Gericault's famous painting Raft of the Medusa is a complex composition, with a lot of figures in dramatic poses. How did he get there?
His early sketches show the seed of the idea, with the figures in the group going in and out of shadow.
Gericault's famous painting Raft of the Medusa is a complex composition, with a lot of figures in dramatic poses. How did he get there?
His early sketches show the seed of the idea, with the figures in the group going in and out of shadow.
I've heard of using bread as an eraser, but this one was new to me: using skim milk as a fixative for charcoal drawings.
Apparently Van Gogh did it, and the milk solution can be applied either with a brush or a spray. There are also recipes for using gelatin, hairspray, shellac, PVA glue or acrylic matte medium.
The main reasons for trying these alternatives are to reduce cost, to lessen fumes, to help the environment, or just to experiment. If you aren't worried about such issues, you can just go ahead and buy some commercial spray fixative.
As with any experimental technique, always test various mixtures and formulas first on a scrap.
From Margaret Chanler Aldrich's memoir Family Vista, Available on Archive.org
Previously: Talking Models, Speaking Likeness, Setting Up a Sight-Size Portrait
"It has been said that Sorolla worked hurriedly, that he got tired or bored before he concluded or finished a work. This is not true. He painted two portraits of me: one indoors and another in his garden. For each one of them he took more than a month, in sessions of three hours a day. Yet, both paintings seem to have been made rapidly, with fortunate suddenness. The multitudinous quantity of his work must be attributed to his tireless laboriousness."
"He worked from the early hours of the day until twelve at night, in his studio, in the open air, with artificial light. At the same time that he was painting my portrait he had many others inn hand, and when he interposed an interval without a model, he made studies and sketches, or he painted landscapes, charming landscapes. For him the practice of art was a vital function, like breathing. If he had to stop painting, it was as if he were being asphyxiated."
Recollection of Pérez de Ayala in Quoted from the book Joaquin Sorolla by Blanca Pons Sorolla , p. 318
Joaquín Sorolla (1863-1923) on Wikipedia.
Irish painter Sir John Lavery lamented in his memoirs that it is impossible to both capture a true likeness of a portrait subject and also please that subject.
The problem is compounded by the fact that most portraits are not commissioned by the subject, but rather by a relative or spouse, and their feelings must be taken into account, too.
(Portraits are by John Lavery but not the one referred to in this story)
"The day at last arrived and with it the husband. Planting himself in front of the picture with both hands resting on a gold-headed cane, he maintained an ominous silence while his eyes roamed over the canvas."
"At last, raising a hand, covering the figure, and concentrating on the head, he spoke. 'I pass the forehead and the eyes. I move my hand downwards: the nose the mouth the chin, them also I pass. I move my hand yet lower: what is this flat-chested modernity that I see? Where is the snowy amplitude of Her Ladyship? No, Sir John Lavery, that does not represent my wife.'"
"Her Ladyship stood by his chair almost in tears, saying, 'I will not have an eighth of an inch added.' I had tried to please both and, of course, had failed."
"Later, I wrote to His Lordship that I felt he was justified in his criticism, and that if he was still in the same mind I would, with his permission, cancel the commission, and that he should take back the very expensive and highly carved frame he had ordered. He accepted."
He painted another portrait over the canvas.
Quoted from The Life of a Painter by Sir John Lavery.
Paul Antonio has worked with the Worshipful Society of Scriveners in London. One of his jobs was to hand-letter the laws of the land on vellum.
He also has lettered millions of envelopes for royal events.
He talks about the challenges of the job in the Calligraphy Podcast, where he tells his amazing personal story, growing up in Trinidad in the 1970s, when it wasn't easy to find out information about lettering.
In 2018 he wrote an excellent book on Copperplate lettering.
In his book, Color in Sketching and Rendering, Arthur Guptill says this white porcelain cup presents an ideal subject for studying the effects of light and shadow, because of it combines curved and flat surfaces.
Nick Eggenhofer was born in a small town near Munich and found his way to America before World War I broke out.
By watching movies, he developed a love of cowboys and Indians (or "Der Trapper und die Indianer" "Trappers and Indians" as they called them in German).
He enjoyed drawing from a young age and soon found work doing illustration, starting with pen-and-ink drawings.
He worked in a variety of media, including gouache (above), oil, and watercolor.
Eggenhofer's work is featured in the latest issue of Illustration magazine #79. The article includes over 75 pictures by him in black and white and color. The issue also includes a feature on Clyde Caldwell (born 1948), plus a listing of New and Notable books and Exhibition and Events.
Self portrait is by Ernest Meissonier
Quoted from The Artist Magazine, August, 1932 (Thanks, James W.)
Most of the afternoon colors are warm gray over that. Inevitably the blue pops through here and there, activating the warm colors.
According to an article in a 1936, "Losing his arms in an accident, he taught himself to paint, holding the brushes between his toes, and has just had an animal study in oils accepted for exhibition at the Burlington Galleries, London."
He went on to have distinguished career, with paintings accepted by the Royal Academy. this one is called "A Welcome Rest". It appeared in a June, 1936 issue of The Artist's Magazine.
Thanks, James!From "Instruction Paper on Strength, Expression and Grace in Hands, Limbs, Etc." published by the School of Applied Art, Battle Creek, Michigan.
Thanks, James!
Victor Navlet (French 1819-1886) painted this gigantic overview of Paris in 1855 based on observations from a hot air balloon. The painting is about 12 feet high.
The details are so fine and carefully worked out that you can see windows on the individual houses.
It's at the Musée d'Orsay in Paris.
I catch the Gurney brothers trash talking while playing Rocket League:
"If we trade who gets Foamer and who gets Boomer, it'll be devastation."
"So...are you blue?"A really nice guy sent me an email and said he wanted me to be a guest on his podcast, which was about obscure old movies. I had to decline, and here's what I said:
"Thanks! Love your show, but I would be a big disappointment to your audience, because I'm no good at talking about movies.If you ordered a book from our web store over the weekend, it’s on its way to you in today's mail.