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Promoting some friends and some clients of my website design business
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Richard Dadd
Writers, and often the public, like to romanticize the connection between madness and art. From the emotional anguish of van Gogh to the physical violence of Caravaggio, there is a notion of the artist going to the brink, and over, and returning with visions from the other side that would be inaccessible to the normal mind.Whether this is true is a matter of debate, and mental illness is hardly romantic, though in the case of Victorian Painter Richard Dadd, his most memorable works of ramantic fantasy were produced after he was committed to “Bedlam” (Bethlem Hospital) because of violent insanity.
Dadd descended into a state we would now call paranoid schizophrenia during a trip to Egypt and the middle east. After his return, he murdered his father, who he evidently believed was possessed by the devil, and fled to Paris, where he was arrested for assaulting another traveler, who he also perceived as possessed. Evidently there was a genetic predisposition to mental illness in his family.
Dadd was a painter whose images of fairies and other subjects from folklore and fantasy are part of a larger stylistic branch of Victorian painting dealing with these subjects, sometimes simply called the “Fairy School”. His pre-commitment paintings of the subject were open and airy; those created afterwards, for which he is most noted, are quite different, large scale, flattened in perspective and richly (or obsessively) detailed.
Fairy Feller’s Master-Stroke, shown here, is his most recognized work. Dadd worked on it for nine years and still considered it unfinished. He finally did stop working on it, however, and then produced a copy in watercolor (the original is in oil) and wrote a strange “guidebook” for the painting in verse.
It’s difficult to get any feeling for this painting from the tiny image here. There is a large version here, another large one here and a larger one here, that is unfortunately a bit dark.
Low resolution web versions still don’t convey the detail in the image, though. If you are interested you really should look for a reproduction in print. The one I have is in Victorian Painting by Lionel Lambourne (an excellent book, BTW). There are also books devoted to Dadd’s work. The World of Richard Dadd by Michael Mott is inexpensive and serves as a nice introduction.
By all accounts, though, you really can’t grasp this painting, which is in the Tate Gallery in London, until you see it in person (I haven’t), because of the dramatically three-dimensional nature of the application of the paint.
Dadd did many other paintings during the time he spent in the hospitals, and his work has been influential on fantasy painters from his own time through the present.
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Line Rider

Did you ever find yourself doodling and daydreaming that a line you were drawing was something physical, like a hill you could slide down? Perhaps you found yourself imagining that the line would become reality, á la Harold and the Purple Crayon, and you could roll or slide away from whatever it was that you were avoiding by doodling.Well, if it’s an imaginative diversion you want for your doodled line, here’s a nifty little amusement by someone who lists themselves on deviantART as “fsk“.
Line Rider is an online interactive that allows you to draw a line, going more or less from upper left to lower right, that will represent the two dimensional topography of a hill. When your line is drawn, you click play and the Line Rider, a small character on a sled with a trailing scarf, will go sailing, bouncing and, if you’re not careful, tumbling down the hill according to forces of imaginary gravity.
The module is quite cleverly done and is much more fun than my dry description would suggest. In addition to a nice bit of semi-realistic slow-motion gravity, fsk has programmed in a good bit of humor in the way the character responds to the physics of your imagined line. Play with several variations of line and you’ll see what I mean.
You can use a hand tool to scroll the drawing area (much as in standard graphics applications) and extend your line well past the boundaries of the working rectangle. You can also save lines that you like for future use.
Link via Marco Bresciani.
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Russell Stutler

You will often find information about pen and ink drawing, and there is certainly a a plethora of information about watercolor, but you seldom see mention of the meeting of the two.Born in Japan, raised in the U.S. and now living in Tokyo, Russell Stutler is an artist who has a fascinating site devoted to his various interests, with an emphasis on sketching in pen and watercolor.
His Sketchbook covers 5 years and ranges from simple and quick subway sketches in pen to more elaborate drawings of buildings and streets, which are usually filled with watercolor washes.
His more recent and more finished drawings in particular are wonderful examples of that meeting of drawing and painting in which a pen sketch is painted into with watercolor and the pen lines “hold” the color, a style similar in may ways to traditional Japanese woodblock printing (see my posts about Hokusai, Yoshida and Hasui), and modern comic book illustration. There is a section of comics on his site, as well as some of his professional work.
The Sketchbook pages not only feature his sketches, but often versions of the same sketch in different stages (which I always enjoy) and his notes and comments on tools and techniques. Although not as elaborately extensive or organized as the handprint watercolor pages, this is still a great reference on tools and methods for the pen and watercolor approach to sketching. He has a nice list of recommended books with descriptions.
Stutler is a proponent of the waterbrush and there is a fascinating article about these terrific tools, as well as information about fountain pens and the interest in them in Tokyo in particular. He has also created a forum devoted to sketching and related topics, the intro page of which has links to additional articles about sketching and links to sketching artists and related sites.
Even if you’re not that interested in the tools and techniques aspect of his sketchbook entries (which are arranged a bit like a blog, but without dated entries), you’ll find some beautiful work among his sketches, particularly the most recent drawings of buildings, streets and storefronts in Tokyo, and houses, mills and other structures from his travels around Japan.
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Childe Hassam
Unlike the French Impressionists, there was really no formal group that called themselves “American Impressionists”; this is a label writers have applied to American painters who adopted elements of Impressionist style and technique to their work.There was however, “The Ten American Painters”, a group of painters from New York and Boston who withdrew from the Society of American Artists in protest of that group’s commercialism and restrictive styles, and devoted themselves to new styles of painting, largely influenced by French Impressionism. The group includes John Henry Twatchman, Edmund Charles Tarbell, William Merritt Chase and J. Alden Weir, among others.
One of the founding members of that group, and along with Tarbell and Chase, one of the most important of the painters referred to as “American Impressionists”, was Massachusetts painter Childe Hassam (pronounced “child HASS-em”).
Hassam started as an illustrator and worked primarily in watercolor. He went to Paris in search of a formal art education (as was common for American artists at the time) and studied oil painting at the Académie Julian. He later discounted that teaching but returned from Paris dramatically impressed (if you’ll excuse the expression) with the daring new style of those radical upstarts from the Salon de Refusés, the Impressionists.
His own work showed that influence in many ways, there are numerous paintings of flower gardens bursting with dabs of pure color, street scenes with finely dressed gentry awash in dappled sun and landscapes blanketed in brightly lit snow. But he also diverged in may ways from the Impressionist path.
His work would often dwell on themes of rain-drenched streets, late day sun and misty twilight, more in keeping with the muted whispers of Whistler’s nocturnes than the mid-day kaleidoscopic dazzle of Monet. He would break his color into rough chunks and patches, very different from the individual dabs of “pure color” favored by Impressionist theory, and explore the rich darks of room interiors, like his fellow member of “The Ten”, Edmund Tarbell.
Hassam was also a superb etcher, again more akin to Whistler than the Impressionists. There are excellent examples of his work in major museums in the US, particularly, as you might expect, on the East Coast.
Like the French Impressionists, the American Impressionists are popular subjects for publishers and there are numerous books on Hassam and his explorations of brilliant color and subtle light.
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H. R. Giger

Sympathy for the Devil Dept.: I couldn’t resist a segue from yesterday’s post about Andrew Gonzalez’s images of transcendent grace to H. R. Giger’s grotesque collisions between tortured biological forms and nightmare machinery. Sort of balances the scales. (“Angels: 1, Devils: 1, highlights at 11.”)H. R. Giger is a Swiss painter most noted for his unsettling designs for Ridley Scott’s film Alien. The original alien creature was based on an already existing painting of his called “Necronom IV”. Giger’s design work for the film earned him an Oscar. He also worked on Alien 3, Polgergeist II and Species. Giger also created memorable album cover art, most famously the cover images for Emerson, Lake and Palmer’s Brain Salad Surgery, the original artwork for which apparently was stolen recently from an exhibition in Prague (reproduced here and here).
Giger paints in airbrush at a fairly large scale. He has also created jewelry and furniture as well as designs for interiors. His work has been very influential, and much copied and imitated, among adherents of the darker side of popular culture.
Giger’s fantastic realist paintings are intricately detailed, darkly monochromatic and can be disconcertingly horrific. In addition to his obvious skills as a painter, I have to admire the way he has managed create imagery that can so effectively push people’s buttons through the use of particular kinds of forms and bits of imagery that are juxtaposed in disturbing ways, rather than overtly depicting acts of violence.
His approach is to use biological forms, sometimes with deliberately “scary” connotations, like skulls and exaggerated teeth, but more often with repeated forms suggestive of bones, ribs, vertebrae and digits, that blend into, are pierced by, or are morphing into, darkly menacing machinery, a synthesis he calls “biomechanical”. With this he blends sexually suggestive forms, and intimations of painful relationships between the biological and mechanical parts.
All of this grotesque confluence of body parts, rods, levers and gears is often painted as if under what might be a painfully thin layer of wet or slimy flesh. (Delightful, eh?) The image I’ve chosen here is somewhat representative, but actually on the mild side.
Because of the disturbing nature of his images, and the fact that they are evidently a response to Giger’s reported problem with the sleep disorder “night terrors”, he is in many ways a painter more in the vein of true Surrealism, which sought to shock and disorient and was concerned with images from the unconscious, as opposed to most of the contemporary Fantastic Realists that are often labeled “Surrealistic” simply because their work is “odd”. Giger apparently was introduced to Salvador Dali by Louis Buñel and met with him on several occasions.
Giger has obviously been influenced by the Surrealists, as well as visionary painters like Arnold Böcklin. (He even did a homage to Böcklin’s Isle of the Dead.)
Giger’s work has been reproduced in over 20 books, the most famous of which is Necronomicon.
There is a Giger Museum in Switzerland. Giger’s official web site, and that of his US publisher, have some information and images but lack actual image galleries and seem to exist mainly to sell merchandise. I’ve listed some unofficial galleries below.
Note: the sites linked here contain images suggestive of sexuality, pain and horror. Avoid them if you’re likely to be offended.
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A. Andrew Gonzalez
Transcendence, spirituality and mysticism have been themes in painting for hundreds of years.Texas-based painter A. Andrew Gonzalez paints mystical-themed images, often of female faces or figures surrounded by radiant lines of light, and at times overlayed with intricate surface patterns.
The Gallery on his site features images from periods in which his work has evolved through several stages, but always focusing on themes of illumination, revelation or transcendence. The “illumination” is sometimes represented literally by figures whose heads are ablaze with shafts of light or halos.
His latest pieces, as in the example at left, are extraordinary monochromatic works which at first glance look more like photographs of intricate alabaster or marble reliefs than paintings.
Gonzalez works using aribrushed acrylic on ClayBoard or canvas. He pulls the forms out by lifting pigment with an abrasive eraser and then overlays new values with layers of transparent pigment.
Gonzales was very influenced by visionary Austrian Fantastic Realist painter Ernst Fuchs, with whom he had the opportunity to work in Monaco and Austria.
Gonzalez also lists the Pre-Raphaelites and other visionary painters like William Blake, Jean Delville, Robert Venosa and Alex Grey among his influences. He also was influenced in a different way by the dark visions of H. R. Geiger, to which he considers his work an antithesis.
Gonzalez’s site also includes works in progress, sketches and drawings.
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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











