Lines and Colors art blog
  • David Hohn

    Illustrations by David Hohn
    Illustrations by David Hohn

    David Hohn is an illustrator living and working in Portland, Oregon. His works have a lively, energetic character that lends itself well to children’s book illustration.

    With a generally bright palette, nicely stylized drawing and a sure sense of value and atmosphere, he conjures scenes from stories both classic and modern.

    His website includes a portfolio of work, a range of his book covers and a selection of his illustrations available as prints.



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  • Summer at the beach with Joaquin Sorolla

    Paintings of beach scenes by Joaquin Sorolla y Bastida
    Paintings of beach scenes by Joaquin Sorolla y Bastida

    Spanish Painter Joaquín Sorolla y Bastida, who was active in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, loved to paint at the beach in his native city, Valencia. At times, he would set up a kind of wind and sun break with sheets strung between poles arranged as walls on three sides of his easel.

    Here’s an array of Sorolla’s sun-drenched beach scenes (by no means comprehensive) to start off the summer.

    These images came from a variety of sources. Rather than trying to give you links, I’ll just suggest you search Wikimedia Commons, Google or Bing images.

    While in most places along both coasts of the U.S., people say they’re “going to the beach”, here in the Philadelphia area, going to the beaches in New Jersey is called “going down the shore”. It’s a Jersey thing.

    Either way, happy Summer Solstice!



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Hal Foster Prince Valiant comics panel

    Octopus in a well, Hal Foster Prince Valiant comics panel
    Octopus in a well, Hal Foster Prince Valiant comics panel

    I place comics artist Hal Foster, creator, author and artist of the early to mid 20th century Prince Valiant newspaper comic strip, among the greatest pen and ink artists of the last two centuries

    The Prince Valiant strip in its heyday was given a full comics section page. Here, in a single panel from a multi-panel page, we have a dramatic example of his skill, not only in draftsmanship and rendering, but in economy of notation.

    At bottom we see an indication of how this panel would have appeared printed in a color Sunday comics section, with stark complimentary colors adding to its eerie appearance.

    In the detail image, note the way he has indicated a few areas of texture on the edges of the topmost ring of stones, giving your eye the impression that texture can be assumed all the way down.

    As your eye descends into the well, the actual indication of detail, even in the delineation between individual stones, diminishes, to the point of being mere strokes of the pen suggesting individual stones in the more severe foreshortening of the wall nearest our view.

    Look at how he has brilliantly indicated the top limit of the water with a reversal of the balance of light to dark, stark contrast, and a few arcs making wavelets around the tentacle that extends above the surface

    The creature itself is a marvel of chiaroscuro with the arrangement of the suction cups indicating the rotation of the tentacles as they menacingly twist and turn.

    Fantastic.



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  • Benjamin West’s portrait of King George III of England

    Portrait of George III, Benjamin West, oil on canvas
    Portrait of George III, Benjamin West, oil on canvas (details)

    Portrait of George III, Benjamin West, oil on canvas, roughly 100 x 72 in. (255 x 183 cm), in the collection of the Royal Collection Trust.

    American born painter Benjamin West, successful in the US, and specifically here his home state of Pennsylvania, moved to England after a European tour at the age of 25, where he became a founder of the Royal Academy of Arts and a favored portraitist to the king.

    In this life-sized portrait, the ruling monarch of Great Britain is dressed in his soldierly uniform and presented as a strong, forceful military commander, with outlines of troop deployment in his hands, and soldiers, generals, encampments and warships behind him, but the regalia of his absolute power as a king are close at hand.

    King George is shown preparing for his latest crisis, an impending invasion by the combined French and Spanish fleets. This was only a few years after we (with the critical help of the French, who Ben Franklin convinced to come to our aid) had kicked his royal butt out of our newly founded constitutional republic.



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  • Paint List

    Paint List
    Paint List

    Paint List is an independent artists’ paint testing, review and information website and YouTube channel created by Melissa Carmon and Jonathan Myers.

    I’m not sure how I was unaware of this until now; there is quite a bit of accumulated material, though the YouTube channel was only started two years ago.

    This is an excellent, well arranged, highly searchable and useful index of artists’ paint information that can be accessed an a number of ways.

    From the home page you can search for a brand, pigment name, or pigment index code, and sort initially by medium. Once with a search you can click “Open Filters” and refine your search from there, including by additional criteria specific to the medium, such as different binders for oil paints.

    There are in depth articles and reviews as well as brief blog posts.

    The YouTube channel, while less extensive, features informative, pleasantly and effectively presented reviews of various brands (such as their review of Vasari Classic Artists’Oil Colors), and topics comparing the same pigment in different brands or spotlighting individual pigments.

    They point out that the site is supported by affiliate links, but from what I’ve seen, I don’t think they let that interfere with their desire to be accurate and even-handed in their reviews.



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Joseph Bail genre scene

    Joseph Bail genre scene
    Joseph Bail genre scene (details)

    Young kitchen boy playing with a cat, Joseph Bail; oil on canvas; roughly 43 x 28 inches (109 x 71 cm); I don’t know the location of the original, the link is to a gallery site, through which the painting evidently passed at one time, so my assumption would be that it’s in a private collection.

    I share with 19th century French painter Joseph-Claude Bail his obviously intense admiration for 18th century French painter Jean-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin.

    You can see the similarities in his frequent subject matter of simple kitchen themed genre paintings, his strong contrast between dark and light and his beautiful handling of the textures and visual appearance of objects.

    In this painting, the large metal (brass?) pot is strongly reminiscent of Chardins’s handling of similar objects.

    Bail was influenced by other painters, of course, and put his own distinctive take on things, but my eye was immediately captured by the Chardin-like elements of this scene.



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Vasari Handcraftes artist's oil colors