Lines and Colors art blog
  • Jacob Wyatt

    Jacob Wyatt
    Jacob (Jake) Wyatt is a comics artist and animator who came to my attention by way of his beautiful short animation, Metro, which was done while he was a student (top three images above, plus promo, 4th down). Metro is about a young girl, a subway, a fox and… other things. It’s simply but very effectively done and makes great use of setting off areas of the screen into smaller shapes. (Link is to Vimeo, best viewed fullscreen.)

    I then found his blog, life on paper, a page on deviantART and a Tumblog, but none offer much in the way of a bio or list of credits. ( I sometimes think artists simply don’t realize they are doing this, rather than making a deliberate choice to ignore an important part of their online presence.)

    From what I’ve been able to glean by skimming the blog, he has done a story for the Image Comics title Hawaiian Dick, but I don’t know in what issue, or if it’s even been released. There is also a comics story that is apparently an adaptation of the story of Theseus that was part of the Anthology Project (Volume 2).

    I also stumbled across the information that he draws his comics in black Prismacolor pencil rather than ink. His comics have a nice, rough edged, textural quality, probably partially due to that approach and partially in his application of textured areas of color. I’m assuming his color is applied digitally, but again there is no link to direct information about process, though you may be able to find more by searching through his blog posts.

    (Via io9)



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  • At the Edge, Allentown Art Museum

    At the Edge, Allentown Art Museum:
    There is currently a spectacular exhibition at the Allentown Art Museum in Allentown, PA called At the Edge that combines some of the finest contemporary fantastic art with some superb examples of art from the 19th century that is part of the legacy on which the contemporary genre is based, and puts one in context with the other.

    This show would be excellent were it simply one group of paintings, but the combination is ground breaking.

    Almost 40 of the 160 pieces on display are from before 1940, with an emphasis on the Golden Age of Illustration. The museum’s website mentions some of them, but as is the incomprehensible usual for museum websites, does an appallingly bad job of giving you a sense of what’s actually in the exhibit.

    I’ve listed some Lines and Colors posts in the links below for some of the artists included in the show, both historic and contemporary.

    Unfortunately my hope of seeing the show and bringing you a first hand report is fading, as the end of the show is fast approaching on September 9, and my overloaded schedule has not abated.

    I’m remiss in not telling you about this earlier, but as of this writing you still have week to catch the show.

    In lieu of my hoped for personal report, I will recommend an excellent overview of the show by Mathew D. Innis on his always superb blog, Underpaintings.

    The report by Innis is actually better and more extensive than an overview I could have provided in the limited space I allow for articles. It includes not only nice reproductions of some of the pieces in the show (click on them for larger versions), but photos of the galleries showing the works hanging in context. Museums should hire people like Innis to write their exhibition previews.

    At the Edge is on display at the Allentown Art Museum to Sunday, September 9, 2012.

    The Allentown Art Museum is a little over an hour from Philadelphia and less than two hours from New York (Google Map).

    Get there if you can.

    (Images above: N. C. Wyeth, James Gurney, Edmund Blair Lighton, J.C. Leyendecker, Justin Sweet, Tom Kidd)



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  • Stapleton Kearns

    Stapleton Kearns
    Stapleton Kearns is a landscape painter based in New England.

    When I first encountered his work some years ago (it can take me a while to get to these posts, folks), I felt it had a nice feeling of being influenced by early 20th century American landscape painters like John Fabian Carlson and, to a lesser extent, Emile Gruppe — painters who, while not American Impressionists, carried forward their bright colors and immediate brushwork, along with a solid underpinning of realist tradition in draftsmanship and composition.

    It was later, on reading his blog, that I found Kearns mention his admiration for another artist with whom I was only passingly familiar, Aldro Hibbard. In the process it led me to a better appreciation of Hibbard’s work (likely the subject of a future post — here is a search for Aldro Hibbard on Kearns’ blog).

    Kearns studied in the studios of R.H. Ives Gammell, a painter who championed the traditions of academic and classical realism in the face of the wave of modernism that acted to suppress them in the early to mid 20th century. Gammell was himself a student of the great American painter Edmund Tarbell.

    In addition to his own blog, Kearns contributes to the group blog, The Boston School of Painting, devoted to artists in that lineage.

    Though certainly worth checking out, Kearns’ own website is unfortunately not the showcase for his work that it might be; the portfolio is somewhat awkwardly arranged and the images are frustratingly small (there are some larger ones on the Ella Walton Richardson Fine Art gallery site).

    It’s unfortunate, in that Kearn’s paintings, in those few examples I’ve seen in higher resolution, have a wonderful surface quality, as well as details of color variation and paint handling that would make larger images rewarding.

    Even in the smaller images, however, you can see his strong sense of composition, economy of notation, harmonious application of color and dedication to capturing the light of his scene on location.

    Though his website feels like it hasn’t received much attention for a while, Kearns’ blog is another story, and has evidently received much of his attention over several years. It is nothing short of a treasure trove.

    Not only can you find some of his work reproduced larger (by searching for the label “my paintings“), you will also find a wealth of other topics accessible by the labels toward the bottom of the right hand column for topics like “art technique”, “art history”, “color”, “painting outside” and many others; as well as by simply looking back through his posts.

    Kearns, both as a teacher of workshops and classes and through the blog, is handing down much of what he has learned from the lineage of his training, his interest in art history and his own experience as a painter. There is even a feature called “Ask Stape” (which is essentially an email contact), in which he writes or appends posts in response to reader questions.

    The combination of personal experience, articles on artists from history and musings on aspects of art and painting like color, composition, materials and other topics puts me in mind of James Gurney’s remarkable blog, Gurney Journey (which I have written about previously).

    Here, for example, is a terrific Kearns post in which he talks about dealing with summer greens and “smuggling red”.

    When looking through the blog I find myself constantly making bookmarks and going off on searches related to topics or artist names he brings, up, some familiar, some new and some, like Hibbard, marginally familiar but to which I have not paid enough attention.

    The latest of these has given me renewed awareness and enthusiastic appreciation of the work of Edward Seago, a brilliant English painter who will undoubtedly be the subject of a post in the near future (here is a search for Edward Seago on Kearn’s blog).

    I find it particularly rewarding to use the blog’s search feature (upper left), searching, for example, for terms like “color palette“.

    There is such a backlog of fascinating information on Kearns’ blog (not to mention strong opinions and amusing snarkiness from “Stape”, as he is called) that I’ll do something rarely called for in a post about an individual artist, and issue my Time Sink Warning. Enjoy.



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  • Eye Candy for Today: View of the Hague, and study by Cornelis Springer

    View of the Hague, and study by Cornelis Springer
    by Cornelis Springer, and .

    In the Rijksmuseum; original pages and .

    In many ways, I like the wonderfully painterly study more than the finished painting, though both are beautiful.



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  • Anna and Elena Balbusso

    Anna and Elena Balbusso
    Anna and Elena Balbusso are illustrators based in Milan, Italy.

    They are twins and create their work as a team. There is a page on their website devoted to their working process.

    Both studied at the Academy of Fine Arts “Brera” of Milan, and the University of Milan. Their work has appeared in numerous publications in Italy, France, the UK, Korea and the U.S. They have received recognition from the Society of Illustrators, Communication Arts, American Illustration Applied Arts, Print, and other publications and artists organizations.

    The portfolios on their website are organized by “Graphic Style”, “Painterly Style” and “Children’s Books”. Within each category you will find both a variety of approaches and repeated stylistic elements.

    Their work shows a firm grounding in the traditions of European art history as well as a sharply modern design sensibility, and the two are skillfully blended into a visually captivating whole.

    I particularly admire their use of contrastingly muted and vibrantly rich colors, and the wonderful textural quality of their “painterly” style, as well as the strong design evident in all of their compositions.

    You can find additional galleries of their illustrations on Shannon Associates, the iSpot, Behance and on Tor.com, which is where I found their work by way of Irene Gallo.

    Their illustration accompanies the new story Men Who Wish to Drown by Elizabeth Fama on the Tor website.

    There is also a selection of their illustrations for The Handmaid’s Tale on The Guardian.

    You can find additional resources on their links page.



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Bierstadt’s California Spring

    California Spring by Albert Bierstadt
    California Spring by Albert Bierstadt.

    On Google Art Project, click image for zoom controls.

    Original is in de Young Museum in San Francisco.



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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