Lines and Colors art blog
  • Eye Candy for Today: Eakins’ Concert Singer

    The Concert Singer, Thomas Eakins
    The Concert Singer, Thomas Eakins

    Link is to zoomable version on Google art Project; downloadble file in Wikimedia Commons; original is in the Philadelphia Museum of Art. There is an article on the painting on Wikipedia.

    This striking portrait by Thomas Eakins is here in Philadelphia, where I’ve had the pleasure of studying it many times over the years. Were it not for Eakins’ even larger and more striking Gross Clinic, it would completely dominate the gallery in the Philadelphia Museum of Art in which it hangs.

    Almost life size at 55 x 75 inches (191 x 138 cm), the painting has an immediacy that seems to project the figure into the room with you.

    The gown is visually striking enough, but it’s the sensual presence of the singer, painted with such tactile, dimensional force, that makes the painting so compelling. The pose — with the singer caught in mid-note, completely focused, hands tensed — presents her as a captured moment in time.

    The account is that in pursuit of visual truth, Eakins repeatedly asked the model, singer Weda Cook, to sing the same piece — a passage from Mendelssohon’s Elijah — so he could accurately capture not only the shape of her mouth, but the shape of the muscles in her throat in the act of singing.

    Eakins worked on the painting for over two years, during the first of which he asked Cook to model three or four times a week. On finish, Eakins carved the opening bars of the Mendelssohon piece into the painting’s frame.

    The painter’s search for accuracy extended to having Cook’s teacher, conductor Charles Schmitz, pose for the hand with a baton — the odd compositional placement of which is compensated for by the bouquet of flowers at the singer’s feet.

    There was controversy (which seemed to hang around Eakins like a cloud) attached to the painting, in that Eakins asked Cook to post nude — presumably in order to get the position of the figure as accurately as possible. Cook refused, and Eakins’ repeated requests resulted in the artist and model falling out before the painting was finished. They later came to good enough terms that Eakins painted individual portraits of Cook and her husband.

    Cook eventually asked if she could buy the painting, but Eakins was reluctant to let it go, citing the desire to exhibit it more extensively, as well as a personal attachment to the work. It remained in his possession until his death, and was given to the Philadelphia Museum by Eakins’ widow. The museum, amid it’s superb collection of Eakins’ work, also has his gestural sketch for the painting.


    The Concert Singer, Google Art Project

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  • Alfred Parsons

    Alfred Parsons
    Alfred Parsons was a British landscape painter, illustrator and botanical artist, active in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

    His sensitivity to the nuances of natural forms and colors is particularly evident in his evocative portrayals of flowering trees in spring. Parsons also brought his artistic sensibilities and botanical knowledge to garden design.

    In addition to oil, parsons was adept with watercolor and gouache, as well as various drawing media. The Royal Academy of Arts has a nice collection of his drawings in pen and ink and pencil, including illustrations and illuminated letters.

    Many of the usual online art portfolios give Parsons short shrift; the best overall selection I’ve found is on BBC Your Paintings. There are large images on the Tate and Philadelphia Museum of Art sites, and several high-res zoomable image on Bonham’s and the other auction sites (links below).



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  • Bill Mudron

    Bill Mudron, Miyazaki/Husi Dr. Who/Mucha prints
    Bill Mudron is an illustrator and designer from Texas, who came to my attention through a series of posters he created, inspired by Hayao Miyazaki’s animated films and done in the woodblock print style of Kawase Hasui.

    In these, I not only enjoy his subtle approach, but his choice to reduce the characters to small elements in the composition — both echoing the traditions of Japanese landscapes, and allowing the essence of the image to gradually reveal itself.

    Looking through his BigCartel shop, you will find additional work, including images of Dr. Who, done in the flavor of Alphonse Mucha’s Art Nouveau posters, as well as a history of the show rendered as a version of the Bayeux Tapestry — right down to the faux-tapestry texture.

    There are additional examples of his work on his website, though I found the navigation there less than clear. If you miss the almost invisible “Next” arrow on the detailed opening image, you have to figure out that “For Hire” is the portfolio, and that the “i” in the upper right opens a large version of the image rather than additional info (the portfolio is evidently meant to be opened the other way). I suggest just clicking on the icon at lower right to open the thumbnails.

    [Via BoingBoing]



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Karl Spitzweg’s Childhood Friends

    Childhood Friends Karl Spitzweg
    Childhood Friends, Karl Spitzweg

    Link is to zoomable version on Google Art Project, downloadable file on Wikimedia Commons, original is in the Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus, Munich.

    I love the illustrative qualities in the piece — the theatrical lighting, the narrative element and the caricaturish portrayal of the old friends, shown in an apparent reunion after one has gone off to see the world, and the other has stayed at home.

    The way Spitzweg has used value contrasts — dark against light and light against dark — along with atmospheric perspective and color accents, to guide your eye is particularly nice.


    Childhood Friends, Google Art Project

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  • Kevin Muente

    Kevin Muente, landscapes and figures
    Kevin Muente is an artist based in Kentucky, who is also a professor of art at Northern Kentucky University.

    His work focuses on landscape and figures in landscape, the latter often engaged in some kind of activity, or a state or situation with some emotional resonance.

    Muente’s approach is one of clear observation and focused representation, his landscape elements, in particular, inviting you in with tactile presence.

    Kevin Muente’s landscape paintings will be on display at the Gross McCleaf Gallery in Philadelphia in an exhibition titled “Reflections on Water“, that runs until May 29, 2015.



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  • Kim Parkhurst

    Kim Parkhurst, Houndton Tabby
    Kim Parkhurst is a Massachussetts based illustrator who loves to paint animals, whether in childrens’ book style illustrations or as anthropomorphized versions of particular individuals.

    In her anthropomorphized animal portraits, she attempts to capture the personality of the individual with her selection of an appropriate animal, usually cats and dogs.

    A particular series of these, for which she has received a good bit of attention, is her series of Downton Abbey characters, which she calls “Houndton Tabby”. For those like me who are not regular watchers of the series, the Daily Mail has a side by side comparison with photos of the characters.

    She also has other animal/character portraits, including David Bowie and Sherlock and Watson from their current British incarnation.

    Parkhust doesn’t appear to have a dedicated website for her work; there is a portfolio of images on the Splendid Toad Art Farm, where you can also sort posts for “art“, and an Etsy shop where she goes by the handle “Toadbriar”.

    [Via Artists Network]



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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
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Daily Painting
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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
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