Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Coop Cuckoo Clock



Coop Cuckoo Clock, 2010. 10" x 5" x 3". Cardboard and glue.

Monday, December 13, 2010

Christmas Card 2010


Christmas Card, 2010. digital work, illustrator & photoshop.

This is my first attempt at using Adobe Illustrator. I put the text on the card in Photoshop. I like to read the magazine "Digital Artist" which has really excellent guides done by working artists' that give step by step advice on a piece they've created. I used one to do this wintertime scene here. Illustrator is a pretty daunting program and the other couple of times I've tried to use it I've closed the program in digust w/o any thing to show for it. But I picked up a 'classroom in a book' for the program and used a more level head to try and wade through the example from the Digital Artist mag.

I think it turned out pretty well and I'm very excited at the potential I now have with the vector based program. Hopefully more to come...

Thursday, December 9, 2010

椅 (chair)


椅 (chair), 2010. 5.5" x 3.75". Digital Work.

In honor of the 2010 recipient of the Swedish industrialist and inventor _ _ _ _ _ prize awarded by the Norwegian _ _ _ _ _ Committee. This is for the Chinese people that want to know.

Monday, December 6, 2010

Bowman's Cuckoo Clock



Bowman's Cuckoo Clock, 2010. 12" x 7" x 5". Cardboard and glue.

Friday, December 3, 2010

Cover Series: Dahlia


Cover Series: Dahlia, 2010. 4" x 6". dahlia, canvas paper, acrylic on cardboard.

The cover series comes from rituals I had a child. Bed time for me as a kid was stressful on my overactive mind and involved a mantra that I would repeat each night. Sometimes the recitals changed, but the general theme remained the same. So to deal with being so scared of the dark I would say things like, "Nothing bad will happen to me", "Mom and Dad are right outside", "The faster I get to sleep the faster I'll wake up". Before I got into bed I had to remove all the evil action figures and toys from the room and place them in the hall. That meant Skeletor, the Rancor monster, Cobra Commander et al were relegated to outside.

The ritual could end once I was under the safety of the sheets. The cover series stems from the removal of fear after I got into bed. I felt that nothing bad could reach me. Blanketing the flowers in this way keep them from harm, keep them from death. It's a way for me to provide shelter for something the way I felt the act saved me as a child. Though the object may be hidden by paint, it has something the others will never have; immortality. Like a reverse fossil the outline of the object remains. There is also irony in the fact that it is already dead.

If I am ever fortunate to have my own studio I have bigger plans for the cover series.

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Mini Cuckoo Clock





Mini Cuckoo Clock, 2010. 6" x 4" x 3". Cardboard and glue.

Little non functioning clock I made. Need to up the scale some because at the size it is I cannot get much detail on the border carvings.

Happy Birthday Dad

Card, 2010. 5" x 11". Digital card made in Photoshop.

Dad's birthday is coming up so I made a card with 'Pompey John' the Portsmouth Football Club's most recognized supporter.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Day Dream


Day Dream, 2010. 8" x 10". ink, oil pastel, acrylic on canvas.

I used to stare at a scene similar to this everyday for my job. Now it's just something I dream about.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Owls sleeping


Owls sleeping, 2010. 10" x 10". acrylic on canvas.

Monday, November 15, 2010

Ceremony I


Ceremony I, 2010. 15" x 15". Digital collage.

Needed to make something to cheer myself up after having been rejected by just about all the Denver Co-ops. So, I'll dance.

Friday, November 12, 2010

We Broke



We broke, 2010. 3" x 3". oil pastel on canvas paper.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Grecian Arms



Grecian Arms, 2010. 10" x 12". pencil, oil pastel, acrylic on canvas paper.

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Detail: Basement


Detail: Basement, 2010. 30" x 30". Acrylic on canvas.

"We all carry within us places of exile, our crimes, our ravages. Our task is not to unleash them on the world; it is to transform them in ourselves and others."
- Albert Camus

This painting is a depiction of the feelings brought on from my inability to get back into architecture. The void left in myself is the basement the Corinthian capital and my self portrait now inhabit in the picture. At the top of the plane there is a section of a floor that, as it creeps into the middle, turns into a jagged nightmarish version of itself. The floor has given way, crumbled and broken and the human figure has fallen into this dankness below. This dark space is tilted. The planes that suggest its boundaries are dynamically on angle.

Thrown into this exile, parts have been labeled as in an architectural drawing. The architectural leaders, the arrows, become little spears that jab and call out all faults. Four descriptors have been highlighted, the four are names of places. Mantua is where fortune's fool Romeo was sent into exile for killing Tybalt. In Euripides' play Medea, the title character is exiled to Corinth. Ovid, the roman poet was sent into exile to a remote village called Tomis. Napoleon Bonaparte was shipped to the island of Elba. All of these places existed far outside the sphere civilization in their days. It was a fate worse than death. In the painting I have played with their usage: MANtua is grouped with boy, CORINTH is included in the label of Corinthian capital, TOMIS is made into 'to mistake', and ELBA is a play on elbow.

As in the Camus quote I have tried to transform this gap away from something I dedicated myself to so fully. Five years of study and three of practice as well as an entire life leading up the decision to pursue architecture can seem to eradicate any self worth once it is taken away. All I can do is keep steady in my hunger. To hope that the dregs of this yield satiate the need to transform a negative something into something positive.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Cover Series: Rose


Cover Series: Rose, 2010. 4" x 6". rose, newspaper, acrylic on cardboard.

Owl Shedding


Owl Shedding, 2010. 10" x 10". acrylic on canvas.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Campaign Ads

Here are some stills from a series of campaign advertisements I was commissioned to make. I was given specific quotes from very reputable sources that did not need to be checked over. The politician targeted in the ads is a yet another rich white male who is a Georgia senator and also a member of the Tea Party. Millions of Americans suffered from unemployment, higher taxes, and the gout from the legislation he helped pass. There is a Communist with a gun in his hands under every bed. Please be afraid.



Sunday, October 10, 2010

Custom Munny


Do it yourself Munny from Kidrobot, acrylic on plastic toy. 2010.

This is a custom made Munny I did. The Munny was a gift from my wife that I just had out for the longest time. I couldn't come up with what I wanted to do to it. Finally I started to see how a knight motif might work and started to sketch it out. This is the final product.





Thursday, September 30, 2010

Columbine


Columbine, 2010. 6" x 6". Acrylic on canvas.

Owls with dinner


Owls with dinner, 2010. 10" x 10". acrylic on canvas.

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Self Portrait

Self Portrait, 2010. 5 1/2" x 6 1/2". oil pastel on canvas paper.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Old Picasso

Old Picasso, 2010. 8 1/2" x 8 1/2". pencil on paper.

Landscaper


Landscaper, 2010. 8 1/2" x 11". pen, oil pastel, and pencil on paper.

Friday, September 10, 2010

Sea Horse




Sea Horse, 2007. 2' 6" x 1' x 8". Metal.

Mountain

Mountain, 2010. 4" x 6". oil pastel on canvas-paper.

Cubed Forest Toner Error

Cubed Forest Toner Error, 2010. 3" x 3". paper on cedar block.

Cedar Mondrian Boogie

Cedar Mondrian Boogie, 2010. 3" x 3". cedar blocks, pencil, paper.

Friday, August 27, 2010

vagrant adverts

Denver's myriad homeless population is ubiquitous on every street corner. Seeing them around town has gotten me thinking about how close I might be to their situation given the financial times we all are experiencing.

I created these from items and slogans associated with the rich.