Sunday, August 30, 2009

Drawing in Church 8/30 + 8/23

Here are a few images from the last two weeks in the pew.


Sunday, August 16, 2009

A Thorny Cover- Part 1


I've spent most of the summer cranking out a sketch dummy of my next book for children, about the remarkable story of Civil War hero Sarah Edmonds. In between I've done a few editorial jobs, only a few worth noting- including this cover package for the new redesign of Christianity Today. The story is about "Spiritual Formation" which is, for those you who don't speak Christianese, the process of deepening and growing your faith. But the conversation gets sticky with this question: Does the act of spiritual growth start with man or with God himself? You can guess where the various denominations fall in this conversation... but this magazine is aimed at a very ecumenical audience.

What makes this a difficult illustration is addressing both sides of this conversation without drawing a complete visual cliche. I proposed three ideas initially, with two of the three pushing a visual style that is much more at home in my sketchbook... but I thought this might be the right opportunity for a challenging pictorial metaphor.



After I sent three ideas- we selected B because it seemed to address the question of God-Authored or Man-Authored growth most clearly. But, in order to be a bit more even-handed we shifted the guy in the vine from reclined, carried upward to the top, to standing/sort-of climbing.


Here are a few color ideas I tried out, and this never happens, but the first one I did was the winner.




I also drew a spot that went with the cover package and two smaller spots that were in a sidebar article, not attached to the cover. The visual language of the little spots shifted a bit to set them apart from the larger story.

Cover work is always exciting, especially with magazines that end up on the bookstore rack. The thrill of seeing it with all the other magazines never gets old for me.

Monday, August 10, 2009

Drawing In Church 8/9

Two recent drawings from the pew...