London As Seen By Charles Dana Gibson
What can I say about Gibson's artwork? His work is among that of my favourite pen-and-ink artists. He provided photograph-like records of people and places in southern England around what we used to call "the turn of The Century". Those were the times of my grandparents' youth, and I grew up with photographs of people of those times, and books from that era with pen and ink illustrations and engraved illustrations made by highly skillful and dedicated people. I am amazed by his many strokes used for heavy detail, and skillfully used to represent texture, and to express the feeling of darkness and light, and shininess. His facial expressions show his characters' emotions and feelings perfectly, as if they were alive. He was certainly one of the greatest artists of his time.
Phil May's Guttersnipes
Phil May was another great pen-ink artist, who had terrific pen tip control, able to sketch figures so skillfully, so quickly. His feel for Human facial expressions and body language and movements is phenomenal. He was a great caricaturist, and would have made a great animator, or action-themed comic book artist. He must have done at least a few hours of quick sketching of people almost every day of his life since he started, as a pre-teen (or a little earlier), to have such a knowledge of a wide range of facial structures and expressions in his memory bank. To create such scenes, I would need to look at photographs to grab some candidates to use in a scene of several characters to make them more detailed than generic in style. I could not possibly sketch so fast in pen and ink to even place just the basic shape strokes on the paper in their staged positions, where they were when I first saw them, to fill in their details later. And how could I remember the details of each one of their faces? People move. They don't stand in one place without moving four some minutes. I could only even attempt to do a shell of this by using a photograph of people in such a scene, as my models (or have to hire a group of people to stand still in scenic positions, for a couple hours). I wonder how, exactly, he did this sort of work.
I admire his patience in using uniform hashed lines to indicate shading, with lines filling all the space, and narrow space between for darker areas, and wider apart for lighter.
A Gallery Of Girls by Coles Phillips
Phillips was an illustrator for Life Magazine for most of his adult life, mainly painting women in watercolours. I think he had an interesting idea of making the women's clothing blend in with the backgrounds, having the reader's eyes fill in the missing lines. That helped create a little more interest when using only one or two colours other than black. Apparently he always used live models. He also drew covers for "Good Housekeeping Magazine", and drew advertising art for women's clothing manufacturers. I like the innocent look of all his models.