Lines and Colors art blog
  • Gilbert Stuart, not just presidents

    Gilbert Stuart
    Today is the Fourth of July, “Independence Day” here in the U.S., a holiday on which we celebrate not having to pay undue deference to a little old lady who wears funny hats.

    Amid carrying on the traditions of beer and barbecues handed down by our nation’s founding fathers, there is sometimes talk of the fathers themselves — the framers of our government and its basic documents, and when those guys are mentioned, out come the Gilbert Stuart portraits.

    Stuart, as I explained in my previous post on him, was a premiere American portraitist, but his skills a painter are overshadowed by his “greatest hits” of presidential portraits, notably of “not so handsome” George Washington (above, top, with detail), as well as other key figures like John “I make George look good” Adams (third down) and Thomas “I can’t stick around to have my portrait finished” Jefferson (fourth down).

    As interesting as these portraits can be, I think Stuart shines much more readily in his portraits of less well known figures like Matilda Stoughton de Jaudenes (third and fourth from the bottom) and Marianne Ashley Walker (bottom two), in which you can see his economical, painterly brushwork and much more lively portrayals than those of the stiffly posed politicians.

    (I don’t know if Walker had the hots for Stuart, or he just wished she did, or what, but that’s some smoldering look he captured there.)

    The images above are from two excellent sources of high resolution images of Stuart’s work, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Google Art Project. For more, see my previous post on Gilbert Stuart, which lists additional resources.



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  • The Higgs Boson Explained (PHD Comics)

    The Higgs Boson Explained, PHD Comics, Jorge Cham
    Curious about the “Higgs Boson” breakthrough mentioned in the popular science news lately, and/or the nature of the very small10 particles that make up life, the universe and everything? (Of course you are!)

    Well Daniel Whiteson, an experimental physicist at CERN, where the exciting high energy particle smashing action has been taking place, explains it to you, as illustrated and animated in “animated whiteboard” style by Jorge Cham of PHD (Piled Higher and Deeper) Comics in a short called The Higgs Boson Explained (on Vimeo).

    (The animation begins about 30 seconds in. The above screens are just samples, and not meant to read as a sequence).

    This was recorded and animated prior to the recent announcement that the mysterious and elusive particle (which Mr. Higgs so carelessly misplaced) has likely been found by the happy matter smashers at CERN (well, 99.999% likely).

    Don’t you just feel smarter already?

    [Via Rebecca J. Rosen on The Atlantic]



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  • J. Paul Getty Museum on Google Art Project

    J. Paul Getty Museum on Google Art Project: ean Baptiste Siméon Chardin [with detail], John William Godward, Roelandt Savery, Vincent van Gogh, Titian [Tiziano Vecellio], Nicolaes Maes, Camille Pissarro, Aert de Gelder, Claude Monet, Pieter de Hooch
    Having never been to the J. Paul Getty Museum, all I know about it is limited to what I see online, but judging from that, and particularly from the selection from the museum available for viewing in zoomable high-resolution versions on the Google Art Project, their collection is quite fantastic.

    I’ve included a detail from the Chardin still life at top (second down) as a reminder of how terrific the zoomable images are on the Google Art Project (see my previous post on the Google Art Project).

    (Images above: Jean Baptiste Siméon Chardin [with detail], John William Godward, Roelandt Savery, Vincent van Gogh, Titian [Tiziano Vecellio], Nicolaes Maes, Camille Pissarro, Aert de Gelder, Claude Monet, Pieter de Hooch)



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Corot waterfall

    Waterfall at Terni, Camille Corot
    Waterfall at Terni, by Camille Corot.

    Metropolitan Museum of Art. Click on “Fullscreen” and zoom or download..



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  • Robert Lemler


    Robert Lemler is an artist based in Phoenix, Arizona who works in all four of the traditional subject areas: figure, portrait, still life and landscape.

    In each, his approach is incisive and economical, using a plein air painter’s eye even in the studio to distill the essence of his subject into forceful compositions and strong value contrasts.

    Lemler’s color palette is often restrained, but always with a feeling of underlying richness in his muted tones. Negative shapes play a strong part in his compositions, and firmly guide your eye through the images.

    In addition to the current and archived works on his website, there is a selection of drawings.



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  • Kingdom Animalia

    Kingdom Animalia: Tom Bagshaw,  Glenn Barr, Mark Garro, Martin Wittfooth, Mark Dean Veca, Mark Ryden, Joen Remmers, Dan May
    Kingdom Animalia is an online group art exhibit and sale to benefit the Big Life Foundation, an non-profit conservation group created by photographer Nick Brandt in response to the alarming increase in animal poaching in Africa.

    The show includes contributions by a number of artists, both originals and limited edition prints. The works are, naturally enough, created around a theme of animals, both real and fanciful.

    (Images above: Tom Bagshaw, Glenn Barr, Mark Garro, Martin Wittfooth, Mark Dean Veca, Mark Ryden, Joen Remmers, Dan May)

    [Via Mark Frauenfelder on BoingBoing]



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Vasari Handcraftes artist's oil colors

Charley’s Picks
Bookshop.org

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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
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Daily Painting
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Drawing on the right side of the brain
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Understanding Comics