I've been trying some ways to get my work organized into a zine/fold out newsprint flyer/book type portfolio thingamajig format lately. I'm one of THOSE PEOPLE that like the idea of giving something tangible to people for them to keep and enjoy, or hopefully enjoy, and not just use as target practice for darts. I'm not totally sold on this approach because I sent it away to be made, but I think due to the medium in which I work and all the color separation printing and technical aspects I know nothing about, it makes more sense right now.
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
Thursday, March 28, 2013
The Crossroads
I've always had a fascination with the history of blues music and even more so, the tale of Robert Johnson going to the crossroads (highways 61 and 49 in Clarksdale, MS) and selling his soul to the devil in order to be a great blues musician. There's just something about Satan and music that go very well together.
Labels:
fire,
guitar,
illustration,
music,
robert johnson,
satan
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Fake Bands: Part 1
I liked Blood Wave, but I did a second version because I felt like it looked too much like the thing these guys have going and I don't want to step on their toes since I love what they do.
Junkie leaves.
And I did this little drawing of Harvey Keitel. Older face attached to a movie reference from his younger days.
Friday, March 1, 2013
Creature from the Blog
Started with this sketch.
Then started making my way through something bigger.
Then ended up here. One of my favorite movies as a kid. I still need to get the trilogy. When I was looking up reference photos I was psyched to see the insane amount of fan art of the creature. I feel like he was always overshadowed by the other Universal Monsters, or maybe that's just me, but either way it's nice to see a devoted following for this movie.
Labels:
Creature from the Black Lagoon,
illustration,
lipstick,
monster,
plants,
portrat,
swimming,
water
Friday, February 15, 2013
It's a Freak Show
Some spoof side show posters I recently did. These are part of a bigger group I did but I can only show these for now, as the others are part of a project I cannot reveal yet. These were the rejects but I felt like I needed to let them know they were still special to me.
On a side note, I had a couple rad moments this week. First, I received an email from Kevin Avery who wrote Everything Is An Afterthought: The Life and Writings of Paul Nelson letting me know he had seen my drawings of Paul from my previous post and just wanted to give me an online high five for them. Then, after that, I found out these rock critics posted a drawing I did of Paul as well. Thanks guys.
Labels:
city,
fire,
glasses,
grill,
illustration,
phone,
side show poster,
smoke,
suburbs
Saturday, January 12, 2013
Faces, Vikings, Monster Snowmen
Here's some work/sketches that were done around Christmas.
I recently read Everything is an Afterthought: The Life and Writings of Paul Nelson by Kevin Avery and instantly became enamored with Paul Nelson. His writing on the importance of certain musicians and pushing music criticism to an art form is inspirational. Growing up with Rolling Stone Magazine and numerous other music mags, I'm used to seeing albums quickly reviewed, so it's pretty intense to read about the break with him and RS magazine when they moved to the way we're now used to seeing the music review section, compared to how he had worked on it, and believed the way it should be. In one way you could tell the magazine knew what it took to survive but you also felt that what Paul Nelson was fighting for was the more admirable route. Paul Nelson is basically a reminder that we should take time to appreciate and think about what we are experiencing.
Some tight and loose sketches of Paul.
I did this portrait as a gift for Christmas. It was sort of tricky and time-consuming as it isn't how I usually work, but I couldn't say no. Oh, and see that sketch above the bigger drawing? That was the real winner in my opinion. It would have been funny to send that instead.
Charles Bronson. Death Wish era.
Some warm up sketches I did of Chet Baker before I attempted the scratchboard of him that was posted earlier.
Ian Brady, one of The Moors Murderers.
Some tight and loose sketches of Paul.
Joe Cocker. Woodstock. With a Little Help From My Friends.
Another sign for Gimme! Coffee. Discussions about lack of snow, The 13th Warrior, Conan The Barbarian were the inspirations for this one.
Monday, December 3, 2012
Freshies
A rejected t-shirt idea that had to be done. If anyone feels the urge to have this printed on a band's album, please let me know. The only stipulation I have is that there is a hidden message when spun backwards.
Some of the coloring process.
Some new sidewalk sign drawings I've done for Gimme Coffee.
Labels:
blood,
coffee,
grim reaper,
illustration,
portrait,
scratchboard
Sunday, November 11, 2012
Stickers of Lore
When you grow up in a small town, and are denied access to the local bars due to the legal drinking age requirement to enter those bars, boredom sometimes gets the better of you. So you create imaginary bike gangs and you ride around with your friends all night, occasionally making a pit stop to eat a "road dog" in front of the neighborhood strip club. Then years pass, you grow up(?) and all of a sudden you feel inclined to make stickers commemorating that weird time in your life.
Learn something new. Here's another meaning for the word lore: The surface on each side of a bird's head between the eye and the upper base of the beak, or between the eyes and nostrils in snakes.
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Tuesday, October 9, 2012
Another Glimpse Into My Free Time...
...and another astronaut exploding. I must be regressing into my pre-teens. There's no other explanation for all this weird sci-fi/astronauts dueling in space bullshit I've been sketching a ton of recently.
Bryan Ferry. One of my favorites.
Here's some classic Ferry doin' "Slave to Love" and a cover of "Jealous Guy" that totally beats Lennon's original. And David Gilmour is even there rippin' it up.
The Boss doin' the classic boss face. For years I couldn't stand him, then he became a guilty pleasure, now I have just come to accept that I am a Springsteen fanatic.
Here are some of the sketches I did of Iggy Pop. Doing all of these helped me figure out which pose I wanted to use on the sign for Gimme Coffee, which I think there's an obvious choice here, but then I just couldn't stop drawing him. Seriously some of the most fun poses to sketch for reference. Pic of the sign can be seen in my previous post.
I hope this happens.
Labels:
astronaut,
blood,
Bryan Ferry,
caricature,
grim reaper,
illustration,
music,
outer space,
politics,
portrait
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
Advertising For Coffee
Soooo, I've been doing these a-frame drawings for Gimme Coffee in Brooklyn for about a year now and people seem to get a kick out of them, which made me think I should start photographing them and putting them on some one of my sites. I don't usually try to put too much thought into them, except for a few here and there, which keeps them pretty enjoyable to do. The more spontaneous and ridiculous, the better. It's only when it comes to attempting to erase the marker that an insane rage starts to build inside of me. I wish I could share all of them, but here are the ones I've done since I started to document this job.
The infamous Iggy Pop back-bend he used to do at his live shows. I included a flipped photo just in case someone really wanted to see it.
My ode to Goblin.
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Never Coming to a Theater Near You
I was chattin' about the Upstate wineries on Seneca Lake with someone and freaked them out by mentioning that the deepest point of Seneca Lake has never been located. I thought it'd be fun to make some sort of cheesy 50's style horror movie poster about it.
Also, following in the cheese factor of 50's sci-Fi/horror, I made a new header for the blog. Didn't really veer away from the gross out factor of the first one.
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