Lines and Colors art blog
  • Steve Rude: Artist in Motion

    Steve Rude: Artist in Motion
    I received a copy of Steve Rude: Artist in Motion from Flesk Publications.

    Flesk is a small specialty art book publisher that was the subject of one of my first posts on lines and colors in which I praised their terrific collections of the work of pen and ink greats Joseph Clement Coll and Franklin Booth.

    Since then, much to my delight, they have continued to expand and produce terrific books on illustrators like James Bama and contemporary comics artists like Mark Schultz and Steve Rude; and I wrote a follow up post on Flesk last Summer.

    Over that time I’ve come to expect high standards in the production of their books, which are simply excellent, but I have to admit I was actually surprised at what a beautiful book they have produced in this latest volume. Not only is it a larger and more extensive book than I had expected, it covers a range of Rude’s work that was eye-opening.

    Steve Rude is best known as a comic book artist. He is the co-creator, with writer Mike Baron, of Nexus, one of the most unique takes on the science fiction/super-hero genre ever produced. Rude has also applied his superb draftsmanship and story-telling skills to several other comics projects, including his own character The Moth, and mainstream characters like Superman, and even Space Ghost.

    There is, of course, plenty of art from Nexus and Rude’s other comics work here, including preliminary sketches, model sheets, penciled and inked pages (often of the same page or panel, which I particularly enjoy). There are also many of his painted comics covers. In addition, however, are a large number of his other paintings, which is where the book really shines.

    Rude is an artist who isn’t afraid to wear his influences on his sleeve. He has taken as his favorites some of the best, Alex Raymond, Jack Kirby and Russ Manning in the comics field, and for painting some of the terrific and under-appreciated illustrators of the mid-20th century like Harry Anderson, John Gannam, Haddon Sundblom, and in particular, Andrew Loomis.

    Rude was instrumental in the production of the book, and in fact shares writing credit with publisher John Fleskes; and he is not only quick to acknowledge his admiration for these artists, but goes into some detail about them and also discusses his process of learning and discovering techniques form the study of their work.

    That’s another remarkable thing about the book, in the process of creating a dazzling art book of Rude’s work, there are enough studies, preliminaries, and step-throughs that the book is also instructional. In several cases it includes original reference photos and preliminary sketches next to the finished work. There are also sections of Rude’s life drawing and animation work.

    If you’re not familiar with Rude’s work, you can browse through the small gallery on the Flesk site and also click on the right two images on the book’s page. Unfortunately, the images are small and the ones chosen fall way short of giving a feeling for the real nature of the book.

    You can also see some of Rude’s work on his own site, including a clip of one of the painting demos he has been giving in various locations.

    All in all, this is a beautiful book notable to those interested in both comic book art and illustration in the classic tradition.

    Steve Rude: Artist in Motion can be ordered directly from Flesk Publications, from Amazon, or from your local bookstore or comic book store.



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  • Joni Mitchell

    Joni Mitchell paintings
    A surprising number of well-known popular musicians, particularly among those who rose to prominence in the 1960’s, went to art school or or majored in visual art in college.

    Among them are John Lennon and Stu Stuttcliff, his band’s original drummer, David Byrne, Keith Richards, Ron Wood, Bryan Ferry, David Bowie, several members of Queen, Grace Slick, Gerry Garcia, and the Who’s John Entwistle. I’m sure someone else could provide a more comprehensive list.

    Many of these, and several more latecomers, continue to dabble in painting as celebrity artists, whose work sells primarily because of name recognition. (Someone famous sneezed in this hankie! What am I bid?) Though I have a fondness for John Lennon’s Thurberesque cartoons, most of the rock star art I’ve encountered is pretty lackluster. You can see why most of them seem happy to have left their art school days and unexplored artistic career behind.

    There are exceptions, like Ron Wood, and another standout, Joni Mitchell. Mitchell has pursued her role as a painter unflaggingly throughout her musical career, and has been quoted as saying she thinks of herself as a painter who does music more than the other way around.

    You can find her work on the covers of many (if not all) of her albums, from the first one on.

    Musically, Mitchell was typecast as a “sensitive singer-songwriter”, but she was actually a restless experimenter, gradually moving from folk to rock to jazz and back through, pulling the strands of all of her influences into a new whole. Similarly, she has explored several avenues of visual art over the years.

    There is a section of her official web site devoted to her endeavors as a painter. The images are frustratingly small, but you can use the links at page right to browse through her work by year or by style, and then browse in your local music shop to look at some of her actual work as reproduced on her CD covers.

    I think she is most successful as a landscape painter, in which she falls into the “painterly realist” school and can have a rich sense of color and tone (something that’s a little hard to tell from the small images on her site). Her figurative work, including many self-portraits, varies more and she seems unabashed about having some of her weaker work posted on the site along with the stronger pieces. Lately she is leaning more toward her occasional forays into manipulated photo-collage, which is my least favorite of her styles.

    You can also see her copying from painters she admires, as most artists will do as they continue to learn, including some of the “American Impressionists”, members of the Ashcan School and even Bouguereau.

    If anyone comes across a significant number of larger reproductions of her paintings on the web, I would be interested to know. In the meanwhile, even the small images can give you a hint of this artist/musician’s experiments, improvisations and formal compositions, in which she occasionally plays a clunker, but often hits a high note.



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  • Lorland Chen

    Lorland Chen
    For some reason I haven’t been able to fathom, a lot of artists who work digitally in fantasy art or concept art seem to feel the need to go by pseudonyms, sometimes multiple ones.

    Lorland Chen is alternately known as lorlandchain, Lorland Chain, Wei Chain and Wei Chen. I think one of the last two is actually his real name. Take your pick.

    Chen is an illustrator from Chengdu China. He is also an instructor at the ChengDu Fine Art Academy.

    Chen exhibits a fascinating range of influences. His sometimes intricate and elaborate compositions of fantasy themed works draw on Chinese mythology and history for their subject matter, but are painted in the traditions of Western art. Chen works in both traditional media like watercolor and in digital painting applications like Painter and Photoshop, and sometimes combinations of digital and traditional media.

    His figures in flowing robes walk through fantasy palaces or enchanted forests amid great trees that sometimes show the influence classic American illustrators like Maxfield Parrish. There are nods to classical European painting and contemporary fantasy art alike.

    His digital paintings are sometimes extensively detailed, giving the impression that Chen was just having so much fun rendering out the intricate bits that he didn’t want to stop.

    Chen’s own site, though it has an English version and information about the artist, is difficult to recommend for viewing his work because the images are marred with watermarking. The site also has some technical problems (won’t stop trying to load in Safari) and plays unrequested music (and long time readers know how much I love that). Still, if you like Chen’s work, it’s worth checking out the info about his work and his self-published how-to book.

    Fortunately, you can see a number of his images without the annoyance of watermarking on his gallery spaces on deviantArt and CGSociety, which are often accompanied by his comments on the works and his digital painting process.

    [Link via startdrawing.org]



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  • John Mattos

    John Mattos
    John Mattos has applied his crisp, colorful illustration style to editorial illustrations for publications like Time, Newsweek, Forbes, and Fortune; and commercial clients like Apple, Adobe, Microsoft and Citibank. He has taught illustration and drawing at De Anza College, Academy of Art University, and California College of Arts and Crafts and has lectured at UC Berkeley, Stanford, and the School of Visual Arts in NY.

    His bright vector based illustration technique combines the artful use of gradient tones and a knack for “lost and found edges” that give a simultaneous feeling of dimensionality and strongly graphic composition.

    His sleek, forceful image of a skier carving her way through a turn was chosen for the U.S. Postal Service’s official commemorative stamp for the 2006 Winter Olympics.

    Mattos’ online portfolio is unfortunately brief (though don’t miss the link to a second page), but there are a few additional images on his iSpot portfolio. His web site also includes a very quick look as some of his film work.

    He will sometimes push his colors way back, fading them as if under a gentle glaze, and at other times punch them forward with intense hues.

    I love the way in the illustration shown here Mattos lets you hang for moment to get your bearings before the dizzyness sets in.



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  • Walt Kelly

    Walt Kelly Pogo
    “We have met the enemy and he is us.”

    Walt Kelley’s revision of an 1813 quote from Commodore Perry (“We have met the enemy, and they are ours”), and his famous reworking of a classic Christmas song as “Deck the Halls with Boston Charlie”, may actually be familiar to a larger number of people than Kelly’s masterwork of the comics art form, Pogo, which is downright unfortunate.

    Walt Kelly was one of the all time great cartoonists. Pogo, his beautifully drawn, keenly intelligent, highly witty and politically daring syndicated comic strip ran for a quarter of a century. Amid hilarious funny animal hijinks, wonderfully loopy wordplay, and multi-leveled stories set in the Okefenokee Swamp (Georgia side), Kelly’s characters mouthed some biting social and political commentary, even to the point of taking shots at “Communist under every bed” witch-hunter Senator Joseph McCarthy, who he portrayed as a gun-toting wildcat named “Simple J. Malarkey”. McCarthy’s “if you aren’t with us, you’re a Communist” tactics had given him considerable power, enough to ruin numerous careers in Hollywood and elsewhere, and taking him on took some nerve.

    Kelly also took on the far right-wing John Birch Society, J. Edgar Hoover, John Mitchell and Spiro Agnew and, during the 1968 presidential campaign, he ridiculed the group of hopeful presidential nominees he called the “wind-up candidates”, including Eugene McCarthy, Richard Nixon, Hubert Humphrey, George wallace and Robert F. Kennedy. In 1952, Pogo himself became the possum of choice with a gag candidacy based around “I Go Pogo” buttons (lampooning Eisenhower’s “I Like Ike” campaign slogan).

    Pogo can be read as a simple, and simply delightful, “funny animal” strip if you prefer, and kids love it as much as adults. It is one of the best drawn newspaper comics ever, owing a good bit to Kelly’s six-year stint working for Walt Disney Productions, during which he worked on such classic animated features as Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Fantasia and Dumbo as well as a number of Donald Duck shorts. He also did comic book work for Dell Comics, during which he created the character that would become his life’s work.

    Kelly’s Pogo strips are masterpieces of fluid, expressive brush and ink drawing and superb graphic storytelling. His elegant calligraphic brush lines are complimented by the judicious application of hatching and expertly balanced spotting of blacks. Kelly has been tremendously influential on subsequent generations of cartoonists. You can see direct inspiration in Jeff Smith’s beautiful work on Bone in particular.

    There are a number of books that have been published over the years and are in various states of availability, including the famously titled We Have Met the Enemy and He is Us. Also out of print but available used is Ten Ever-Lovin Blue Eyed Years with Pogo, which is a good introduction and overview, and reprints some great strips.

    Of particular interest, though, is the new series of complete Pogo strips from Fantagraphics, starting with Pogo: The Complete Daily & Sunday Comic Strips Vol. 1: “Into the Wild Blue Wonder”, and continuing with Pogo, Vol 2.

    There is an “official” Pogo Possum site, with lots of news, info and links, but not much artwork. There are other sites that fit a similar niche, lots of info, not enough artwork.

    The amazing ASIFA-Hollywood Animation Archive comes through again, however, with an article on Walt Kelly’s Pogo that features some absolutely great scans of Walt Kelly original Pogo art courtesy of Mike Fontanelli. There are three high-resolution Pogo Sunday pages, in which you can not only see Kelly’s beautiful brush and ink finishes, but his underlying blue-line pencils as well (click on the images for the larger versions). I’ve had the pleasure of seeing some of Kelly’s originals in person and these scans do a great job of showing the work of this master cartoonist as it actually looks.

    In the meanwhile, if someone asks me who I’m supporting in the U.S. presidential primaries, I Go Pogo!.


    Walt Kelly’s Pogo on ASIFA-Hollywood Animation Archive
    Official Pogo site
    Pogo Fan Club
    I Go Pogo fan/collector site
    In Praise of Walt Kelly

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  • Glenn Harrington

    Glenn Harrington
    Glenn Harrington’s figures, portraits and landscapes display a painterly approach and fascination with light that reminds me of Sorolla, Sargent, and some of the painters generally called “American Impressionists“, but with the chiaroscuro temperament of Rembrandt and Carravaggio demanding equal time for darkness. Perhaps the most direct comparison I’m tempted to make would be with William Merritt Chase, who exhibited some of those same qualities.

    You can see it in Harrington’s evocative portraits, and his masterful figurative works, but I was particularly taken by these characteristics in his landscape paintings, which are simply striking. They are marvels of intertwined light and darkness, in which sun and shadow almost seem to be struggling for dominance.

    Though his painting approach uses the fresh, open brushwork of the 19th Century painters who took the influence of French Impressionism and combined it with underlying solidity of Academic painting, he particularly seeks out the dark with the light, eschewing the open sun common among landscape painters for the dramatic spotlighting of overcast skies, in which the sun has managed to punch a temporary rift or find edges around which it can barely seep.

    Unfortunately the galleries on his site are arranged in a manner that requires you to hold your mouse over the thumbnail to view the images (which I find particularly annoying, your mileage may vary), and the images themselves are frustratingly small. That said, if you go through a number of his landscape paintings you may come away, as I did, with an overall impression of an emotional quality in the interplay of light and dark, leaving the feeling the what light can be gleaned is precious, fleeting and not to be taken for granted.

    Even in those compositions in which broad daylight is present, it must make its way to us through tangles of branches, walls of trees and and thickets as dark as night.

    His landscapes of Pennsylvania are often of river, creek and canal-side, possibly of the New Hope area (see my posts on New Hope and Lambertville, Daniel Garber and Fern Coppedge). Harrington’s landscapes of the American South are of a somewhat different nature, and often include wildlife and figures.

    His figurative work, in keeping with many of the 19th Century painters, is frequently theatrical, not just in terms of the drama of the lighting, but in the use of costume and unusual dress for the models.

    Harrington is also an accomplished illustrator, and brings his painterly approach and chiaroscuro drama to the publications like The New Yorker, The New York Times, and Sports Illustrated, He has also painted covers for numerous books in including classics like Wuthering Heights, Pride and Prejudice, and A Room With a View for which his visual drama is a perfect compliment to literary drama.



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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