unlike most of the great masters, the majority of Rembrandt’s drawings were not done as preparation for paintings, and very few were signed as pieces to be presented to friends or patrons. Most of his enormous outpouring of drawings were apparently done for himself, as visual record of his life and experience or simply for the joy in the act of drawing.
He drew almost anything in the world around him: trees, houses, marshes, reeds, boats, bridges, people in the street, people in costume, domestic and captive wild animals, children, beggars, merchants, his patrons, his wife, his family and himself. Rembrandt must have drawn with the ease and facility with which you or I walk or speak.
That faculty for drawing expressed itself in an economy of line and fluid simplicity unmatched by any other drawings I have ever seen in Western art. (Chinese and and Japanese ink paintings are another story, but they had a different purpose and were also a definite influence on Rembrandt.)In the same way that poetry distills pages of emotion and meaning into a few lines, Rembrandt compresses his fascination with the visual world into a few intensely meaningful ink lines.
Drawing most often with reed pen and bistre ink, at times with rapid, wildly calligraphic strokes, and adding quick expressive ink washes that speak worlds of volume and light, Rembrandt was a visual poet. He captured the essence of what he saw with a clarity and brevity that is transcendent.
Rembrandt’s etchings show his drawing skills at their most careful, since these were made for reproduction and sale, but he still shows a wonderful freedom and almost casual confidence when drawing with the etching needle.
Although not as mind-bogglingly comprehensive as the Essential Vermeer site, Rembrandt: life, paintings, etchings, drawings and self portraits is still an amazing resource, containing over 100 paintings, 50 drawings and the complete set of all 289 of his etchings, as well as biographical information, museum listings, links and more. Wow.
Addendum: I forgot to mention: there are seven Rembrandt etchings on view at the Philadelphia Museum of Art as part of an exhibition on Dutch Prints (to February 12, 2006), and a major show of Rembrandt prints and drawings will be at the National Gallery in November of 2006.
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Dodecaden (Man Arenas)

Man Arenas is a production designer and concept artist, primarily for animated films. His production designs, storyboards, location drawings and character designs are sometimes simple, sometimes complex but always beautifully realized, He works in a loose, confident drawing style that is full of life and just plain fun to look at.Many of the images on the Dodecaden site have a magnifying glass icon (usually at the upper right) that opens a wonderful hi-resolution version in a pop-up. Some of the images also have a word balloon icon that shows a comment about the image when you mouse over it.
Unfortunately, there’s very little information on the site about Arenas himself or his techniques. It looks like he starts many of the monochromatic images with an ocher line drawing, switches to black crayon or chalk for the final linework and finishes out with washes of what I’m guessing to be gouache, highlighted with white chalk.
There are terrific images throughout the site. Under the “Productions” link, they are arranged by type of project (Movies, Production, etc…) and under the “Artwork” link many of the same images are arranged by type of drawing (Storyboard, Character Design, Layout, etc…). My favorites are the beautiful tone drawings for an animated film called Laura’s Star (from Warner UK; here’s the movie site).
Addendum: reader fourmi (who has a very nice blog herself) wrote to let me know that Man Arenas also has a terrific blog called Yacin the Faun (some amazing stuff here), and Man wrote to mention that the Dodecaden site has several language versions: English, French and Spanish (links at the bottom of the pages), a great feature.
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Paul McCormack
Paul McCormack is a portrait artist living in the Hudson Valley area of New York State. He creates portraits in oil, watercolor and graphite. Although his oil and graphite portraits are accomplished and refined, it’s the watercolor paintings that caught my attention. There is something about the way he handles the texture and color of fabric and skin in watercolor that is particularly appealing, and brings to mind the beautiful Pre-Raphaelite watercolors of Maria Spartali Stillman. (I’m using “watercolor” in its broad sense: including opaque watercolor.)I link below to both McCormack’s personal site and his gallery on the Art Renewal Center. The personal site has more information and includes a listing of workshops and exhibitions, but the images are inexplicably small and don’t do his paintings (or drawings) justice. The ARC gallery gives a much better showing of his work. In particular, you can see something of the texture and detail in the watercolor portraits.
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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
Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective
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
Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective











