Lines and Colors art blog
  • Theo Jansen

    Theo Jansen
    A number of sculpture related links have come up as a result of my post about Lawrence Northey last Thursday.

    Theo Jansen’s kinetic sculptures are particularly fascinating because they walk back and forth (literally) across the supposedly fixed line between art and engineering. These amazing artifacts are built of ultralight materials and constructed of levers and gears so that they become wind-driven and walk across the flat wet sand on beaches.

    This video posted on glumbert.com probably shows them to best advantage. Their graceful, cantilevered legs and wing-like transparent films give them the appearance of animated skeletons of ghostly alien grazing animals.

    He also has fabric-covered variations that look like anime robots come to life. Amazing.

    Link courtesy of Karl Kofoed



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  • Tim Prentice

    Tim Prentice
    Another artist whose work crosses boundaries between disciplines, kinetic sculptor Tim Prentice was trained in architecture at Yale, founded a successful architectural firm, and went on to establish a studio to create kinetic sculpture.

    Prentice creates beautifully balanced and intricate mobile-like sculptures, flying out from the aerial paths first pioneered by Alexander Calder. His pieces, spin, turn, hover, glisten and dazzle, all the while performing a delicate act of balance with the forces of wind and gravity.



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  • Ree Treweek (update)

    Ree Treweek The Tale of HowWhen I first wrote about the delightfully original and idiosyncratic art of South African artist Ree Treweek back in March of 2006, I was a little disappointed in the lack of information about the artist and her work, and the limited number of her images available online.

    I was pleased when artist/blogger Siouxfire (Michael Curry) wrote to say that he has posted an interview with Ree Treweek on his blog siouxwire.

    In addition to her editorial illustrations, many of which were done under the name of Cheri Treweek, Ree Treweek has commercial clients that include Virgin Atlantic, Levi’s, Musica and HP, and she continues to move forward with her fascinating animation project, The Tale of How, a collaboration between herself, Jannes Hendrikz and Markus Smit, collectively known as The Blackheart Gang.

    I also wrote about The Tale of How; in April of 2006. Since then, the sample video clip from the project has been extended by almost double, to about four and a half minutes.

    The movie, a hybrid of animated drawings, live action manipulation of drawings and CGI, is mesmerizingly otherworldly and visually unique. The current clip (which weighs in at around 70mb), is available on The Blackheart Gang site.

    (Though it’s obvious they mean for you to be able to download the clip, they’ve put the link in a Flash file, which means you can’t right-click/control-click to download, and some may have trouble downloading, rather than viewing it in Quicktime in the browser. If you’re using Firefox, you can go to Tools: Page Info, go to the Media tab, select the name of the file and click on “Save As” to download the file. There are other download options on No Fat Clips!)

    The interview with Treweek on siouxwire includes sketches of her original ideas for The Tale of How, and in it Treweek talks about her influences and working methods: “I begin with the outlines, often drawing straight into pen when possible… I then do the patterning and detail. I generally draw all the elements as separates and then composite them together later. Usually I do all the coloring in Photoshop.”.

    There is also some discussion of the collaborations on the animated film and the planned coffee-table book/DVD release.

    Siouxfire also provides a more extensive list of links for additional information, including The Blackheart Gang on MySpace, and an article on Motionographer, in which there is a description of The Blackheart Gang’s collaborative process.

     


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  • Suncage (Jon Hall)

    suncage (John Hall)

    I will be the first to admit that, when it comes to painting “en plein air” (outdoors), I am a fair weather painter. Days when it’s even mildly chilly find me sitting cozily in font of a computer monitor, or the in the comfort of a heated studio indulging in the convenience of photographic reference.

    That doesn’t stop me from admiring the determination of some dedicated plein air painters, and being outright amazed at others.

    Suncage (pseudonym of UK painter Jon Hall) is in the latter category. He is astonishingly dedicated to painting outdoors regardless of circumstance; painting in wind, rain, cold, and all manner of unpleasant conditions.

    His site and blog are a little short on introductory information, but some of this dedication may have come from a challenge he set for himself that he called “The Limners Contract“. (“Limner” is defined as someone who describes something by painting or drawing. It comes from a root meaning illuminator, from which we also get illustrator. Limner also can refer to ornamental painters in the American colonies.)

    Suncage’s Limner’s contract was essentially a contract with himself to complete paintings from life, on site, every day for a year. In the course of the project he created over 500 painted sketches and chronicled the endeavor with photographs and video.

    You can see come of Sungcage’s work in his online Gallery. He also maintains a blog, which is often devoted to Podcasts he makes about his plein air painting process.

    His site includes a record of other painting projects, including ICE, the Robert Stephenson Awards in which he is painting a dozen icons of civil engineering in the country’s North East.

    Last December, Suncage entered an open challenge form London’s National Gallery Podcast to create a piece of audio based on a picture in the National Gallery. He created the winning piece based on his impressions of the thoughts Pissarro may have had while painting a winter landscape in Fox Hill, Upper Norwood during his stay in London. Suncages’ own video about the piece, in which he intersperses the audio piece with his description of his own experience painting in the same location, may be a little confusing unless you’ve seen the original National Gallery Podcast in context (scroll down to view the Podcast. The segment on Fox Hill is a bit past halfway in the video.)

    Suncage has provided numerous video accounts of his outdoor painting experiences. Those of you who, like myself, have seen one too many PowerPoint demos, may blanch as his overindulgence in iMovie/Keynote style video transitions, but the stories he has to tell about painting on location stand on their own.

    He also has a preference for caging his voice in an echo effect and submerging it in electronica. Personally, I find these unnecessary distractions from his otherwise fascinating stories about painting on location and the challenges he has set himself in his desire to work under all conditions.

    Of particular interest to me is his 12 Quick Exercises in painting the same scene repeatedly, as Monet did. Suncage works with this idea in multiple quick sketches on the same day, and in repeated visits to the same scene on different days, spaced both days apart and seasons apart. Within that process, he works in many different approaches to the application of tone and value (images above).

     


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  • Free Comic Book Day 2007

    Free Comic Book Day 2007
    OK, so maybe you haven’t picked up a comic book since you were 12, and you’re so past that; or maybe you’ve never picked up a comic book and you’re so beyond that; or maybe you just associate comics with steroidal aberrations in spandex bashing into one another like runaway freight trains and you’re so not into that.

    Well, if you think comic books are what they used to be, or what you’ve been told they are, or what you only think they are, you could be so missing out on something you shouldn’t.

    So,… tomorrow, Saturday, May 5th, 2007 is Free Comic Book Day! Here’s a great opportunity to casually drop by your friendly neighborhood comic book store, where the staff will be on their best behavior, prepared to accommodate newcomers to modern comics, happy to answer any questions, and handing out free, yes free, comics!

    Free Comic Book Day has been going on for six years, and has grown each year. Comics companies large and small have published free special editions that showcase some of their best titles, and the comics store often put on sales, have guests, artist and writer signings and other events to make it as much of a celebration of comics as they can.

    There is a web site devoted to the event, that contains a brief description, a list of frequently asked questions and other information about the event and comics in general.

    In my post about last year’s Free Comic Book Day, I go into more detail about the event, talk a little about why you should take the time to check out modern comic books, and give a brief introduction to comic book specialty shops for those who haven’t dared to peer into the mysteries of what too often seems like a private club.

    Not only will the stores have their doors wide open and the red carpet out, the free comics themselves will showcase some interesting titles. Of course there are the expected superhero books, from the the big publishers and independents, but there are many other titles appealing to kids and adults with a variety of other tastes.

    There are 28 titles in all; you can see covers and descriptions here and here. In addition, many shops will add some titles from their own stock.

    Notable this year is a Nexus comic by Mike Baron and Steve Rude, one of the best of the off-beat superheroes (preview here); a Linda Barry collection from Drawn and Quarterly; comics festival, a collection that includes artists like Darwyn Cooke and Hope Larson; a couple of how-to books on drawing and creating comics, Impact University and Wizard’s How to Draw sampler; a preview extract from Eddie Campbell’s new graphic novel, The Train Was Bang On Time (preview here); and some collections that showcase the continuing move of popular webcomics into print, like the Digital Webbing Jam and the Keenspot Spotlight.

    So, what are you waiting for? Find your local comic book store and check it out on Saturday! You just might be so surprised.


    www.freecomicbookday.com
    Comic book store locator
    Comic book descriptions here and here
    My previous post about last year’s Free Comic Book Day

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  • Lawrence Northey

    Lawrence Northey
    I don’t often feature sculpture on lines and colors. I probably should consider it more often. Sculpture can have, after all, both lines and colors.

    In the case of Lawrence Northey’s wonderfull small scale sculptures (the one shown here, “Jim & George: Space Cadets” is 30 inches [76cm]), the colors are those of polished brass, aluminum, copper and glass, and the reflected colors of their environment; and the lines are the charmingly whimsical lines of cartoonlike robots.

    OK, I’ll admit right off that I’m a complete sucker for robots, particularly shiny, reflective, steampunkishly mechanical robots with completely silly bubble headed space helmets and art deco ray guns, carrying anachronistic apparatus with dials and gauges and accompanied by equally silly mechanical dogs replete with dials and embossed lightning bolt insignia, so I may be inclined to like Northey’s approach.

    Sculpture can be be visually appealing in a number of ways, but rarely is is as much outright fun as these beautifully crafted, meticulously detailed and marvelously imaginative creations from Northey’s hands.

    Not only do his objects delight the eye with their rich metallic colors and sleek lines, many of Northey’s sculptures actually do things — move, sing, speak, produce music or “Zap!” sounds.

    Northey has received recognition several times in the Spectrum collections of contemporary fantastic art and other publications. His gallery shows some of the range of his works. Much of his current work is commissioned. He also has multiple, but limited, editions of certain works.

    His site lacks a bio or “About” page, but you can find one here.



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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