Lines and Colors art blog
  • The Vegetable Museum, Ju Duoqi

    The Vegetable Museum, Ju Duoqi
    It has long been an established practice for artists to study the paintings and drawings of artists from the past by creating their own copies of the masters’ work. Ju Duoqi just happens to use vegetables as her medium.

    Her “Vegetable Museum” is a series in which she has arranged vegetables, fresh and otherwise, chosen for their form, textural qualities, tone and color, to recreate famous works from some of Western art’s great masters. The results, particularly if you are familiar with the original work, are amusing, often hilarious, as well as being visually yummy for their own compositional characteristics.

    Duoqi, who was born in Chongqing, China and studied at the Sichuan Fine Arts Institute, found herself rearranging vegetables in the bins at market stalls, seeing in the arrangments bits of imagery.

    She put some together in her first old master study by recreating Eug&eqcute;ne Delacroix’s La Liberté Guidant le Peuple (“Liberty Leading the People”) as La Liberté Guidant les Légumes (essentially,”Liberty Leading the Beans”).

    Duoqi chooses from a variety of vegetables in various states, fresh, rotten, withered, dried, pickled, fried, boiled and otherwise prepared, carefully arranges them, photographs the arrangement and then digitally manipulates the results. The final pieces are printed in limited editions.

    In addition to The Vegetable Museum, the Galerie Paris-Beijing, which handles her work, has an exhibit of The Fantasies of Chinese Cabbage, images of cheesecake pictures of women (including Marylyn Monroe’s iconic Playboy centerfold) created out of the aforementioned vegetable. These are particularly interesting for the way she has used the striations of the cabbage in defining the forms, plus they’re also frequently hilarious.

    The Vegetable Museum series, as I pointed out, is best enjoyed in comparison to the originals. Images above: Rembrandt’s The Anatomy Lecture of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp, Da Vinci’s The Last Supper, Ilya Repin’s Barge Haulers on the Volga, Henri Rousseau’s The Sleeping Gypsy and Gustav Klimt’s The Kiss.

    (Also, for more on those artists, see my posts on Rembrandt [also here], Da Vinci’s The Last Supper, Ilya Repin, Henri Rousseau and Gustav Klimt.)

    So far, Duoqi has resisted the temptation to create any (possibly recursive) homages to the vegetable-as-image paintings of Guisepe Arcimboldo.

    [Via Sandbox World]



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  • Barbara Kacicek

    Barbara Kacicek
    Pennsylvania artist Barbara Kacicek favors a few subjects to which she returns frequently. One is small still life subjects, particularly pears, plums and smooth river stones. Another is compositions of clouds, often mounded and towering cumulus clouds.

    To these she adds drawings that veer away from realism into “Imaginary Realism”, done with smooth tones of charcoal on bristol board.

    Her still life paintings, though brought to a fairly high level of finish, are painted alla prima, in oil on canvas mounted on panels. She finds compositional focus in the textural surfaces of her subjects as well as their subtle colors.

    I particularly enjoy her series of “31 Meditations on Three Plums“, in which she approaches the same basic subject repeatedly on small canvas (6×6 inches), with variations on composition of the plums against a striped cloth background in a variety of lighting choices.

    When viewing her website, note that there are additional works in the Archive section. There is also a section of oil pastels, in which she explores the cloud theme, but with the different textural effect afforded by the medium. Kacicek also features her charcoal drawings on a separate site.



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  • Jeremy Bastian

    Jeremy Bastian, Cursed Pirate Girl
    I just came across Jeremy Bastian this morning in Cory Doctrow’s post on BoingBoing about a commissioned drawing he did: an extravagantly detailed homage to Winsor McCay’s Little Nemo (see my posts on Winsor McCay, and here).

    The owner of the drawing, Ben Friedman, has been kind enough to share it with us by posting images of it on ComicArtFans (images above, top, and detail, second down). You can see the full piece here and here, and details 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5.

    Bastien is a contemporary comics artist with a wonderfully anachronistic style, picking up the fine line illustration styles of the late 19th Century and applying them to his own idiosynchratic vision.

    In checking out Bastian’s website, I found it sadly lacking in information about his most prominent project, a comics series called Cursed Pirate Girl.

    He gives a brief, colorful description of the story, a couple of prominent raves by Mike Mignola and Mouse Guard’s David Peterson, and a link to an under-construction “Booty” page, but no indication of what the comic is, who publishes it, where it might be found or even whether it exists in digital or printed form. (When amateurs make websites they frequently overlook the critical factor that other people don’t know what they know and need introductory information.)

    With a bit of digging, I was able to discover that Cursed Pirate Girl is a printed comics series, published by Olympian Publishing, which apparently has issues 1 and 3 of a three part series still available.

    Comixcology, which sells digital versions of comics for iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch, lists issues 1-3 as “of 6”. I don’t know if they are split up differently for digital distribution, or if three more issues are planned.

    Delightfully, Comixcology has provided a 7 page online preview of Cursed Pirate Girl #1 (bottom three images, above), making up for the inexplicable lack of images on Bastian’s site.

    You will find a few images on Bastian’s website, mixed in with personal travel photos in the “updates” section (I can’t give you a direct link because the site is in frames); but they are mostly sketches.

    I found another image on Guy Davis’s site of a drawing Bastian did of Davis’s character The Marquis, and a portrait of Leto II from Dune on Hey Oscar Wilde! It’s Clobberin Time!! (see my post on Hey Oscar Wilde! It’s Clobberin Time!!).

    There are also reviews and articles about Cursed Pirate Girl on Read About Comics, CBR’s Robot 6 and Broken Frontier; as well as an interview on Newsarama.

    Bastian also contributed a short Story to David Peterson’s Mouse Guard: Legends of the Guard #1.

    Olympian Publishing is producing an audio drama adaptation of Cursed Pirate Girl, with Stephanie Leonidas (Mirrormask, Dracula) as the lead.

    Here’s hoping that some of the attention Basitan has been getting results in a graphic album collection of the issues to date, and broader awareness of his unique talent.



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  • Blow Up: Hanuka, Shimizu, Weber

    Blow Up: Tomer Hanuka, Yuko Shimizu, Sam Weber
    Blow Up: Hanuka, Shimizu, Weber is an exhibit at the Society of Illustrators in NY that features three artists I’ve profiled previously, Tomer Hanuka, Yuko Shimizu and Sam Weber.

    The organizers make a point of the disparate backgrounds and visual approaches of the three artists.

    Hanuka’s richly colored comics illustrations, Shimizu’s admixture of Yukio-e and pop culture and Weber’s sometimes brooding, often monochromatic intensity make for an interesting study in contrasts.

    Though there isn’t an online gallery of work from the exhibit, you can find plenty of work by all three illustrators on their respective blogs and websites (listed below).

    Blow Up: Hanuka, Shimizu, Weber is on display at the Society of Illustrators, New York until October 16, 2010.

    (Images above: exhibition poster, Yuko Shimizu, Sam Weber, Tomer Hanuka; note: I have no idea if any of the bottom 3 pieces will be in the exhibit, I simply picked works I like to represent each artist)


    Blow Up: Hanuka, Shimizu, Weber, Society of Illustrators, NY, to 10/16/10
    Tomer Hanuka: website and blog
    Yuko Shimizu: website and news
    Sam Weber: website and news
    My previous posts:
    Tomer Hanuka
    Yuko Shimizu (and here)
    Sam Weber

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  • Don Kenn

    Don Kenn
    Don Kenn (whose blog also confusingly lists him as John Kenn) is a Danish writer and director of childrens’ television shows. In his limited spare time he draws “Monsterdrawings” on Post-It notes; as he describes them “…a little window into a different world, made on office supplies”.

    The drawings, of ghouls and ghosts, sea monsters and living islands, haunted woods and city streets, combine the imaginative ramblings of doodles with a technique of hatching tones and range of atmosphere and effect reminiscent of Edward Gorey.

    Kenn often juxtaposes passages of dense hatching with areas of open space, to excellent effect.

    I understand the fun of using unusual art supplies like Post-It notes, and I certainly understand the appeal of off-white drawing surfaces, because I prefer them myself; but I think Kenn’s Monsterdrawings are too good to be wasted on non-archival materials.

    I would love to suggest the nicely off-white Strathmore Series #400 sketchpads and the Sakura Pigma Micron markers I described in my post on My Pocket Rembrandt.

    At the very least, somebody give the man a Moleskine.

    [Via Sandbox World]



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  • Mark Summers (update)

    Mark Summers
    I have long been fascinated by pen and ink drawing, and its mirror world cousin, scratchboard.

    Both are demanding mediums, but scratchboard is additionally difficult in that the unfamiliarity of working by subtraction rather than addition takes some practice, as well a mental shift (in common with some printmaking techniques); but the rewards are a kind of textural quality and visual appeal unlike any other medium.

    There are some excellent contemporary scratchboard artists carrying forward the tradition; perhaps the best known and most accomplished of which is Canadian illustrator Mark Summers.

    Summers combines superb draftsmanship, a talent for whimsey and humorous exaggeration and a knack for likenesses, both contemporary and historic, with a flair that have made his unique illustrations in demand and a common sight for readers of Time, Rolling Stone, The Atlantic Monthly, Sports Illustrated, The New York Times Book Review and numerous other publications and a range of book publishers an corporate clients.

    He has received awards form the Society of Illustrators and been featured in juried shows, collections and publications like Step by Step Graphics, Communication Arts, Print and Applied Arts.

    If you are a book lover, you may in remember his wonderful series of literary portraits that were prominent in Barnes and Noble bookstores a few years ago (I particularly loved his portrayals of Edgar Allan Poe).

    Summers was born in Ontario and studied a the Ontario College of Art. He was introduced to scratchboard by Duncan Macpherson, an editorial cartoonist who drew for the Montreal Standard and the Toronto Star.

    Summers doesn’t have a dedicated website, but since I last wrote about him in 2007, a new resource for viewing his art has become available. In addition to the portfolio on the site of his artist’s representative, Richard Solomon, and his portfolio on The iSpot, he now has a presence on the relatively new Behance Network.

    In the latter you will find a section of delightfully Wicked Portraits, with Summers’ portrayals of notorious heavies from history, such as Edward VII (image above, top), in the company of such cheery chums as Torquemada, Rasputin, Genghis Kahn and Atilla the Hun.

    In these and many of his recent illustrations, he enlivens his scratchboard drawings with tones of watercolor and sometimes oil glazes. There is a step through and description of his working process on the Richard Solomon site, and the same process is also shown a little larger at the bottom of this page on the Behance site. In addition, Summers has left a few replies to comments on my earlier post about his work with answers to questions about his technique.

    Summers’ illustrations are featured in a new book, Vanity Fair’s Presidential Profiles: Defining Portraits, Deeds, and Misdeeds of 43 Notable Americans–And What Each One Really Thought About His Predecessor.



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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