Friday, May 21, 2010

The Boulevard of Broken Dreams (and Killed Sketches)

The business of illustration demands flexibility and kind of mercenary approach to image-making. Illustrators pride themselves on believing that nothing is too sacred or too important to scrap at a moments notice. But every now and then, it really hurts when a beloved image gets killed at the last minute. I was on the hot seat for the The New York Times Op-Ed Sunday page for over the weekend (Sunday is a most desirable page to get).

For this article about accurately measuring the amount of oil leaking into the Gulf of Mexico, I sent the following ideas.





It is rare that an art director will let you take a crack at the page design as well as the illustration. So, I was pretty sure we'd end up with idea C, the freestanding measuring cup. BUT, the very best idea approved, sketch B, where the column of text forms the oil spill. The amazing Aviva had even worked out a rough layout of the text for me to work with.



BUT, as is common in the newspaper business, things change quickly and the column was moved around, leaving no room for art. So, this amazing idea is dead in the water. Still a bit hurt. Viva La Illustration.

Friday, May 14, 2010

AIGA 50 Books/ 50 Covers Show



Mark Helfin, Director of American Illustration and Matthew Lenning, Art Director Extraordinaire, contacted me yesterday with some great news. The American Illustration 28 book was juried into the AIGA 50/50 show, collecting the best book designs of 2009. It is an exciting honor because the competition is really about design and not specifically titled towards favoring illustration- so to be included is thrilling.

The AIGA website has a collection up of the 2008 winners.



The jury’s selections will be mounted as a public exhibition scheduled to open at the AIGA National Design Center in New York in 2010. In addition, the show will travel to AIGA chapters, student groups and galleries throughout the country and China during 2011. In addition, one copy of the book will be housed at the Rare Books and Manuscripts Library within the Butler Library, Columbia University in New York, and a second one in the AIGA graphic design archives at the Denver Art Museum.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

ICON Interview


Most of you know that I am on the board producing ICON, The Illustration Conference, taking place this summer in Los Angeles. As the PR chair, I've done a interview with Escape from Illustration Island about the conference, my work and teaching. Check out the new podcast here along with several other great conversations about illustration on the archive. Thanks to Thomas James and his great work over at Escape from Illustration Island!

Monday, May 10, 2010

Drawing in Church- 5/9



I've been in the batcave for the last month finishing up the art for my upcoming book about Civil War hero, Sarah Edmonds. It is a wonderful story written by Marissa Moss and the art is really starting to take shape, hope to post some sneak preview images soon. I have two more months left before the final deadline and I'll be drawing non-stop till then. But, somehow I find time to waste an hour drawing in my sketchbook. Did I mention I'm behind on the final art?

Monday, April 19, 2010

Seminar Sketchbook

Our seniors just presented their Senior Seminar Project, a self-generated semester long exploration that serves as a capstone experience for their undergraduate education.



I have a small tradition of doing a drawing during the three nights of presentations, touching on some of their themes. This year includes- Rasputin, talking bread, tigers in a grandmothers kimono, stepford wives, martians, dogs with jobs...etc. etc.

Congratulations to all of the seniors!

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

WORDPLAY at The New York Times



Many of you know the "On Language" column from The New York Times Magazine, not just from the etymological brilliance of the late William Safire, but for the gorgeous hand-drawn/hand-built typography featured there every week.



The New York Times Gallery on the 7th Floor is opening a show called WORDPLAY, and features some of my illustrated type in an exhibition of these pages. If you are in New York, the opening is Thursday April 22nd 2010, at 7pm.

Thursday, April 08, 2010

American Illustration 29 - Selected

Good news from American Illustration yesterday, I got three images into the new annual, which will come out at the launch party this November. It is also exciting because they selected three images that didn't get into any other shows- so I'm excited that these drawings will have a bit of life beyond their original publication. An unusual year of annuals, with very little overlap between the images selected by the juries of the major shows. The winners:

The Headless Horse/Man- An uncommissioned drawing I created for Dan Zettwoch's Villains Show last fall.



Uncharted 2- Entertainment Weekly called me to create an image about "Uncharted 2," the top video game selected for the year end "Best of 2009" Issue. The main character Drake is a kind of Jason Bourne meets Indiana Jones: a fearless treasure-hunting tough guy with the aerial dexterity of a stunt double. As a conceptual image-maker, it really offered me a great chance to have some fun with the conventions of first-person shooter gaming.



Coloring New Orleans - The cover for United Airlines Hemispheres magazine about the new New Orleans.

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Gambling in the Locker Room



Just finished a drawing for ESPN The Magazine about the astonishingly pervasive practice of gambling in professional athletic locker rooms. A recent gambling altercation that lead to Washington Wizards superstar Gilbert Arenas bringing multiple guns into the locker room to frighten a third-stringer indicate the extreme stakes of these wagers. Superstars have been known to lose hundreds and even tens of thousands of dollars on a single game of dominos, pool and the bet-inducing card games like "Hit the Post." In this insidious betting game, when you lose, you don't just pay in your share but match the whole pot on the table.

Perhaps this visual idea seems obvious (or inevitable), but using the look and palate of Vegas was an exciting solution to explore in my sketches. I barely had 5 days for this, so I didn't have much time to look around for other ideas. The scope of the drawing would take a majority of the time. So I was eager to get started on something.



I sent a super rough idea for a quick "you're on the right track" approval. I wouldn't want to spend 6 hours solving this drawing if they hated the idea of a vegas locker-room.



Once they signed off on the concept, I had to add some new player likenesses and adjust the layout accordingly. And they took out my favorite part, that the devil was dealing the cards. All the players are specific likenesses, though none anyone would really recognize.



The final art was executed in about 36 hours (not ideal)- which did allow time for a rough color study, above (which I ended up mostly ignoring). I rarely get a chance to use a garish high-saturation palate- so I went all out. Perhaps too far out. The drawing will run across the top of a magazine spread, and their format is a big larger than most magazine- a full 10 inches wide. The full drawing will be seen at about 20 inches long. A few details below.


Saturday, March 27, 2010

Just Enough Jeeves


W.W. Norton & Company are re-issuing the classic British early 20th Century novels about "Jeeves" - the uppity valet. (He is NOT a butler. Butlers manage the household, Valets manage the man!) This collection of several stories, called Just Enough Jeeves is the first in the series.




I liked both of the final sketches I sent, above. they picked the one with many different Jeeves, a challenge once I got past number 15, but really enjoyable to draw. The full cover including spine and back cover below.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Drawing in Church- 3/14

We have started a long trip through my favorite book in the Bible, the Gospel of John. The book is loaded with powerful metaphors, stark descriptions of good and evil and the quiet moving narrative of Jesus' closest friend, John. I'm looking forward to a good season of pew drawing. Here is Nicodemus, on the day he met Jesus- and the question that changed his life.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Battle of the Books

Just got back from an amazing event in Chicago, put on with a collection of area libraries, including the Bartlett Public Library called Battle of the Books! The audience was full of a couple hundred kids who were thrilled to talk about books and especially Abe Lincoln Crosses a Creek. Thanks to everyone who made this such a great event. A few pictures from the night.



The winning team from Centennial School, above, the winners got a copy of John Brown: His Fight for Freedom for their school library.




A view of the audience before I went on- these kids were truly awesome. They love books!

Sunday, March 07, 2010

IAM Conference Sketchbook

I just returned from the International Arts Movement Encounter 10. They kindly brought me up to enjoy the three day conference. I was asked to join a panel discussion about the intersection of the digital and the handmade world.... but more importantly the IAM folks commissioned my sketchbook to do some work, with the title "Conference Illustrator" (like I'm a journalist!) I drew throughout all the sessions and documented as many ideas, quotations and concepts as I could. I decided before I arrived that I wasn't going to draw anything from observation from the weekend. The result is a visual salad of symbols, metaphors and typography. What a fun weekend- hope those of you who were not there can imagine you were.




Wednesday, March 03, 2010

New World Order

With great thanks to Matt Kirkland and the folks at Brand New Box, I have a brand new design for my website and blog, and couldn't be happier with how it looks and functions. Lots of new goodies on my site with new work, new features and a much more cohesive look between my blog and website. If you see anything that needs fixing, let me know!

Tuesday, March 02, 2010

Drawing in Church- Redux

During the course of any particular week, there is always a moment or two when I wish I could sit down with my sketchbook for an hour, but deadlines and other work prevent it. Recent annual submission deadlines have given me the excuse to waste some time on these again. Since the day I've made them I've been meaning to sit down with these pages and have a little fun with them or finish them/ruin them. A few from the greatest hits catalog, now in color.





Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Love + Crush



I've donated a drawing to a local show and auction happening here in St. Louis, on March 12th at Mad Art Gallery. The proceeds from the show will benefit the American Heart Association. (Great poster by Mr. Dan Zettwoch!) The theme had to be love or crushes, and after searching the archives, I found a drawing I did for Men's Fitness a few years back about "How to Fall For a Bad Boy." Hope to see you at the show!

Thursday, February 04, 2010

Communication Arts Annual- 2010



Good news on the wire today- my American Illustration cover is going to be in the CA illustration annual, out in July.
This show always confounds me, I can never guess what is going to get in or if anything will get in at all. Last year was a goose egg, even with some of my John Brown work that seemed like a shoe-in. Glad to be back in the pages this year with an image I'm very proud to show.

Wednesday, February 03, 2010

Sketchbook 2010



The pristine spine is still talking to me when I crack the new sketchbook open... a sign that more drawing is needed. I wasted a whole afternoon on this cover for no clear reason other than to make use of a pile of old stamps I found at a rummage sale. Below is a few weeks of pew doodling. Clear the baffles!

Monday, January 25, 2010

Ebbets Eulogy



A new image commissioned for the cover of Books and Culture Magazine about our national pastime. Specifically, it is about the loss of the Brooklyn Dodgers and the impact baseball teams have on the identity of communities. The images feels a bit like a throw back for me (with apologies to N.C. Wyeth) but it should look good on the cover.
I'll post the final image in place with text when it comes out.

Monday, January 18, 2010

India Sudoku

One of students was in India over the winter break and found my old Will Shorts Sudoku book floating around a local bookstore. She sent me this picture in a poorly disguised attempt to get on my blog. Thanks for sending Vidhya!