Lines and Colors art blog
  • Tom Kidd

    Tom KiddcaI’ve long had a fascination with airships. The idea of an aircraft that drifts slowly through the sea of sky, gently buoyed by the density of air rather than forcing its way up with raw power, has always seemed appealing. If they ever get around to offering luxury cruises by airship, I’ll be among the first to sign up.

    It was airships that attracted me to Tom Kidd’s work. I first encountered his illustrations a number of years ago at a comics and science fiction convention (somewhere on Long Island) in which some of his originals were on display as part of the art show. The first thing I noticed were his wonderful depictions of airships, not ordinary airships, mind you, but airships as H.G Wells might have enjoyed them, imaginatively designed, richly decorated and finely arrayed.

    The paintings were from an ongoing project of Kidd’s called Gnemo, a series of images of a fantastical world, the origin of which he assigns to a mythical artist of the same name.

    The name, of course, it a take off on the lead character from Winsor McCay’s incredible newspaper strip from the early 20th Century, Little Nemo In Slumberland. The world Kidd has conjured up, in fact is filled with references to McCay (such at the name of the city pictured here, “Winsor McCay City”) and other famous illustrators and artists like Wyeth, Schoonover, Pyle, Dunne, Moran, Sloane, Krenkel and others.

    Kidd is a fantasy and science fiction illustrator who has done illustrations for publishers like Tor Books, Random House, Doubleday and William Morrow. He has also done work for Marvel Comics and has illustrated versions of classic books like Dumas’ The Three Musketeers (gallery here) and Wells’ The War of The Worlds. His illustrations can also be found in The Banquet of the Lords of Night and Other Stories, written by Liz Williams, and in the new collection of his work, Kiddography: The Art and Life of Tom Kidd.

    Kiddogrophy is also the name of Kidd’s blog, in which he posts his work, both recent and past, and talks about how it was created, including a detailed discussion of the Gnemo image of Winsor McCay City shown here. The blog is supplemented with another, Gnemo’s Sketchbook, dedicated to the imaginary artist from which Kidd supposedly “inherited” the drawings.

    Kidd’s illustrations run from straight-ahead science fiction subjects to dragons-and-wizards fantasy, but the ones I enjoy most, in addition to the Gnemo illustrations, are the ones in which his penchant for portraying the style and feeling of Victorian fantasy holds sway. His illustrations are richly colored, wonderfully imaginative and often lavishly detailed.

    Kidd is a 4-time winner of Science Fiction’s prestigious Hugo Award and a 5-time winner of the Chesley Award, named for pioneering space illustrator Chesley Bonestell, who Kidd lists as one of his influences.

    There are quite a few images on Kidd’s site, and there is a nice click-through feature for browsing through them, but many of them are unfortunately a bit small to get a real feeling for his work. I’ve listed a couple of unofficial galleries below with larger images, but they require a strong pop-up blocker and stomach for animated banner ads.

    Kidd is currently working on a new book with more of his delightful flights of fancy on the Gnemo theme, Gnemo: Airships, Adventure, Exploration. Hopefully, it will be among the books found in the reading rooms on the next generation of luxury cruise airships.

     

    http://spellcaster.com/tomkidd/
    Gnemo images gallery
    Kiddogrophy (blog)
    Gnemo’s Sketchbook
    Unofficial Imagenetion Gallery One and Two (pop-ups and animated banner ads)

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  • Francis Livingston

    Francis Livingston Although influenced by Sargent and Whistler, Francis Livingston painted for a while almost monochromatically, but eventually embraced color with a vengeance, apparently after studying the painters of the Bay Area Figurative Movement, the California Impressionists and their inspiration, the original French Impressionists.

    I wouldn’t put Livingston’s work in the Impressionist mold, though. Instead of small strokes of color optically blended to make larger shapes, he uses big bold blocks of color, chips and chunks of color, (perhaps troweled in with a palette knife in places) to define his forms.

    In fact he seems to luxuriate in the physical presence of the paint, using wonderful fat strokes of buttery oil paint, laid on with three-dimensional thickness, stroke defining edges raised above the surface of the canvas. The effect is one of energetic abandon to the luxury of color, and a feeling of the rich sensuality of paint, looking as if it was just squeezed from the tube.

    His subjects vary from urban scenes, particularly theater fronts and amusement parks, to landscapes of the American west, specifically Idaho where he moved with his family after living in San Francisco for a number of years. His color range varies with subject, at times with bright contrasts and other times in muted, atmospheric harmony. He also seems particularly intrigued with the geometry of his subjects, and his compositions often emphasize the primitive shapes he sees in them.

    Livingston’s bios list him as having been a successful illustrator, although I haven’t been able to find much in the way of examples of his illustration on the web. Fortunately, there are plenty of examples of his gallery work on several sites for commercial galleries, a couple of which have large enough versions of the images to get a feeling for the rich, painterly quality of his canvasses.

     

    Bio and images (click into subsections) on Medicine Man Gallery
    Thomas Reynolds Gallery
    Leslie Levy Fine Art
    Lindgren & Smith Gallery, with short bio
    Arcadia Gallery

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  • Russ Manning

    Russ Manning
    You might look at the comic page above and think “Oh, someone’s doing a take-off of Star Wars.”, except that you’d be wrong by almost 40 years. It’s a page from Magnus, Robot Fighter 4000 AD, a character created and drawn by comics artist Russ Manning in the early 1960’s.

    Magnus, Robot Fighter depicted a semi-utopian world of the year 4000, in which great-looking men and women living in cities of sleek skyscrapers and flying cars had abdicated many of their personal responsibilities to domestic and official robots, with less than ideal consequences. The strip was drawn in a beautiful style with elegant linework and superb draftsmanship. His futuristic designs still look advanced, where most science fiction illustration and comic art from the time looks impossibly dated.

    Ironically, Manning did later work on Star Wars comics, writing and drawing the Star Wars newspaper strip in the late 1970’s, toward the end of his career. He also worked on the newspaper strip Tarzan as well as the Tarzan comic book other comics for Dell and Gold Key. He also created Tarzan graphic albums that were aimed at the European market (and are now being reprinted by Dark Horse).

    Manning was influenced by comics greats like Alex Raymond and Al Williamson, and in turn has been a great influence on many contemporary comics artists, among them William Stout and Dave Stevens, who worked as his assistants at one time, and in particular Steve Rude, who shows a dramatic influence from Manning’s solid draftsmanship and beautifully controlled line.

    There an extensive, if somewhat awkward to navigate, Russ Manning Tribute on the online Edgar Rice Burroughs magazine ERBZine. Look for images outlined in blue, which connect to enlarged images or additional pages. Most of the images are not large, but you can get a feeling for the quality of his work and the extent of his career. The Magnus, Robot Fighter sequence from which the above page comes is on this page.

    The beautiful Magnus , Robot Fighter 4000 AD stories are being collected by Dark Horse and released as hardback collections, Volume 1, Volume 2 and Volume 3. There are also collections of the European-aimed Tarzan albums, Tarzan the Untamed, Tarzan: Jewels of Opar and Tarzan: The Land that Time Forgot.


    ERBZine Russ manning Tribute
    Illustrated bio on Lambiek.net Comiclopedia
    Russ Manning on Dark Horse Comics – Magnus titles have previews

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  • Malcolm McNeill

    Malcolm McNeill
    Malcolm McNeill is an illustrator, concept artist and comics artist based in New York. His work has appeared in publications like The New York Times, National Lampoon and titles for Marvel Comics.

    McNeill was collaborating with William S. Burroughs, before his death, on an “word/image novel” called Ah Pook is Here (image above, top), based, I believe, on a short story by the same name (which was also the inspiration for an animated short by Philip Hunt). McNeill worked on the project with Burroughs intermittently for seven years. Unfortunately the project was eventually abandoned because of insufficient funding. The glimpse of the work is tantalizing. It looks like McNeill is playing with the comics narrative form in some interesting and novel ways.

    McNeill is at work on his own graphic novel, , and a non-fiction graphic narrative called 1%, in which he also seems to be playing with narrative conventions. It’s too bad that the images on the site are relatively small.

    He wrote and illustrated a science fiction comic series called Tetra (above, two images at bottom, right) that ran in Gallery magazine for two years.

    He has also done concept design for TV, including concept, design and art direction for the Saturday Night Live opening sequence in which the cast appeared as giants among the buildings of New York, as well as a number of commercial spots.

    There are some nicely done illustrations for a dinosaur-themed project in the Kids section (above, image at bottom, left), for which he lists contributions of character design and script development but doesn’t indicate the name of the project.

    Addendum: Malcolm has let me know that he in now in LA, not NY, he’s just completed a book about the collaboration with Burroughs, which took place in the 70’s, and the book will include the artwork in various stages of completion. The dinosaur images are for a book/film called “Pterrence with a P”, which he storyboarded, but has left to work on . He also notes that anyone interested in contacting him for professional inquiries can simply ask for larger versions of the images.

    Note: Site contains NSFW images.

    Addendum 2 (9/11/07): McNeill has posted a sited devoted specifically to the Burroughs project, which is now spelled Ah Puch is Here. There is now a fairly extensive interview with malcom McNeill posted on RealityStudio.org, and another on George Laughead’s Beats in Kansas, in which he talks about collaborating with Burroughs.



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  • Chris Appelhans

    Chris Appelhans
    I chanced on Chris Appelhans from a two-month old link from John Nevarez’s blog, did a little digging and found that he is being widely mentioned at the moment. Good thing because his own site has some yummy art but very little actual biographical or background info.

    Chris Appelhans is a visual development artist who, among other projects, worked extensively on the new movie Monster House. His previsualization art for that movie is particularly striking (images above), and there are a number of images from the project on his site.

    There are also images from an upcoming project that is an adaptation of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland which apparently takes place in a modern urban/sci-fi setting called Underworld. Art from these and other projects can be accessed from Appelhans’ Portfolio page, along with landscape sketches, doodles and an animated Superman short.

    There is also a link there to the archive of his series of short webcomics, frank and frank.

    Appelhans is featured in the Art of Monster House book and is a contributor to the Flight 1 and Flight 2 comics anthologies.

    There is a nice post on Stainless Steel Droppings which indicates that Appelhans is a Pixar employee and goes into more detail on his current and upcoming projects. Appelhans is also an instructor for the Gnomon School of Visual Effects.

    Link via John Nevarez



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  • Ivan Bilibin

    Ivan Bilibin
    Every once in a while I stumble across something by accident that turns out to be a great find.

    I was in the Met in New York last weekend and they have a wonderful practice (fortunately in common with many major museums lately) of rotating works into view from their collection of drawings, prints and photographs that ordinarily can’t be on permanent display because of sensitivity to light. One of the many upsides to this is that works come to light that might not make it to the curator’s list for major displays and wouldn’t be seen under other circumstances.

    I was walking by a case in which some lushly illustrated books were on display and noticed that they were open to wonderful, brightly colored illustrations by an illustrator I was not familiar with. I took some photos (image above) and noted the artist’s name: Ivan Bilibin. On looking him up, I was pleased to find that there were a number of resources on the web, and I’ve listed what I could find for you in the links below.

    Bilibin was a Russian illustrator working, more or less, during the peak times for great illustration around the turn of the 20th Century, but he seems to have been outside of the mainstream and took most of his influences from Russian folk art, Medieval and Renaissance art, Art Nouveau, and the open line and filled color style of Japanese prints. (See my posts on Hokusai, Yoshida and Hasui.)

    Bilibin is most famous for his illustrations of Russian fairy tales which he illustrated with a colorful clear line style that incorporates decorative elements both within the images and at times surrounding them.

    Bilibin eventually moved into stage and costume design for operas and ballets and also ventured into murals and straightforward landscape painting.

    I was also delighted to find that there are books available with his illustrations, including Russian Fairy Tales, although I haven’t see them first hand yet.


    Bio and illustrations on Wikipedia (16 illos)
    FantasyGallery
    Illustrations and bio on Matt McArdle site
    Illustrated bio on Bud Plant Illustrated Books
    SurLalane Fairy Tales
    Auburn University (many costumes and stage sets)
    Artcyclopedia (links)

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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