Tuesday, May 15, 2018

The Artist's Way

Link: http://a.co/1lbiQA2

Wednesday, May 9, 2018

Sullivant Original



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Sullivant Original
// Deja View



I do own a few TS Sullivant originals, but not this one. It was offered by Heritage Auctions late last year.
Just like every Milt Kahl drawing, each Sullivant illustration represents an adventure in humorous, graphic exploration. EVERYTHING is entertaining, the animals' anatomy, the insane sense for caricature, staging and on and on.
The caption is very funny, too. Here is what Heritage said about the piece:

Thomas Sullivant Life Magazine Illustration Original Art (Life Publishing Company, 1921). Before LIFE magazine was purchased by Henry Luce in 1936 and become the long-running photo-magazine American institution it is remembered as, it started in 1883 as a humor magazine similar to the British Punch. This whimsical cartoon illustration from 1921 features only a portion of the caption, but in it, Mrs. Hippo asks Mrs. Gnu how her children are. Mrs. Gnu replies that one of them has gnumonia, to which Mrs. Hippo says that is "bad gnus". At least this Dad-joke has charming artwork crafted in ink on an oversized 25.5" x 17.25" sheet of Bristol board. Signed in the lower left of the image area. Toned, with edge wear, torn caption, and a missing bottom left marginal corner. In overall Very Good condition. 

Over the years I have posted numerous times on Sullivant's art. Here is the first one:

http://andreasdeja.blogspot.com/2011/06/t-s-sullivant.html



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Eye Candy for Today: Frederic Leighton’s Invocation



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Eye Candy for Today: Frederic Leighton's Invocation
// lines and colors

Invocation, oil painting by Frederic Leighton
Invocation, Frederic Leighton

Link is to Wikimedia Commons, original is in a private collection.

Like the remarkable figure of Perseus in his interpretation of the mythological story of Perseus and Andromeda, Leighton here manages to render the figure as both solid and etherial.

This is partly accomplished with solid draftsmanship, and partly with his superb command of value and edges. I'm struck in particular by the way he has handled the subtle shift in value on the arms, in which the tonal transitions are so delicate as to be almost imperceptible.

The diaphanous gown defines the underlying figure with precision and grace, again by subtle control of value and the draftsmanship in the sweeping folds of fabric.

The small bit of still life adds weight at the bottom of the composition and ties it to the hints of architectural elements that form the background.

 

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Eight Portrait-Lighting Setups



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Eight Portrait-Lighting Setups
// Gurney Journey

Here are the eight most common setups for portrait lighting:

1. Three-Quarter Broad
Most portraits have light coming from in front of the model, and a little off to the side. The main or "key" light strikes three-quarters of the visible form, leaving one-fourth of the form on the far side of the face in shadow. Typically, the key light is elevated from the subject's line of sight. It's high enough to leave a shadow under the nose and chin, but low enough to get some light into both eyes. The light casts a shadow from the nose onto the far cheek, leaving a lighted triangle on that shaded cheek. If the face is turned slightly to one side, the near or "broad" side of the face is the one receiving the major illumination, which is why it's called broad lighting.


2. Three-Quarter Short
Alternately, light can come from the farther, foreshortened, or "short" side of the face. It's still three-quarter lighting if the tell-tale lighted triangle appears on the shaded side of the face. This time the lighted triangle is on the cheek closest to the viewer. Short lighting can help make a face look thinner. Some photographers use the term "Rembrandt lighting" more generally for any three-quarter lighting, either broad or short. Rembrandt himself used both broad and short lighting. Both of these lighting arrangements are flattering and unobtrusive, good reasons why portrait painters and photographers have used them almost universally.



3. Side or Split Lighting
Light that comes straight from the side is called side or split lighting. The dividing line or terminator between light and shadow runs along the centerline of the face. It's not a light arrangement that you see too often, but it has its purpose, especially
in film, comics and illustration. It places equal importance on the light side and the shadow side, so it can convey the sense that the subject is a doppelganger, a person whose soul is a battleground of equal and opposing forces. Sometimes two equal light sources shine onto each side of the face without quite overlapping, leaving a dark core shadow running down the forward-facing planes in the center of the face.

4. Top Lighting
In top lighting, the light comes straight down onto the head from above. It occurs often under a streetlight, a ceiling light or a noonday sun. The forehead and the nose intercept most of the light. These parts of the face carry relatively little expression. The mouth and eyes, the chief agents of sympathy, are lost in shadow. As a result, the subject's emotion is masked. The effect can be threatening, mysterious or inscrutable. This lighting arrangement is ideal for a dramatic entrance of a dangerous character or for conveying a feeling of cool detachment.

5. Light from Below
Strong light usually doesn't come from below, so when you see it, it grabs your attention. We tend to associate warm-colored under-lighting with firelight or theatrical footlights, which can suggest a magical, sinister or dramatic feeling. In modern times a cool light from below suggests a cellphone or a computer. Faces that are familiar to us (family, friends and celebrities) nearly always appear lit from above. We hardly even recognize them when we see them with the light shining upward on their features.


6. Frontal Lighting
In frontal lighting, the light travels straight toward the form from an angle close to the viewer's line of sight. The planes get darker as they turn away, and the planes facing us are lightest. Frontal lighting tends to flatten the form, and it emphasizes the two-dimensional design instead of the volume. It can give the picture a striking poster-like impact. It's a good lighting to choose if you want to emphasize color or pattern. Frontal lighting is one of the few times when outlines actually appear in real life. The outline is really the thin fringe of shadow that appears at the very edge of the form.

7. Edge or Rim Lighting
Edge lighting comes from behind to touch the sides of the form, separating it from the background. It's also called a rim light or kicker in the film industry, and it usually requires a relatively strong source of light. The width of the rim light varies according to the size of the planes that face backward to the light. Edge light is not just a thin white line around the form. If you want to introduce an edge light source, it should be a different color from the ambient light on the front planes.


8. Contre-Jour Lighting
Contre-jour lighting is the opposite of frontal lighting. The planes that are darker in one system are lighter in the other. The head appears against a field of light, which might be a bright sky or an illuminated doorway. The field of light takes on an active presence, surrounding and burning out the edges of the silhouette. The darkest tones are on the front-facing planes and the hollows of the form.
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These eight portrait lighting setups are featured in the current issue of International Artist Magazine.


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