Lines and Colors art blog
  • Super Bowl art bet 2014

    Superbowl art bet , Denver Art Museum, Seattle Art Museum, The Bronco Buster, Frederick Remington, Sound of Waves, Tsuji Kako
    In what should have been an annual tradition, but was apparently dropped for a time, art museums in the two U.S. cities sending teams to the Super Bowl are again engaging in an art loan wager.

    If the Seattle Seahawks win, the Denver Art Museum will loan “The Bronco Buster”, a sculpture by Frederick Remington, to the Seattle Art Museum for three months.

    If the Denver Broncos win, the Seattle Art Museum will loan “Sound of Waves”, an ink painting on screen by Tsuji Kako, to the Denver Art Museum.

    Each museum is staking the loan of an artwork that can be taken to represent their city’s team in some way.

    I think it’s great PR for the museums, gets people talking about art, and should have been a yearly event, but somebody in the last two years apparently (dare I say it?) dropped the ball. (Or, if it happened, I didn’t hear about it.)

    For more on the art loan Super Bowl wagers from 2011 and 2010, see my previous Lines and Colors post on the subject.

    For more on this year’s wager, see this article on the LA Times.

    [Via Jeffrey Hayes @dailypainter]



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  • Stock Schlueter

    Stock Schlueter
    Stock Schlueter is a painter from northern California, who excels at capturing the light and atmosphere of that region, as well as more exotic locations from his travels.

    Previously a watercolor artist, Schlueter switched to oils, and works both on location and in the studio for his landscapes. His website has a portfolio of both plein air and studio work, as well as a selection of portraits.

    On his blog, you will find both, often reproduced larger, along with descriptions of the locations and conditions for the individual paintings.

    I particularlry enjoy some of Schlueter’s more unusual subjects, like industrial night scenes and weathered old trucks in snow.



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  • The fleeting art of Andres Amador

    Andres Amador
    “Ars longa, vita brevis”, goes the phrase (Art is long, life is short), but then, some art is much more temporary than most.

    The art of Andres Amador, though ostensibly made of “archival materials”, lasts only until the next high tide.

    Amador takes his rake to the beaches of northern California and creates carefully controlled markings in the sand, then photographs the result.

    You can read more about his process on his website. There is also a gallery of his work here.

    [Via MetaFilter]



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Corot landscape near Volterra

    A View near Volterra, ean-Baptiste-Camille Corot
    A View near Volterra, Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot

    Wow. I just love these direct, observational landscapes from Corot — filled with light and the feeling of immediate atmosphere. You can see why the Impressionists thought so highly of him.

    Original is in the National Gallery of Art, D.C. The image on the linked page is zoomable. Click “Download” for larger images. You have to create a (free) account to download the high-resolution images.



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  • Yu Cheng Hong

    Yu Cheng Hong
    There are times when I like certain science fiction, fantasy, comics or concept art specifically because it’s completely and gloriously over the top. (I mean, who doesn’t love a trident-wielding Valkyrie princess, saddled up on a cross-breed allosaurus/styrachosaurus, galloping through mist-shrouded mountains? Really.)

    Yu Cheng Hong is an illustrator and concept artist, working primarily in the gaming industry. His illustrations — that blend influences from those genres, as well as steampunk and who-knows-what-else — are pull-out-the-stops over the top — and wonderfully rendered as well.

    His website includes galleries of work in several categories. The quickest way to get an overview of his work is on CGHub.



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  • Painters of the cliffs of Étretat

    Cliffs of Etretat Eugene Delacroix, Gustave Courbet, Eugene Boudin, ustave Loiseau, Claude Monet
    I had the pleasure today of re-watching one of David Dunlop’s informative episodes of Landscapes Through Time (which I profiled previously here on Lines and Colors).

    In this segment, he visited the famous chalk cliffs of Étretat, on the northwestern coast of France, where several generations of painters have been drawn to paint the dramatic geological features and beautiful sea. Dunlop discussed the different approaches taken by Eugene Delacroix, a Romantic painter, Gustave Courbet, a painter of Realism, and Claude Monet, the archetypal Impressionist painter.

    I thought it might be interesting to compare some paintings by those artists, as well as two others, Gustave Loiseau, a Post-Impressionist, and Eugéne Boudin.

    Boudin was Monet’s first teacher, and introduced Monet to the importance of painting en plein air along the coastline near Étretat and La Havre, where Boudin painted and Monet grew up.

    Monet, known for painting the same subject multiple times in differing conditions, painted the cliffs at Éretat numerous times, and from both sides of the headland. Some of his canvases from there are among his best known works.

    (Images above: Eugene Delacroix [1,2], Gustave Courbet [3,4,5], Eugene Boudin [6, 7, 8], Gustave Loiseau [9], Claude Monet [10-16])



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Vasari Handcraftes artist's oil colors

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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
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Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective
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