An ordinary artist shows you the things everybody can see. The egotistical artist shows you the things only he can see. But the great artist shows you things nobody ever saw before.
- Pablo Picasso
Failing is not a problem.
Not trying is a problem.
- Jay Maisel
 

 

Friday, December 23, 2005

James Gurney

Posted by Charley Parker at 7:34 am

Dinotopia - James Gurney
Dinotopia - James Gurney
I don’t usually post two full images by the same artist, but in this case I was fascinated to find out that an artist I thought I was familiar with is, in effect, two artists.

Many people are familiar with James Gurney as the artist/creator of Dinotopia, a series of lavishly illustrated fantasy books about a “Land Out of Time” in which humans and intelligent dinosaurs co-exist amid fantastic neo-classical cities and spectacular landscapes. The stories were made into a rather lackluster TV mini-series from Hallmark Entertainment. The books, however, are delightful. I think the designs for the cities and landscapes in Gurney’s Dinotopia paintings were a large but uncredited inspiration for the cities and palaces of Naboo in Star Wars Episode I. I think Gurney, in turn, was influenced by Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema (see my previous post) and other 19th century academic painters.

What I was surprised to learn about Gurney, and didn’t know until I Googled him for this post, is that he is also an accomplished plein-air landscape painter working in the tradition, and general location, of the Hudson River School. His Hudson Valley landscapes and town scenes are open, painterly and full of light. In addition to the landscapes, his professional site includes some of his non-Dinotopia fantasy and magazine illustration.

I give links to both his Dinotopia and professional sites below, but the images on the Dinotopia site are unfortunately too small to get the real flavor of the illustrations. Here are some larger Dinotopia images linked from the Artcyclopedia. Of course, the best way to see any artist’s work is in person. There is an exhibition of Gurney’s Dinotopia art opening at the Norman Rockwell Museum in Connecticut on February 18th.

4 comments for James Gurney »

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  1. Comment by Alina
    Monday, December 26, 2005 @ 12:30 am

    WOOOO!! This is amazing!

  2. Comment by Tim
    Wednesday, February 8, 2006 @ 9:10 am

    Aah. Dinotopia, I at a certin point of my childhood “lived” on these books. The Dinotopia series is a really beautiful world that is greatly illustrated!

  3. Comment by Michael
    Thursday, November 30, 2006 @ 9:12 pm

    The link to James Gurney’s website is typed correctly on this page but the actual linked text in the code has an “i” after the forward slash that kills it.

  4. Comment by Charley Parker
    Friday, December 8, 2006 @ 9:00 am

    Michael,

    Thanks for catching that. It’s been corrected.

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News:

Exhibition list updated November 11 (lower in this column)


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Exhibitions
Drawing, Illustration and Comics
Updated 11/11/08
Double Lives: American Painters as Illustrators, 1850-1950
Sept 6 - Nov 23, 2008
Brandywine River Museum, DE
The Totoro Forest Project
Sep 20, 2008 - Feb 8, 2009
Cartoon Art Museum San Francisco, CA
A Light TOuch: Exploring Humor in Drawing
Sep 23 - Dec 7, 2008
The Getty Center, CA
New Acquisitions
Oct 7 - Dec 31, 2008
Society of Illustrators, NY
Drawings and Prints: Selections from the Permanent Collection
Oct 20, 2008 - Jan 11, 2009
Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY
Giles: One of the Family
Nov 5, 2008 - Feb 15, 2009
The Cartoon Museum, London, UK
Over the Top: American Posters from World War I
Nov 8, 2008 - Jan 25, 2009
Norman Rockwell Museum, MA
Leonardo da Vinci: Drawings from the Biblioteca Reale in Turin
Nov 15, 2008 - Jan 4, 2009
Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco, CA
Frank E. Schoonover: An Artist for All Seasons
Nov 22, 2008 - Jan 11, 2009
Delaware Art Museum, DE


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