Lines and Colors art blog
  • Richard Schmid: The Landscapes

    Richard Schmid: The Landscapes
    Richard Schmid is a well known painter, author and teacher, who is highly regarded among other artists and whose signature style is often emulated by his students.

    I first mentioned Schmid on Lines and Colors back in 2008. In that article, I focused largely on his demo videos and his excellent instructional book, Alla Prima.

    Those who are primarily familiar with Schmid’s work in print from early editions of that book will find The Landscapes — a collection of his paintings published in 2010 — a revelation (and likewise the newer edition of Alla Prima II).

    The Landscapes is wonderfully large (11×14″, 28x36cm) and sumptuously produced, with much attention given to the color production in an attempt to do justice to the artist’s work.

    Unfortunately, I can’t say the same for the presentation of the book on the Richard Schmid website. There is a preview, accessed from a “Preview this Item” tab under the image of the cover, but (almost as nonsensically as Amazon previews) it includes atypical pages and front matter totally irrelevant to why you might want to purchase the book — which is, of course, for the artist’s beautiful paintings. Some 300 images are included in this volume, a bit more than half of which are full plates of the works.

    There are also a few landscape images in the Archive Gallery on the website, a couple of which are included in the book. It’s still not much of a clue as to the real nature of the book.

    I’ve taken the liberty of trying to photograph a few, somewhat more representative, examples of images from the book to show you here, but I can’t claim my photographs are accurate reproductions of the color or image quality in the book itself, and of course, they’re still very limited in size.

    Suffice it to say, if you like Richard Schmid’s work, but have not seen this book, you are likely to want it if you see it. If you’re not familiar with Schmid’s work, it’s certainly worth investigating.

    I find Schmid particularly fascinating for his mastery of edges and values. His work is a textbook lesson in how to control the viewer’s attention — what to include and what to simply suggest. Schmid uses deft control of color, contrast and texture to evoke mood and atmosphere, imbuing his work with a kind of whispered poetry. Elements in his compositions subtly emerge from their settings as if slowly revealed by contemplation.

    Those qualities come through in The Landscapes in a way that invites you to linger over every image, and go back through it repeatedly. It’s a beautiful presentation of work by one of our best contemporary landscape painters. I’m remiss in not having reviewed it before now.

    I hope to follow up soon with a review of the newly revised edition of Schmid’s classic instructional book, Alla Prima II, which I recommend highly. I can also recommend his instructional videos, notably the series of four seasonal landscapes, among which I think June the best place to start

    Note: if you look for Schmid’s books and videos on Amazon or other online sellers, you will find them artificially overpriced and often presented as if out of print. You should purchase them directly from the Richard Schmid website.



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Bruegel pen and ink landscape

    Landscape with the Penitence of Saint Jerome, Pieter Bruegel the Elder, pen and brown ink
    Landscape with the Penitence of Saint Jerome, Pieter Bruegel the Elder

    In the National Gallery of Art, D.C, with zoomable version (also downloadable if you create a free account). There is an additional zoomable image on the Google Art Project and a smaller downloadable version on Wikimedia Commons.

    The nominal penitent saint is probably the least interesting part of this beautiful and sweeping landscape, rendered with remarkable delicacy in pen and brown ink by the 16th century Flemish master.

    I had the pleasure of seeing this —and a number of other Bruegel landscape drawings — several years ago at a show at the National Gallery, and they just knocked me out.

    I particularly love Bruegel’s lively and economical shorthand expression of distant trees and foliage, which on closer examination looks less casual, and more like every stroke was lovingly placed. The former is of course more likely, but his confident mastery creates an appearance of care and precision.

    In their simplicity, his renderings of the trees also carry for me a feeling of Chinese ink painting, as does the relative scale of the figures to the composition.

    The actual influences, however, are Italian — Bruegel’s approach to drawing and painting landscape changed after he spent time copying from Venetian Renaissance masters like Titian and Domenico Campagnola during a trip to Italy in the mid 1500s.

    Landscape with the Penitence of Saint Jerome; NGA, DC



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  • Distance

    Distance, animation by students from the Gobelins school in Pari
    Distance is a short (3 minute) animated film by students from the Gobelins school in Paris.

    It portrays a psychological mini-drama of fear within the mind of an introverted high school girl as she tries to traverse the distance between her hall locker and that of a boy she likes.

    Please see the page on Vimeo for the animation’s group credits.


    Distance, on Vimeo

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  • Eye Candy for Today: Watanabe Seitei ink painting

    Birds of a Flowering Branch, Watanabe Seite, ink and color on silk
    Birds of a Flowering Branch, Watanabe Seitei

    In the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Use zoom or download icons below the image.

    Roughly 14×11 inches (36x27cm), ink and color on silk. The listing doesn’t say what kind of “color”. The white flowers look to me like opaque watercolor, but I don’t know.

    The museum lists the piece as an album leaf, and there are links to similar works by the same artist at the bottom of the page.



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  • Ali Cavanaugh

    Ali Cavanaugh, watercolor on clay - modern fresco - portraits
    In a process similar to traditional fresco-secco — a method of painting with water based paints on a dry plaster surface that has been moistened — St. Louis based painter Ali Cavanaugh works by applying layers of watercolor to a prepared clay ground that has been wet.

    The resulting images have been described as luminous and translucent, a character that unfortunately would be difficult to convey in photographs. Fortunately, her website often features detail crops of works, some of which are fairly large in scale, giving at least some idea of the textural character of her surface.

    Cavanaugh varies her approach, from refined and precise to more loosely pulled from free washes, as though distilled out of the running wet paint.

    Her subjects are figures and portraits, arranged in thematic groupings, some with light or dark backgrounds. A theme of figures with hands and arms interlocked in complex positions is contrasted with another with hands in socks, the latter submerging the complex form within a more general mass, that is in turn covered in a complex pattern. At times the socks are translucent enough to allow silhouettes of the fingers.

    Cavanaugh seems to relish the challenges and the exploration of variations within her themes.

    Note that the selections of paintings by theme on her website are accessed from a drop-down menu, and there is a separate section of “portraits” . There is also a brief description of her process. There are additional details about her process in her profile on the Ampersand site, makers of the clay-coated board on which she works, and a bit in this short film about the artist by Alvaro Aro.

    Cavanaugh’s series “Immerse” (images above, top five) will be the subject of a solo show at the Gold Gallery in Boston from September 8 to October 18, 2015, with an artist’s reception on September 18, 2015.



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  • Pronk Still Life with Holbein Bowl, Nautilus Cup, Glass Goblet and Fruit Dish

    Pronk Still Life with Holbein Bowl, Nautilus Cup, Glass Goblet and Fruit Dish, Willem Kalf
    Pronk Still Life with Holbein Bowl, Nautilus Cup, Glass Goblet and Fruit Dish, Willem Kalf

    Link is to zoomable version on Google Art Project, downloadable high-res file on Wikimedia Commons; original is in the Statens Museum for Kunst, National Gallery of Denmark, which also has a high-res downloadable file.

    “Pronk” still life means “splendid”, or fancy, and 17th century master Willem Kalf has arranged this one with an array of rare and highly expensive objects, including the “Holbein Bowl” owned by Henry VII.

    There is a point at which it’s obvious that an artist is just plain showing off, but when you can paint like this, who can blame you?



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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