Showing posts with label food illustration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food illustration. Show all posts

Wednesday, 23 January 2013

A Treat for You!


Today I am featuring the delectable work
of artist Wayne Thiebaud (b. 1920).

alicenell.blogspot.com

Wayne Thiebaud's long career is reflected in a wide range of subject matter, but he will probably always be associated with the canvases of pastries that made him famous in the 1960s.

As a teenager, Thiebaud spent a summer working at the Walt Disney Studio, drawing the "in-betweens" that provide the illusion of motion from one animated gesture to another. His earliest jobs were as a cartoonist and commercial artist. After his WWII Army service, Thiebaud earned a BFA and MFA from what is now California State University, and he became a college art professor shortly thereafter.

artic.edu  |  postcrossing.com

In the late 1950s, Thiebaud started painting what I will refer to as retail still lifes. Though this work predates Pop Art, by happy coincidence Thiebaud was associated with Pop Artists like Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein, and had his work exhibited with theirs in the first major Pop Art shows of 1962.

nga.gov

Thiebaud's style is geometric and includes ...

nga.gov

...  as you can see in this detail, richly textured applications of paint that seem so complementary to his subject matter.

newyorker.com

His shadows are rich in color, and while his subjects fall within realism, the coloration is decidedly impressionistic. While Wayne Thiebaud benefited from being associated with Pop Art, it would be wrong to attempt to box him into any style — his work is unique.

purefecto.com

In the 1970s and 1980s, Thiebaud painted distinctly geometric street scenes, and in the 1990s, he turned to aerial landscapes that are a gorgeous world of realism and abstraction:

poulwebb.blogspot.com


artfixdaily.com

famsf.org

In 1994, President Clinton presented Wayne Thiebaud with the National Medal of Arts, and today, at age 92, Thiebaud still creates delectable, lush paintings.

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Monday, 4 April 2011

My Food Section Illustration

When I started working for the St. Petersburg Times, it was long enough ago that clip art was not pervasive, and I would actually create illustrations, as well as design ads. This illustration in acrylics was the cover for a multi-page tabloid of readers' favorite recipes.


I achieved an interesting texture by painting on a matte board that was pebbled to look like burlap. As you can see in the detail, I applied the acrylic paint thinly, like a watercolor, allowing the surface texture of the board to show through.

The title of the section was printed over the tan square at the top.

When I choose colors for a painting — any painting — I tend to think in terms of edible colors! I want a buttery yellow, a tomato red, or a crisp green. So I suppose painting food comes naturally.

Bon appetit!