Lines and Colors art blog
  • Artist studios in 360°, Bradford Bohonus

    Artist studios in 360, Bradford Bohonus
    I have an ongoing fascination with artists’ studios.

    I suppose it’s partly curiosity, partly looking for usable ideas and partly, I must admit, looking for confirmation that I’m not the only one whose working space is crammed wall to wall and floor to ceiling with drawing boards, easels, palettes, jars, tubes, racks, frames, shelves, boxes, computers, monitors, flat files, books, papers, comics and toy dinosaurs (everyone has toy dinosaurs in their studio, right?).

    Beyond that, artists’ studios are fascinating in that they are a kind of work by the artist — a self-portrait of sorts, one that while deliberate in some respects has also evolved organically over time to accommodate the artist’s working methods.

    Bradford Bohonus is a Seattle based photographer who specializes in 360° panoramic images. Among his VR galleries are a number of themed projects, one of which is a series of Seattle Artists in Their Studios.

    These are presented as interactive “Virtual Reality” stye panoramas that can be panned completely around and up and down, as though the camera were a single point floating in the center of the space. In addition, they can be zoomed out or in to take in more of the scene or view greater detail.

    There are two unfortunate drawback to the presentation. One is that though there is a thumbnail page that lists the artists and gives links to their websites, the thumbnail images show the artists’ faces rather than their work, so if you’re interested in the studios of artists working in particular mediums, you’re left to guess.

    The other issue is that whoever created the Flash module in which the VR interactives are presented was too lazy to script the “Here’s how you use the VR controls” window to go away once you’ve seen it, so you must click to close it every single time you view an image, even if clicking through with the “previous/next” arrows at the top.

    If you can get past that, the images themselves are wonderful. Seeing a space like an artist’s studio in a 360° panorama is very different from looking at single images, and gives you much more of a feeling for the space than even a series of normal photographs. The sample shots I’ve included above are screen captures in just one position that don’t begin to convey the 360° effect, I’ve just tried to show some of the variety of the artists’ working spaces Bohonus has photographed.

    These range from expansive industrial spaces to the cramped spare bedrooms and corners of basements and attics so familiar to many. They also range from crammed to organized, chaotic to serene and dark to light, with a variety of mediums, tools and types of art.

    In addition, Bohonus, like a National Geographic adventure photographer peering into animals’ dens, has captured the artists themselves in their natural habitat, along with examples of their work.

    Given my assertion that an artist’s working space is a kind of portrait, and the usual assumption that an artist’s work is representative of who they are, you could say Bohonus has created a tri-leveled portrait of each artist, as well as one that is visually expansive and invites exploring.



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Rembrandt landscape

    he Stone Bridge, Rembrandt
    The Stone Bridge, Rembrandt, on Google Art Project. Mouse over to use zoom feature at lower right.

    From the Rijksmuseum.



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  • Pascal Campion

    Pascal Campion
    Pascal Campion’s illustrations are, quite simply, a treat.

    Campion rarely uses line, working directly in areas of color, sometimes augmented with textures, but his images are so fundamentally graphic that his springy, energetic compositions carry much of the visual charm of drawings. At the same time they have the atmospheric qualities of painting.

    Like Tadahiro Uesugi, who works in similar applications of graphic color, Campion uses carefully chosen colors and a masterful touch for value to evoke mood, time and place with a finesse that would be the envy of many artists who work in a more elaborate manner.

    Campion uses of areas of distinct light and shadow, and in particular splashes and patches of bright light within subdued backgrounds, to lead your eye and highlight the focus of his images.

    He has a wonderful ability to use these effects, along with strong compositions and adept control of his color palette, to bring drama and energy to even the most unassuming of subjects; intimate domestic scenes and quiet moments of solitude become as visually compelling as raucous action.

    Campion is French-American. He studied at Arts Decoratifs de Strasbourg in France and now lives and works in San Francisco, where his clients include Dreamworks Animation, Disney TV, MTV, Nickleodeon, Cartoon Network and PBS.

    Though he also works in traditional media, Campion works primarily digitally. According to the About section on his website, he works in a somewhat unusual manner, sketching and coloring his illustrations in Adobe Flash. He then takes some of his images into Photoshop for final touches and lighting.

    (Creating still images in Flash is not as odd as it may seem. I work in Flash a lot and I can attest to the nice set of vector drawing tools — in particular a brush tool that responds to pressure sensitive tablets like superbly springy brush/pen combination.)

    There is an interview with Campion from the CharacterDesign blog in which he describes his daily routine and some of his working methods, and a very good video interview on Vimeo that includes brief time-compressed sequences of him working in Flash and Photoshop.

    In addition to the still images on his site, which are primarily personal rather than professional, there is a selection of short animations, some of which are essentially stick figures with more life and vitality than stick figures have any right to exhibit.

    He also has a blog on which he posts more recent work, and you can find a link at the bottom center of his home page by which you can subscribe to the “Pascal’s Sketch of the Day” malling list.

    Campion has posted a generous selection of his work on the site. The images can be viewed in the order they’re posted or by themes selected from a dropdown. Open your browser window to full screen to see them to best advantage.

    The images, in fact, are so numerous, the quality so consistent and the entertainment level so high that I will issue a Time Sink Warning, which is unusual for the site of an individual contemporary artist.

    Campion’s subjects are also delightfully light hearted, with storytelling aspects that frequently speak to the small pleasures in life, particularly of home and family.

    Like the best art, if you connect with his images they may accomplish the magic of allowing you to see the everyday world around you with fresh eyes.

    Like I said, a treat.



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  • Master Drawings London, 2012

    Master Drawings London, 2012: Charles-Joseph Natoire, Il Guercino, Eva Gonzalés, Adrian Zingg, Giovan Battista Dell'Era, Jean-Francois Millet, Adolph Menzel, William Callow
    Master Drawings London is a coordinated sale of master drawings by a number of galleries in London, UK, from 27 June to 5 July, 2012.

    This is apparently the 12th such sale, and the event has a dedicated website from which you can access an online catalog. Though it unfortunately takes the form of one of those cutesy page-flipping online magazines, you can zoom in on the images and, if you click the “Menu” button at upper left, you can download a PDF version.

    “Drawings” in this case means works on paper and includes watercolor and oil sketches.

    (Images above: Charles-Joseph Natoire [with detail], Il Guercino, Eva Gonzalés, Adrian Zingg, Giovan Battista Dell’Era, Jean-Francois Millet, Adolph Menzel, William Callow [with detail])

    [Via @American_Artist]



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Meléndez

    The Afternoon Meal, by Luis Egidio Melendez
    The Afternoon Meal (La Merienda), by Luis Egidio Meléndez. On Metropolitan Museum of Art. View Fullscreen and choose zoom or Download (lower right).



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  • Leo Dillon, 1933 – 2012

    Leo and Diane Dillon
    I’m sorry to report that renowned illustrator Leo Dillon died on Saturday, May 26, 2012.

    Dillon, along with his wife and long-time artistic collaborator Diane, were particularly well known and influential in the fantasy and science fiction art communities.

    It would be difficult to sort out Leo Dillon’s work separate from that of Diane’s, nor would I attempt to, as theirs was a remarkably deep collaboration.

    The Dillons have never had a dedicated website or blog as far as I know. Into that void has stepped an unofficial blog dedicated to archiving The Art of Leo and Diane Dillon.

    For more, including links to additional resources, see my 2009 post on Leo and Diane Dillon.


    The Art of Leo and Diane Dillon (unofficial blog)
    My previous post on Leon and Diane Dillon

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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