Thursday, February 2, 2012

Inside a Dinosaur's Egg

Here's my best guess about what's inside a dinosaur egg, halfway through incubation.

The painting is done with oil paint, thinned with solvent and Liquin on illustration board that's been sealed with acrylic matte medium.


The image is from Dinotopia: A Land Apart from Time It also appears in my workshop on "maps and cutaway views" for the fantasy artist in the current issue of ImagineFX magazine.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Deathly Visitor

A lot of artists (me included) portray death in the form of crazed skeletons and zombies, wielding swords and attacking the living. But I find Adolph von Menzel's understated vision even more chilling.

In his little drawing "Der Besuch des Todes" (The Visit from Death), he shows the uninvited guest, waiting outside the door and gently pulling the bell rope.

It's daytime, and the birds are singing outside. Maybe he has been waiting all through the night. But he is patient. His thin heel is slipping out of his shoe. He is a frail skeleton, hunched over, not quite filling the fine coat and hat that once marked him as a gentleman.
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From the book of drawings: Das graphische Werk in zwei Bänden

-----Added later:
Here's the drawing mentioned by blog reader Christian Schlierkamp in the comments.

"Imaginary View in Menzel's Studio After His Death"

Christian says: "Before he did it a photographer visited his studio and asked him whether he could take photos. As he wanted to shoot the studio from a certain angle Menzel stopped him and asked him not to photograph:
'I still have a drawing in mind that I want to do: This place after Death has visited it and I'm gone. If I see all that in a photo I'm losing the point of doing a study of it.'"

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Artist's Facial Hair Poll

It's time to vote for the artist with the best facial hair. The poll is at left.


First row: Aivazovsky, Courbet, Friedrich
Second row: Kahlo, Uhde, Dali
Third rowMan Ray, Steele, Dickens
Fourth row: Brancusi, Rodin, Meissonier

----Added later: Dali is the winner. Here are the results, with 519 votes:

Aivazovsky
  35 (6%)
 
Courbet
  20 (3%)
 
Friedrich
  13 (2%)
 
Kahlo
  86 (16%)
 
Uhde
  84 (16%)
 
Dali
  106 (20%)
 
Man Ray
  19 (3%)
 
Steele
  39 (7%)
 
Dickens
  15 (2%)
 
Brancusi
  15 (2%)
 
Rodin
  22 (4%)
 
Meissonier
  65 (12%)
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Previous Post: Best Facial Hair
Blog on Artists' Beards

Monday, January 30, 2012

Bennett School for Girls

The Bennett School for Girls is a hulking ruin at the outskirts of Millbrook, New York. 
It flourished for a time, but eventually went bankrupt and was abandoned in 1978. 


Over the last 35 years it has gradually become swallowed up by vines. Sections of the roof and outer balconies have rotted and fallen.


Inside, the floors have collapsed in places, making it rather treacherous to explore. It was scheduled to be torn down last fall, but Millbrook is having a hard time figuring out how to come up with the money for demolition.
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Photo essay at Opacity.com
Photo of interior by Milfodd on Flickriver
Bennett College on Wikipedia

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Roadside Dinosaurs

Brian Switek, of the Smithsonian blog "Dinosaur Tracking," has gathered up photos of the "Best of the Worst Roadside Dinosaurs." 


This weak-kneed Corythosaurus (photo by Mark Ryan) is propped up alongside Interstate 15 near Victorville, California.

He looks like he's hoping to hitch a ride, and if that doesn't work, he'll just radio back to the orbiting cruiser to return him to Neptune.

Best of the Worst Roadside Dinosaurs

John Berkey in Illo 36


The new issue of Illustration magazine has just arrived, with a big, splashy article on the life and work of artist John Berkey (1932-2008), best known for his extravagant spaceships. 

Berkey began as an illustrator for Brown and Bigelow calendars, where he developed his signature style which combines deft realism with a baroque abstract shape-music playing on a smaller scale. 

The article includes samples of his work for the movies: Towering Inferno, Orca, King Kong (remake) and Star Wars. 

The magazine also features the work of Rose O'Neill. Besides creating the Kewpie doll icon which made her famous also surprisingly created images of sultry women and mythological figures. The magazine has 80 pages in full color and costs $15.00. 

If you can't find it at your local Barnes & Noble, comic shop, you can order directly from Illustration magazine's website.

The article is written by loyal collector and fan Jim Pinkowski, whose website shares the trove of tearsheets that he has collected.
Berkey's book, "Painted Space"