Lines and Colors art blog
  • Daniel James Cox (update)

    Daniel James Cox
    Daniel James Cox is a Sydney based artist who has worked as a concept and visual development artist for the film industry, including major productions with Weta Digital.

    He has also been doing portraiture in a process in which he works digitally initially, then transfers to canvas to finish in oil.

    When I last wrote about Cox, his professional work was not easily available on line, but he now has a professional site with a gallery of his film work. The site is apparently still in progress as none of the navigation links work except Contact, but the galley of images on the home page is functional.

    You can also find his portraits and landscapes on this site, and posts about both, as well as other topics, on his blog.

    Cox’s latest project is a short animated film he is producing called Cog and Turbine, about what game characters do on their time off. For this he has a funding campaign on Indiegogo, the page for which contains preliminary art, rough animatics, color keys and much more information than the project’s dedicated website.



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Floris van Dijck still life

    Eye Candy for Today:  Floris van Dijck still life
    Still Life with Cheeses, Floris van Dijck (82x111cm, 1615-1620). Just the tablecloth is amazing.

    From the Rijksmusum. Click on “Extra large view” under the image.


    Still Life with Cheeses, Floris van Dijck, Rijksmusum

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  • Illustration Friday redesigned website

    Illustration Friday redesigned website
    Illustration Friday is a venerable community website that each week presents a “challenge” in the form of a topic (e.g. “Fluid”, Messenger”, “Disguise”, “Vanity”, “Stripes”, “Fearless”, etc.) that illustrators, aspiring illustrators and artists of all stripes can use as a springboard for their own interpretation.

    This is just a no deadline, no pressure way to keep the creative wheels greased, and participants can post their work to the site, compare and communicate with others. Participants can also suggest topics. You might be surprised by how many professional illustrators participate.

    Here is a page on How it Works, and a general About page.

    The new design refresh features a brighter interface, larger thumbnails, and an easy way to browse by most recent, medium or style.

    As the name implies, new topic is posted every Friday (hey, that’s tomorrow!).

    For more see my previous post about Illustration Friday.

    [Via Escape from Illustration Island]



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  • Fantasy art auction in support of Cyril van der Haegen

    Art aucion in support of Cyril van der Haegen:  Dave Seeley, Donato Giancola, Todd Lockwood, Lars Grant West, Dan Dos Santos, Gregory Manchess, Jon Foster
    Despite what those politicians (on both sides of the aisle) who accept large campaign donations from the health insurance industry might try to tell you, the U.S. health care system is not the “best in the world” and is not “doing just fine” without some kind of government intervention — not while millions of citizens of the most prosperous industrialized nation in the world are uninsured.

    Among the uninsured, unfortunately, are a number of self-employed artists. One of them is the well known illustrator and concept artist Cyril van der Haegen, who is battling a rare form of Leukemia and a condition known as Smoldering Myeloma.

    Several fellow artists (organized, I think, by Dave Seeley) have set up a fantasy art auction to help Van der Haegen with his medical bills and medication expenses.

    Contributors include Julie Bell, Boris Vallejo, Stephan Martiniere, Donato Giancola, Dan Dos Santos, Gregory Manchess, Jon Foster, Rebecca Guay, Lars Grant West, Todd Lockwood, Scott Fischer, Bruce Jensen, Sam Burley and Dave Seeley.

    There will be a live auction at ComicCon, and in conjunction, there is an online eBay auction that is now open for bids.

    There is more information on Dave Seeley’s site.

    You can see Van der Haegen’s work on his website and deviantART page.

    The eBay auction ends July 14th.

    (Images above: Dave Seeley, Donato Giancola, Todd Lockwood, Lars Grant West, Dan Dos Santos, Gregory Manchess, Jon Foster)

    [Via Irene Gallo on Twitter]



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  • Bendito Machine

    Bendito Machine, Jossie Malis and Zumbakamera
    Bendito Machine (blessed machine) is a series of nicely realized fantastical animations created by Jossie Malis, produced by Zumbakamera and animated by Malis and Pau Martinez.

    This is a series of animations, done primarily and very effectively in sihlouette, of which the most recent and by some degree the most entertaining, is Bendito Machine IV – Fuel the Machines (Vimeo link).

    It’s about a man who, um… takes a ride — several, in fact.

    I don’t think you lose anything by viewing that one first and then going back to the others.

    [Via Annalee Newitz on io9]



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  • Gilbert Stuart, not just presidents

    Gilbert Stuart
    Today is the Fourth of July, “Independence Day” here in the U.S., a holiday on which we celebrate not having to pay undue deference to a little old lady who wears funny hats.

    Amid carrying on the traditions of beer and barbecues handed down by our nation’s founding fathers, there is sometimes talk of the fathers themselves — the framers of our government and its basic documents, and when those guys are mentioned, out come the Gilbert Stuart portraits.

    Stuart, as I explained in my previous post on him, was a premiere American portraitist, but his skills a painter are overshadowed by his “greatest hits” of presidential portraits, notably of “not so handsome” George Washington (above, top, with detail), as well as other key figures like John “I make George look good” Adams (third down) and Thomas “I can’t stick around to have my portrait finished” Jefferson (fourth down).

    As interesting as these portraits can be, I think Stuart shines much more readily in his portraits of less well known figures like Matilda Stoughton de Jaudenes (third and fourth from the bottom) and Marianne Ashley Walker (bottom two), in which you can see his economical, painterly brushwork and much more lively portrayals than those of the stiffly posed politicians.

    (I don’t know if Walker had the hots for Stuart, or he just wished she did, or what, but that’s some smoldering look he captured there.)

    The images above are from two excellent sources of high resolution images of Stuart’s work, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Google Art Project. For more, see my previous post on Gilbert Stuart, which lists additional resources.



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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
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The Art Spirit
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Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective
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World of Urban Sketching
World of Urban Sketching

Daily Painting
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Drawing on the right side of the brain
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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