Wednesday, January 9, 2019

Setting up a Sight-Size Portrait

In this photo, an unidentified artist has set up a life-size portrait.


The canvas is approximately on the same plane as the model, so that when the artist backs up from both, he can compare the painting and the subject side by side in the same light. Note the planks of wood to protect the lawn from wear when the artist backs up from the painting or steps over to his taboret. Sight-size is good exercise.

The sight-size method, which is in common practice in many ateliers, is one practical way to achieve accuracy, and it makes sense when you want your painting to be the same size as the subject. That works for portraits and still life studies.



Sometimes people apply the term "sight-size" to landscape in the sense of matching the apparent visual size of the scene to the image on the canvas (link to video by Marc Dalessio).

It's worth pointing out that the method isn't strictly an "observational" method. When done with figure painting, it requires a good deal of short-term memory practice, and some of the leaders of the sight-size movement have written books about drawing from memory.

I'm not going to get into all the pros and cons of the sight-size method, because I don't practice the exact same method that's taught in the ateliers, but I should point out that various art teachers have criticized the way the sight-size method is held up as the only method that was taught in the 19th-century academies. Here's one free online pamphlet by Semyon Bilmes that addresses the issue.

And not all ateliers use the sight-size method in its absolute form. The Swedish Academy promote a comparative method, which they explain on their website.

What's your experience with sight-size method? Has anyone attempted a life-size outdoor portrait? If you use sight size, how has it helped you—or limited you—as an artist? Is the method oversold in modern ateliers, or is it presented as just one tool among many?
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More info at Sight-size.com
Books: Cast Drawing Using the Sight-Size Approach
Memory Drawing: Perceptual Training and Recall
The Sight-Size Method, a Critical Overview By Semyon Bilmes

Tuesday, January 8, 2019

The Sketchbook Project


The Brooklyn Art Library is a collection of 41,000 sketchbooks from over 130 countries. The library has the collection on shelves, but it's also digitally cross-referenced and available for free for the public to browse.

They have launched a project to encourage the creation and dissemination of sketchbooks. Participants order standard-sized blank sketchbooks and fill them up. The project is funded by a payment from the creator when they buy the sketchbook or pay an extra fee to have it digitized.

SANDWICHES By: Emily Pelka
The "sketches" can be anything: doodles, observational studies, photomontages, or imaginative works. The artist assigns keywords and search terms so that the content can be discovered online. You can visit the website and search by keyword or theme.

Like the internet itself, the Sketchbook Project appears to be uncurated and unfiltered, with no gatekeeper. That can be either attractive to you or not, depending on your point of view. Part of the appeal to people who visit the collection is the fun of randomly encountering someone else's point of view.


All the books are displayed on the shelves and available for browsing, and some are even brought around the neighborhood by bookmobile.
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Sketchbook Project

Monday, January 7, 2019

A Museum for Stones with Faces

Photo courtesy Yukkawanet
Two hours north of Tokyo is a museum featuring rocks that appear to have human faces. It's called Chinsekikan, which translates as 'Hall of Curious Rocks.'

The collection was originally assembled by Yoshiko Hayama who discovered rocks that he compared to E.T., Elvis Presley, Jesus, Gorbachev, Nemo, and other personages. His only requirement is that every rock be formed by natural processes.
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Via WebUrbanist 
More samples at This is Colossal and Kotaku
Previously: Apophenia and Pareidolia

Sunday, January 6, 2019

Gaston la Touche

Gaston la Touche (1854 - 1913) was a French painter whose creative approach to light, color, and composition was a big inspiration to his contemporaries.

Gaston la Touche
He was not a product of the Academy, but instead learned to paint independently. He made friends with Degas and Manet at the cafés in Paris. 


La Touche wanted Manet to teach him, but Manet declined, saying "he had nothing to teach him other than to paint what he saw and to use a variety of colors."

Gaston la Touche, The First Born, 1883. 
His early paintings represent a low-key realism in a traditional mode. This painting, "The First Born" is a rare survival, because he burned most of his early paintings in 1891.

Gaston la Touche, Pardon in Brittany, 1896
But before long he started to explore unusual compositions and brilliant ideas of light. A "Pardon" is a Breton form of penitential pilgrimage conducted at twilight with candles.

Gaston la Touche, The Joyous Festival, 1906
According to Wikipedia: "Félix Bracquemond, a friend and associate, suggested that he might be more successful if he brightened his color palette and chose different subjects, recommending Antoine Watteau and François Boucher as models."

Gaston la Touche, Nocturnal Spirits

The following quotes are from a 1921 museum publication: "Gaston La Touche was above all, the artist of imagination. Starting as a realist in his early days, he gradually worked towards a particular kind of idyllic subject which has become identified with him." 


"He was a modernist, in that he used all the tricks and subtleties of modern technique, but his subjects were generally phrased in the graceful idiom of the eighteenth century. He reconquered the charm of Watteau and Fragonard and reclothed the classic myths of Boucher in modern guise."



In his beloved Normandy, at Flers de L'Orne, where he spent many a summer, or at his home in St. Cloud, in surroundings where the spirit of the eighteenth century still lingers, he painted untiringly, a true product of his environment."


Henry Field said: “In the years I spent in Paris I never heard the Frenchmen discussing technique. Simon, Menard, Gaston La Touche, Fantin-Latour, indeed, all my French friends were intent on expression and never bothered about brushwork.”



"His subjects are always filled with intense vitality. He painted the world as he saw it and found it a fairyland. He rediscovered the poetry of existence for those who can and will see. In the woods and plains the satyr and nymph form part of a classic fantasy or a "Fête Galante" of modern life."



"Like Debussy in "L'apres-midi d'un faun" he has retold the ancient legend in the colloquial language of today. He was a decorative artist at all times, but he never lost his touch on reality."




"With that as a foundation he chose the same gay setting beloved by the eighteenth century artists and treated his subject with their unfailing grace and sense of decoration."
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Quotes are from a bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art, 1921, also available as a PDF
Obituary in American Art News, 1913
Book: Gaston la Touche
Wikipedia on Gaston la Touche
Online biography at Gastonlatouche.com

Saturday, January 5, 2019

Remembering Frank Duveneck

Frank Duveneck (October 9, 1848 – January 3, 1919) painted this oil portrait of a fellow artist. 



The portrait has some animation in the mouth and eyes, as if the subject was talking. The portrait is essentially made up of spots of tone, almost like pixels. But under the strokes is a careful arrangement of tone and edges, gradating down from the light area on the forehead.



A few days ago (January 3) marked the 100th anniversary of his death. Artists in Cincinnati, such as Linda Crank, Carl Samson, Jeff Morrow, and Richard Luschek, went through a scrapbook of Duveneck's paintings at the Mother of God Cemetery in Fort Wright Covington, Kentucky.


(Link to video) There were other commemorations at the Cincinnati Art Museum, including a group of artists doing master copies of Duveneck originals. Read more at Linda Crank's Facebook page.

Friday, January 4, 2019

Reading Rooms

Public libraries today offer a collection of books that you can borrow, as well as a place to read periodicals.

Reading room, Magnus Enckell 1899
In the 18th and 19th centuries, those functions were typically separated. A reading room, or cabinet de lecture, was a place where you could, for a small fee, read newspapers, magazines, novels, and pamphlets. 

Libraries didn't stock those publications, and most ordinary people didn't get them delivered to their homes.


Johann Peter Hasenclever's The Reading Room (1843)
Reading rooms were also open late, and they were well heated and well lit, so they were attractive places to hang out together.

Etching by Gustave Janet after Charles Yriarte
In France, cabinets de lecture were especially popular after the Revolution, as people became more interested in politics. According to Wikipedia:
"Often at the cabinets, as with at the clubs, coffee houses, salons and bookshops, serious discussions would break out. People argued, hurled abuse and fought one another over specific facts in order to attack or defend the public figures being discussed. Whether by the light of a lantern or a simple oil lamp, people came to feed their political appetite and to leave better prepared for the debates that took place in the street."
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Wikipedia on Cabinet de lecture

Thursday, January 3, 2019

Did you make a New Year's Resolution?


Did you make an art-related New Year’s resolution? If you don’t mind, please share it in the comments, and I’ll try to address the topic in future videos.
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Wednesday, January 2, 2019

Ron Lesser in Illustration #62

The new issue of Illustration magazine features the art of veteran illustrator Ron Lesser.

Ron Lesser cover for Curtains for a Lover, gouache
(I'm not sure why the colors are so different.)
Lesser, who is still active as an illustrator, started doing book covers in the late 1950s. He has done it all, from movie posters to advertising art to gallery work, but he's probably best known for painting sexy crime paperback covers.

Many of his early covers were painted in gouache. He says: "I was using water-based paint—casein white for body and then designers colors [gouache], which have more covering ability than watercolors, but less than casein."




Lesser used photographic reference from professional models in New York City. The models charged around $150 per hour in the 1970s, and all the costs—professional photographer, model, and print costs—were covered by the publisher.

The second article in the current Illustration magazine chronicles the art that was created for World War I, from recruitment posters to battlefield sketches by artist-reporters.

Tuesday, January 1, 2019

Shake Your Head to Make an Image Appear


If you shake your head, an image should appear out of this illusion.
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via: BoingBoing

Using machine-learning to arrange a bedroom

This computer rendering shows a 1980s teenage bedroom. There are posters on the wall and some stuff on the floor. It's a little messy. 


The elements were arranged by a recently announced machine-learning program called "Promethean AI."



(Link to YouTube) This video announces how the automated system selects and arranges elements in the room according to a written description.

The creators of the program say: "It knows what goes where, just like you and I do. It also has something we call a context. It can pick it up from the environment or you can expressly set it by saying that we are in the 80s for example and then it will make sure the suggestions fit the context."

This may be a glimpse of things to come, at least in the VFX and game worlds. However the video is a little misleading, because it's not creating things ex nihilo. The assets being arranged by the machine-learning algorithm are separately created with more conventional techniques.

Although this kind of emerging technology fascinates me, for my own art, I'll stick with pencils, paint, and brushes. If my role was limited to "specifying high level creative intent," I wouldn't be closer to the creative nexus; I would be banished from it. I'd rather be an artist expressing my intent at much lower levels.
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Website: The Tricks of Learning Game Art