Lines and Colors art blog
  • Pierre-Paul Prud’hon

    Pierre-Paul PrudhonIn one of my recent posts I was talking about the place of value in painting. It brought to mind one of the greatest masters of value and tone, both in painting and drawing, whose chalk figure drawings are among my favorites by any artist.

    Pierre-Paul Prud’hon was a French painter of the Romantic era, a time he shared with Gothe, Gainsborough and Mozart, among others. Napoleon commissioned him for portraits and allegory paintings. Napoleon’s first wife, Joséphine was also his patron, as was his second wife, Marie-Louise, who employed Prud’hon to teach her drawing.

    Prud’hon’s paintings are something of a bridge between the neo-classicism of Jacques-Louis David and his followers and Romanticism. He was particularly influenced by italian masters like Correggio.

    As beautiful as Prud’hon’s portraits and allegorical paintings are, it’s his drawings that wow me. Prud’hon was a master draftsman and his academic figure studies are among the finest ever done. As someone fascinated by tone when I draw the figure, Prud’hon’s drawings are examples of the level of skill I would strive to acquire.

    After achieving considerable success as a painter he began collaborating with Constance Mayer, who would finish many of their joint works, leaving Prud’hon free to pursue his academic figure drawings, something a master painter supposedly leaves behind on graduating from the Academy and uses only as studies for paintings. Not so for Prud’hon; drawing figures in chalk was apparently what he wanted to do with his life.

    And what drawings they are! Usually starting with a toned paper as a middle ground, Prud’hon pulls the living form out of the surface with lights and darks that revel in the volume of the form, follow rippling shadows and highlights along the curves and turns of the body and create the figure’s shapes as revelations of value, often with little or no evidence of line.

    Prud’hon’s figures can seem oddly mixed-gendered, his muscular male forms often oddly paired with heads and faces that seem feminine; and his women are often classical to the point of appearing ready to be made into statues; but the confidence and subtlety with which he draws them is never in doubt.

    Prud’hon did not have an easy life, despite his success, and separated from his wife of 25 years, who was reportedly prone to drunkeness and violence, taking custody of his 5 children when she was committed to an asylum. I’m not sure of the nature of his relationship with his young collaborator, Constance Mayer, but Prud’hon’s beautiful portrait drawing of her certainly shows great affection, and he was devastated by her suicide in 1821, dying himself two years later.

    I was fortunate to catch a show of Prud’hon’s work at the Met in New York a few years ago that included many of his drawings. The control and sensitivity with which he handles the chalk is just amazing. Some of his drawings are larger, but he usually worked at a size that most artists today would find comfortable for life drawing, roughly 18″ x 24″. The drawing shown here, which is in the collection of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, is about 13 x 24″ (35 x 61 cm). The Art Renewal Center has a great high-resolution image of this drawing.

    There is a catalog from the exhibition at the Met, “Prud’hon, ou, Le rêve du bonheur, by Sylvain Laveissiére. The exhibit was organized by the Galeries nationales du Grand Palais in Paris and the catalog is in French, but the reproductions are obviously in the universal language of art.

    There is another book on Prud’hon by the same author, simply titled Pierre-Paul Prud’hon, but it emphasizes his paintings over the drawings. Unfortunately the excellent Language of the Body by John Elderfield is out of print and expensive on the used book market, but look for it in libraries.

    For a wonderful contrast in the study of master drawing techniques, compare the drawings of Prud’hon, master of value and tone, to the drawings of Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres, master of line.

     

    Prud’hon at Art Renewal Center (many drawings. look for links to hi-res versions)
    Prud’hon at Cuidad de la pintura (drawings and paintings)
    Short bio on Secret Encyclopedia of Art (pop-up warning)
    Prud’hon at Artcyclopedia (links to other resources)

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  • Frank Reilly

    Frank Reilly and Doug HigginsSome artists have as much, or more, impact as a teacher as they do as an artist.

    Although Frank Reilly had been fulfilling assignments as a professional illustrator even while he was still a pupil at the Art Students League, it was on his return there as a teacher that he would make his greatest contribution.

    Reilly was one of the most influential American art teachers in the 20th Century. He is credited with codifying methods for teaching drawing, painting, illustration and other aspects of representational art in ways that became the foundation for teaching techniques still in use today.

    Reilly organized the study of color, value, form, composition and other elements of painting and drawing into systematic programs built on Munsell’s scientific study of color and the knowledge he acquired from his own teachers (who included renowned anatomist George Bridgeman, Frank Vincent DuMond and his friend and neighbor, the great illustrator Dean Cornwell), as well as his own experience as a working illustrator.

    For the 35 years he taught at the Art Students League his classes and lectures were waiting list and standing room only.

    I can point you to two excellent sources of information about Reilly on the web. One is an article American Art Archives, the other is a remembrance by contemporary realist Doug Higgins in which he gives a wonderfully detailed account of his experiences as a student of Reilly’s, profusely illustrated with his notes, drawings and paintings from his classes (images at left, bottom).

    Because Higgin’s site is in frames, I’ve popped it out of context here because it’s the only way to link to it directly. The original context is a link within Higgin’s main site.

    Another of Reilly’s students, Jack Faragasso, who succeeded Reilly at the school he founded, has published a book, Mastering Drawing The Human Figure From Life, Memory, Imagination which is based in large part on Reilly’s instruction.

     


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  • Jeremy Lipking

    Jeremy Lipking
    Value is one one of the most overlooked and misunderstood properties in painting. No, I don’t mean $Dollar $Value, the only property that seems to matter to some art collectors, I mean the range of value from dark to light, which is often difficult to separate from hue (the particular color) and intensity (how much color).

    Jeremy Lipking is a California painter whose work is a study in the understanding and use of value.

    He paints landscapes and figures. In both he employs careful control of value contrasts to move your eye and create focus within his images. His compositions are often created in a range of middle or even dark values punctuated by areas of white (or close to it). At other times he will do the reverse, place an almost silhouetted figure against a bright, almost white background.

    Lipking shows a marked influence from John Singer Sargent (which is a Good Thing). He also acknowledges admiring the work of Joaquin Sorolla and Anders Zorn, but it is the Sargent influence that I find most interesting. Not that he is slavishly trying to copy any Sargentisms in his work, he has just absorbed elements that he likes and has put them in service of his own approach.

    Lipking came from an artistic family and was formally trained at the California Art Institute. He has garnered a number of awards including Best of Show in the Portrait Society of America International Portrait Competition this year.

    As you browse through his galleries try to think of the compositions in terms of value. What would they look like if all of the color were removed? In our quickness to be dazzled by color in painting, we often overlook the power of value. Jeremy Lipking does not.

    Link via Karen Hollingsworth.



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  • Bob MacNeil

    Bob MacNeil
    As mentioned last week on Drawn, Bob MacNeil is a multi-talented illustrator and concept artist with a wide variety of styles.

    An illustration of his was given a special spotlight in back of the new Flight 3 comics anthology, along with an inspirational story about dealing with tragedy and almost giving up on being an artist.

    Fortunately for us, he didn’t give up and is creating illustrations and concept art for a number of projects for toy companies, gaming and TV development, including the new season of Venture Brothers from the Cartoon Network.

    He is trained in traditional media. Having worked for a few years in acrylic and oil he made the leap to digital drawing and painting some years ago and finds the speed and flexibility of the digital mediums advantageous.

    His approach ranges from highly rendered to simplified and cartoonlike, realistic to highly stylized, indicating an adventurous attitude toward exploring and growing as an artist.

    MacNeil also has a blog (with the wonderfully simple name of Bob’s Log, which makes it seem like the term “blog” was invented just for him). The blog often features discussions and step-through demos of his working process.

    In addition to the mention on Drawn, MacNeil was recently interviewed on Design Inspiration.



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  • Bermuda Shorts

    Bermuda ShortsBermuda Shorts is a UK animation firm that lists itself as the first animation company to represent individual animation directors in the commercial animation arena.

    Their site is organized that way. In addition to showcasing new work, the reels are organized by director and designer. You can also browse them organized by type: commercials, broadcast, promos and short films.

    Most of the animations are for broadcast commercial applications, with clients like Volkswagen, American Express, MTV, Nikelodeon, Kraft, Coke, Nestle and the BBC.

    There are also a fair number of experimental animated shorts and fun self-promotional pieces, but most of the commercial work is just as fun.

    There is a broad variety of approaches between the directors, and all of them seem to be very imaginative and demonstrate the ability to communicate and entertain in short bursts, often 15 or 30 seconds.

    The animations are done in a variety of animation media, 2-D cell, Flash, 3-D CGI, stop-motion, photo-montage and altered live action.

    Images at left: History of Animation Nicktoons short by Filipe Alcada, Save the Children spot by Ian Bird, Nite Nite Volkswagen ad by Will Barras and Paper Dinosaurs Nickelodeon spot by Model Robot.

    Gate: bi-monthly animation contest

    Bermuda Shorts is sponsoring a bi-monthly competition called Gate for animation freelancers who want to break into directing, designers looking to move into animation and animation school grads who want to break into the biz.

    If you’re chosen, they will feature you on the site as a guest director, bring you into the studio (assuming you’re in reach of London, UK, or can travel there) and promote your work for two months. If you get a positive enough response from the industry they’ll back you with a production team and give you studio space to produce your first job. Details here.

    Link via Articles and Texticles

     


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  • Stuart Immonen

    Stuart ImmonenStuart Immonen is a Canadian comics artist and cover illustrator with a crisp, confident style. His drawings can have a loose, stylized and modern feel, but are always based on an underpinning of solid draftsmanship.

    Immonen has done work for mainstream comics companies like Marvel, DC, Dark Horse, Image Comics and the French publisher Les Humanoides Associés. Most of his work in recent years has been for Marvel, where he has worked on high-profile titles like The Hulk, Ultimate Fantastic Four and Ultimate X-Men.

    I particularly enjoyed his run on the Ultimate X-Men last year, an 11-issue arc (#54-65) inked by Wade Von Grawbadger and colored by Justin Ponsor.

    For those not familiar with the process, mainstream American comics are usually created by an artistic team, the art being broken down into pencil art, final ink drawings and then color, usually applied digitally. This allows for the creation of 22 page continuing stories on a monthly basis. (Personally, I think the old practice of crediting the color artist on a level with the letterer rather than equal to the inker is way out of date. Ponsor’s nice work on this series is a case in point.)

    Immonen started in comics by self-publishing a series called Playground. He moved from there to small companies and then the major publishers. In addition to his mainstream comic work, he still produces his own work in the form of webcomics. He has two titles, Never as Bad as You Think and Misery Loves running on the subscription based Webcomics Nation comics portal.

    In addition to Immonen’s own site, which is somewhat disappointing in the limited amount and scope of the artwork in the galleries, I’ll suggest the unofficial galleries on Comic Art Community, as well as some interviews from Top Two Three Films (re: their Adventures into Digital Comics film), Sequential Tart, and Newsarama, in which he discusses his 50 Reasons to Stop Sketching at Conventions, a painfully humorous insight into what comic artists sometimes put up with at comic conventions.

     


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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