Lines and Colors art blog
  • Eye Candy for Today: Whistler’s Black Lion Wharf

    Black Lion Wharf, James McNeill Whistler, etching
    Black Lion Wharf, James McNeill Whistler, etching

    Black Lion Warf, James McNeill Whistler, etching, roughly 6 x 9 inches (15 x 22 cm); link is to the impression in the collection the National Gallery of Art, DC. Their site has both a zoomable and high resolution downloadable version of the image, as does Wikimedia Commons.

    I’ve had the pleasure of seeing in person another impression of this etching from the collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. I’ve taken the liberty of adjusting this image a little lighter to be in keeping with the impression I saw.

    In my personal pantheon of great masters of etching, Whistler comes in at number two, after Rembrandt and just before Anders Zorn.

    Whistler’s etchings of the wharves and warehouses along London’s River Thames just knock me out — so detailed in places, elegantly simplified in others, precise and yet loose and gestural.

    The delicacy of line is a characteristic of etching that no other medium can duplicate, and Whistler was a master at it. When looking at the details from the image (like the figures on the balcony in the images above, bottom), keep in mind the size of the original.



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  • Coles Phillips (revisited)

    Coles Phillips Fadeaway Girl illustrations
    Coles Phillips Fadeaway Girl illustrations

    Clarence Coles Phillips was an American illustrator working during the “Golden Age” of illustration, just before and after the turn of the 20th century.

    Though his approach was not limited to the concept, he was known in particular for his series of illustrations called “Fade-away Girl”, in which he played with negative space and found multiple ways of defining a figure without actually delineating an edge.

    For more, see my 2007 post on Coles Phillips.



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Waterhouse’s Gossip

    Gossip, John William Waterhouse
    Gossip, John William Waterhouse

    Gossip, John William Waterhouse; oil on canvas, roughly 28 x 36 inches (72 x 93 cm). Link is to image page on Wikipedia; image is via a previous Christie’s auction; the painting is now in a private collection.

    English post-Pre-Raphaelite (if that makes any sense) John William Waterhouse — whose usual metier was dramatic mythological and literary subjects — here gives us an unusually prosaic domestic scene.

    Three women, engaged in doing laundry or taking care of a child, discuss events over the garden wall.

    To me, the calm undramatic nature of the scene highlights its simple beauty. I love the tone and texture Waterhouse has created for the bricks, pots and stone pathway. The muted colors indicate an overcast day, and the colors take on a subtle strength as a result.

    When you get up close, you see that Waterhouse was much more painterly than the Pre-Raphaelite painters he admired.



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  • Joseph Zbukvic (update)

    Joseph Zbukvic, watercolor
    Joseph Zbukvic, watercolor

    Joseph Zbukvic is a well known painter who is considered a modern master of watercolor, and I would add that within that discipline, he is also a master of suggestion.

    His paintings of urban scenes, rural landscapes, harbors, boats and many other subjects often appear rich with intricate detail, but on closer inspection reveal that he has skillfully prompted your mind’s eye to fill in much more detail than he has actually provided.

    Zbukvic works primarily with a muted palette, at times punctuating his compositions with brief passages of high chroma colors.

    If you search YouTube, you can find a number of videos featuring his work or showing him demonstrating technique.

    I was particularly impressed wit this one. Starting at 36 minutes into the video, he demonstrates creating a simply suggested scene, and then proceeds to overpaint it into a completely different scene — twice, in watercolor!

    Zbukvic’s work is currently on display in an extensive solo exhibition at Principle Gallery, Alexandria. The show is on view until November 27, 2023. Their site offers an interview with the artist.



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  • Eye Candy for Today: Louise Jopling domestic scene

    Blue and White, Louise Jopling
    Blue and White, Louise Jopling (details)

    Blue and White, Louise Jopling, oil on canvas, roughly 49 x 34 inches (123 x 86 cm). Link is to Wikimedia Commons; the page indicates the original is in the Liverpool Museums, but I can’t find mention of it on their site.

    Louise Jopling was a Victorian era painter and apparently well known, though I haven’t found many images of her work on the web.

    Here she gives us a quiet domestic scene. Two women are apparently washing dishes — though they’re hardly dressed for the chore. Perhaps they’ve stopped in the middle of a dinner party to ready up some additional dishes for another course?

    Note the attention paid to the blue and white Dellftware and other dishes and pottery, hence the painting’s name.

    I like the way Jopling has indicated the textures of the womens’ hair and the material of their gowns.


    Link: Blue and White, Wikimedia Commons

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  • Edgar Payne

    Edgar Payne
    Edgar Payne

    Edgar Alwin Payne was an American painter primarily active in the early 20th century and known best for his paintings of the mountains, canyons, bluffs and buttes of the American west.

    He also painted other subjects. I particularly enjoy his compositions involving fishing and sailing boats, painted both in the Boston area and in France.

    Payne’s book, Composition of Outdoor Painting (unfortunately out of print, although available at a premium used) is considered a classic.

    If you can find a copy, either used or in a library, look for his wonderful series of thumbnail drawings in which he codifies major types of composition (images above, bottom). There is an excerpt and article on Muddy Colors.



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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

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The Art Spirit
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Urban Sketching: Understanding Perspective
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World of Urban Sketching
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Daily Painting
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Understanding Comics
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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