Monday, June 26, 2006

Illustrating Water


On his blog, Illustration Art, David Apatoff recently presented a two-part post on painting water, focusing in the second half on illustrator Stanley Meltzoff, who goes so far as to actually paint under water!

I was intrigued by those two posts and thought it might be fun this week to look at how a variety of illustrators from the 50's dealt with water, both above and below the waves, starting with these two monochromatic treatments by two relatively unknown - though certainly accomplished - illustrators from Argosy magazine.

9 comments:

Joe Jusko said...

These are great pieces, particularly "The Survivors". Water is without a doubt one of the more challenging elements that any illustrator is required to interpret, and these are two brilliant examples!

Dominic Bugatto said...

Nice ones. The the first being reminiscent of the opening shot of 'Sunset Blvd'.

cibbuano said...

wow, great illustrations... I wish real water looked that good...

skipgoforth said...

Hey Lief! You got mentioned on www.boingboing.net!

Congratulations...I have always loved your postings!

SMV said...

yes, nice illustrations indeed, but cibbuano, what do you mean "i wish real water looked that good"? seen any glacier fed streams and pools lately? or the ocean for that matter? can't beat the real thing...

Lotta said...

Insightful comments and great pictures. Keep on keeping on.

Jobs Site said...

Really beautyful....

Jason Lethcoe said...

Very humbling. The illustrators of that era were truly masterful.

Anonymous said...

Stanley is not really painting underwater. He has no mask and is, therefore, virtually blind. Check his web site for further info. www.stanleymeltzoff.com