Lines and Colors art blog
  • Mike Wieringo (update)


    I first wrote about comics artist Mike Wieringo (“Ringo”), back in September. At the time I mentioned that he had started a blog, Mike’s own personal soapbox!, and was posting nice large images of his drawings (in contrast to the rather small images in his site’s galleries).

    He’s still at it, frequently updating the blog with wonderful new drawings of comics characters, sometimes his own (above), sometimes other artist’s and sometimes company owned. In every case, he has his own unique take on the character and his style is immediately recognizable.

    As I mentioned in my earlier post, although his work looks terrific inked and colored, his pencil drawings are particularly appealing. They have a loose, confident quality and energy that is sometimes submerged in the finished work, so it’s a treat to see lots of his pencil work on the blog.

    Unfortunately, even though he’s up over 200 posts, he doesn’t seem to have any provision for permalinks or archives on the blog, so once the current posts are replaced by new ones, they’re out of reach. It’s a good reason to check in often I guess, but maybe if we all write and ask nice, he’ll open up the blog archives and let us have a look at the older posts once in while.



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  • Whistler’s Etchings

    James Abbot McNeill Whistler
    I’ll do a general post about James Abbot McNeill Whistler at some point, but for this one I want to concentrate on his etchings. In the general sense, suffice it to say that if your only familiarity with Whistler is his rather staid profile portrait of his mother sitting in a chair (Arrangement in Grey and Black: Portrait of the Painter’s Mother, commonly known as Whistler’s Mother), you’re missing out on a unique and amazing artist.

    Apart from his considerable skill as a painter, he was an astonishingly accomplished etcher and printmaker. Whistler is my second favorite etcher, after only Rembrandt, and that’s saying something. His masterfully atmospheric etchings could capture with equal aplomb the delicate grace of a young girl or the rough textures of the London waterfront.

    Etching is a painstaking process. The metal plate (copper in the past, these days steel or aluminum unless you’re rich) is coated with a wax ground, into which the artist draws with an etching needle or other sharp instrument. The plate is then immersed in acid which “bites” (etches) lines into the plate where the wax resist has been removed by the needle. The plate is then prepared, inked and wiped so that the ink only remains in the recessed lines, and then run through a press with a dampened sheet of special (usually soft) paper, transferring the ink to the paper through pressure.

    The artist doesn’t truly know what a print (or impression) will look like until going through the entire process. Often the artist must repeat the process and bite the plate again if the lines are not definite enough, or the plate can be ruined if the lines are bitten too far or the resist is corrupted with dirt or pinholes. (All in all though, as painstaking as it is, there is something soothing and appealing about the process. It produces some of the state of “mindfulness” often engendered by craft that requires careful attention.)

    The advantage of etching, other than the ability to produce and sell multiple versions of the same drawing, is the beautifully fine line that is possible with an etching needle and the careful biting of a plate. Whistler was a master etcher, and also worked in drypoint, the creation of plates without acid by scratching directly into the surface, producing a coarser but softer-edged line that is sometimes preferred.

    His most famous series of etchings is of the banks and docks of the Thames River (image above) in his adopted home of London. (Whistler was an American by birth.) He also produced two wonderful sets of Venice, which he sometimes added to with pastel after they were printed, and a French set.

    His images can be heavily rendered in one section of the composition, giving an illusion of solid reality, and dissolve into obvious lines on paper a few inches away. (I just love that effect and the mental shift it produces.)

    There is a beautiful but expensive volume, The Etchings of James McNeill Whistler by Katharine A. Lochnan, but there is also a very nice and inexpensive Dover book, Etchings of James A. McNeill Whistler (Dover Art Collections) by Maria Naylor.

    The Dover volumes as a whole are wonderfully inexpensive, but image quality often suffers in the inexpensive printing. Etching, however, survives reproduction in books far better than drawing or painting, largely because it is a graphic process to begin with and deals with line, and this book is a bargain for the price (about $13). (Dover also has a terrific and very inexpensive volume of The Complete Etchings of Rembrandt: Reproduced in Original Size by Gary D. Schwartz.)

    The link below is to a wonderfull collection of Whitsler’s etchings and drypoints at the Freer Saclker Online Collection of American Art from the Smithsonian.

    There is something irresistible and other-worldly about etched lines, and a subtle delicacy that is unmatched in any other drawing medium (except perhaps for metalpoint). In Whistler’s hands, etched lines become things of wonder.



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  • Ed von Lee

    Ed von Lee
    Ed Lee draws cool ‘bots, wild characters, fantastic environments and nasty villains. He studied fine arts but his interest in such things led him to a career in commercial art (something I can identify with). He studied at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, NY, but lives and works in Korea.

    Lee is a concept artist and has worked on projects like Underworld 2: Evolution, The Green Mile, Batman & Robin, MGM:EFX and Guild Wars. He has worked with ILM and prior to that was a production designer, visual effects designer and computer graphics director for Rhythm and Hues.

    He has also been teaching concept design at Dongseo University in Busan. He works in traditional media, digital painting and CGI, utilizing whatever medium is more appropriate for the task at hand.

    Lee’s character designs have a fun, loose feeling and exaggerated features that emphasize the character. His environments play with dramatic contrasts of light and dark to emphasize mood and his ‘bots look like blueprints for an alien robot assembly line that’s about to go into production. Fun stuff.

    In addition to the web site, Lee also has a blog where he often posts his work.



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  • Collected Tears of the Weeping Nivbed (Justin Cherry)

    Justin CherryI’ll start out by saying that I don’t know much about Justin Cherry.

    I know that he does terrific images, sometimes in comics outline style and sometimes painted in both traditional and digital media. I know that he is mentioned often (but briefly) on CGI sites, and at one time, he worked at Troika Games. I know that he has been featured in the Expose 1 collection of digital illustration, and I know that I like his work.

    He is working on a personal project called Unreal Doco. He has a blog here that hasn’t done much to answer my basic questions but does have some more of his drawings and sketches.

    What I don’t know is what he does professionally, who his clients are, where his work has been published (other then Expose), where he studied, or any of the other background info it’s usually easy to come by about artists and illustrators on the web.

    I don’t know if he is intentionally keeping his personal (and professional) information out of the spotlight, culturing a mysterioso persona or simply doesn’t think that kind of information is worth posting.

    He has a GC gallery and traditional media gallery on his site. There is also a Justin Cherry gallery at Epilogue.net, and a Nivbed gallery at Bugglefug.

    I also don’t have a clue what Collected Tears of the Weeping Nivbed refers to. I do know that I’ll keep stopping back to see if he’s posted any more of his terrific images.



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  • Michael J. Deas


    You’ve probably seen Michael Deas’ work without realizing it. In addition to his revitalization of the Columbia Pictures logo (above) Deas created the illustrations for some the most popular commemorative stamps ever released by the U.S. Postal service (James Dean, Marilyn Monroe and Audrey Hepburn and others).

    His beautifully realized illustrations have been on the cover of magazines like Time and Commuincation Arts (in which he was the subject of a cover story) and he has received numerous awards from the Society of Illustrators.

    He initially wanted to be a realist painter, unfortunately at a time when realism was being pronounced prematurely dead by the art establishment, and turned his attention to illustration.

    He carries his admiration for traditional technique into his working method for illustration. He paints in oil on prepared wooden panels, first creating a detailed underpainting on top of which he builds his final color in glazes.



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  • Nancy Depew

    Nancy Depew
    Nancy Depew paints landscapes, still lifes and figures. In each case her approach, although consistent in many ways, is so strongly tied to her intentions toward the subject that you might think it the work of three different artists if you didn’t know otherwise.

    Her landscape paintings are usually deep within the woods, at the edge or center of streams, in thickly canopied areas occasionally punctuated with light. She works in a meticulous and refined realist style and infuses her landscapes with subtle emotions by controlling the light. The light invites you in, but the darkness is always there, at the edges. Her landscape images are at once appealing and slightly disconcerting.

    Depew’s still life paintings are primarily of floral subjects. Rather than the expected arrangements in a vase, her flowers are often lying on a flat surface, as if carelessly tossed aside, or pulled up roots and all. The colors are simultaneously delicate and strong, vibrant and subdued. She often plays with a subtle spotlight effect as in her landscapes, drawing your eye to a particular point from which you then move to other areas of the image, exploring her wonderfully rendered textures and careful arrangements of tone.

    There are also figure paintings and charcoal drawings on the site. Her figures are most often in curled or contorted positions, as if haunted by something or struggling with emotional isolation. Her figure paintings show a masterful command of traditional techniques and perhaps a fondness for Velázquez.

    After seeing the figures your perception of her landscape and still life paintings may be altered, so I recommend viewing the figure work last.

    The paintings are in oil. Unfortunately, Depew has taken down the small gouache landscapes that used to accompany the oils.



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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