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Promoting some friends and some clients of my website design business
- Twin Willows T’ai Chi studio in Wilmington DE. Taiji classes with Bryan Davis.
- Ray Hayward, Inspired Teacher of T’ai Chi ( Taiji ) in Minneapolis, Founder of Mindful Motion Tai Chi Academy
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Franklin Booth (update)

Franklin Booth was a great American Illustrator and one of art history’s masters of the medium of pen and ink.Booth grew up on a farm in Indiana in the late 1800’s. Innocently misunderstanding the printing technology of the time, he developed his style by copying what he thought were pen and ink illustrations in popular magazines, but were in fact wood engravings.
The result was a unique style that no one else would have attempted, and one that Booth ran with and developed to dizzying heights.
Booth is not nearly as well known as his talent and accomplishments would warrant. When I wrote about him in 2007, there were two recently published collections of his work, one from Auad Publishing and the other from Flesk Publications that are now unfortunately out of print and commanding several times their cover price used.
There are, however, some resources on Booth that have become available since then.
Notably for images, there are a series of posts by indefatigable image poster and enigmatic friend to the internet, Mr. Door Tree on his wonderful (and inaccurately named) blog, The Golden Age Site. The link I’m giving is a general search for the artist’s name; be sure to follow the “Next Posts” links the bottom of the pages for more (and click on the images in the posts for the larger versions).
There is also a little trove of Booth’s astonishing illustrations for Estey Organs; some of these are available in higher resolution in the posts I mention above, but they are collected here in a surprising array of images not directly depicting pipe organs, but the concept of enjoying them.
In addition there is a selection of Booth images on The Pictorial Arts
You can also find some good examples of Booth’s work by doing a Flickr search or a Google Image search.
In addition there is a new eBook, The Colors of Black Lines: Franklin Booth’s Life and Work by Thomas E. Rugh. It is available in several eBook formats. Though not a collection of Booth’s work, it is densely illustrated and is probably the most comprehensive source of information on the artist and his work yet undertaken. There is a free sample chapter available as a PDF.
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Nick Patten (update)

When I wrote about the beautiful and quietly enigmatic room interiors of Nick Patten back in May of this year, I pointed out that I found it difficult to navigate his online portfolio.I’m happy to day that Patten has redesigned his website, making it much easier to view the images of his work.
For more see my previous post on Nick Patten.
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Eye Candy for Today: Interior of the Oude Kerk, De Witte

.On Met Museum. Use Fullscreen link, then zoom or download arrow.
Compare to same subject by .
There is, shall we say, a bit less respect being shown to the imposing edifice in De Witte’s version (grin).
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Malcolm Liepke

Malcolm T. Liepke is a well known and widely respected contemporary painter who works primarily in figurative and informal portrait subjects. (By “informal portraits”, I mean that his subjects are models posing for the benefit of the artist as opposed to the subject of commissioned portraits.)Liepke has been tremendously influential on a number of other contemporary gallery artists, and quite a few illustrators. Liepke himself had a very successful career as an illustrator, eventually transitioning into gallery painting.
His subjects are most often women, sometimes pensive, sometimes subtly emotional or sensual or flirtatious. They inhabit a world that may be of a different era, or may be just a preference for another time expressed in contemporary surroundings. Some of his work is overtly sexual (NSFW).
Liepke draws his own inspiration from the portrait masters of the late 19th century, but imbues his work with a contemporary verve. His canvasses are richly textural with bravura brushwork and a beautiful mix of intense and subdued colors.
As far as I can determine, Liepke doesn’t maintain a web presence of his own, relying instead on the galleries in which he is represented. Foremost of these is Arcadia Fine Arts in New York, which showcases an extensive selection of the artist’s work. (For best viewing use the “Full Screen Toggle” at upper right.)
Arcadia is offering a large volume of the artist’s work, Malcolm T. Liepke – A Retrospective (see the link at the bottom of the gallery’s page on Liepke.)
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Eye Candy for Today: Phillipe Rousseau still life

Eye Candy for Today: Still Life with Ham, Phillipe Rousseau.On Met Museum. Click “Fullscreen” under image, then use zoom or download arrow.
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Koren Shadmi

Koren Shadmi is an illustrator and comics artist whose clients include The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Mother Jones, BusinessWeek, the Village Voice, The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, Wired, Spin and Random House, among others.Shadmi is originally from Israel; he moved to New York to study at the School of Visual Arts and is now based in Brooklyn, which he suggests might be the center of the world in his new watercolor drawing, View of the World from Bedford Avenue (above, top with detail), a homage to Saul Steinberg’s iconic New Yorker cover in which he framed the New York centric view (and by extension, the way we all perceive our surroundings, near and far).
Shadmi has made View of the World from Bedford Avenue available as a limited edition print, as outlined on his website’s News section.
His website also includes portfolios of his editorial illustrations, covers and personal work. (When viewing he galleries note that there is often more than one page in a given section.) In addition he has a portfolio on Behance Network.
Shadmi is also an author of short stories as well as comics, of which several collections have been published. You can read his comic story, The Abaddon (above, bottom) online and an interview about same on Robot 6.
You can also read a comics story from In the Flesh on Vulture and an interview about that project on Comic Book Resources.
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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
Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective
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
Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective











