June 24, 2009

What's your waterfootprint?

I'm always amazed, it seems the biggest way to reduce your carbon footprint AND your waterfootprint is too eat less meat. Too bad I like meat, but my wife doesn't so I'm a semi-vegetarian by default. I've gotten used to it though, and actually like it. About twice a year I'll eat a steak and it tastes good but since I'm not used to it, feels like a brick in my stomach.

Full page for Mother Jones.

The roughs. I went alittle nuts, but I'm a sucker for environmental stories.

The "final". Art direction and design by Carolyn Perot.

June 12, 2009

Locavores

Locavores for the Boston Globe Magazine.
Art director was Grant Staublin. Who let me really push the textures on this one, which I really wanted to do so I could repeat the patterns of the rows of soil.

Here's the approved sketch. Grant had the idea of a family in a garden, so I compacted the space a bit. But obviously it needed a ton more work on the composition.

Since Locavores try to limit themselves to locally grown foods, like a 100 miles radius for example, I wanted to hint at the effort that goes into this voluntary self limiting, that why I have the figures contorting themselves into the square space. Initially I had a green dotted line around to symbolize the radius, but I dropped it. Also I don't usually stylize figures this much, but the idea called for it, and I enjoyed doing it.

June 11, 2009

Stab at Stalin


Got to take a stab at Stalin, in an illustration for the NY Times book review of "Secret Speech" by Tom Rob Smith, author of "Child 44" which is soon to be movie. Art director was Nicholas Blechman.

The novel is set during the process of de-Stalinization, set off by Khrushchev's secret speech in 1956, during which some of the hunters and executioners became the hunted and executed.

In the illustration I wanted to show the Stalin driven murders and the cycle of revenge afterward.

I'd actually had a similar idea for some personal work I've been meaning to do on the bloody history of communism. In those sketches Stalin moustache's was a grim reapers scythe which I simply switched to a knife to better fit this assignment.

So I was thrilled when Nicholas gave me the job and ended up picking that idea.

Here's the sketches, I spent a bit too much time on them, but often when I'm really loving a subject I can't help myself.

Naturally I had to base my drawing of one of Stalin's posters, but as portraits go the best I've seen is this one by Ernest Hamlin Baker on the right, which is much revealing of the true Stalin.

Preliminary drawing, likeness still bad at this point.

A photoshop color study. I ended up pushing more distance between the figure and the background in the final, but I'm still unsure which is better, closer and flatter or a bit more atmospheric space.

June 2, 2009

GM in bankruptcy


Janesville, Wisconsin a town unraveling from the closure of it's GM plant.
For the Progressive, art director Nick Jehlen. Inspiration was partly from one of my favorite Maynard Dixon paintings, see below.



The roughs.

May 30, 2009

my studio



Thought I'd post a picture of my studio, that's C.J. there in the sun.

And my father's table he bought as an art student in the late 60's.

May 26, 2009

Animal Testing, Yes or No?

For John Hopkins magazine on whether or not it would be ethical to bio-engineer an lab animal that didn't feel pain. Art director was Pamela Li.

Here's the roughs. I risked pushing the colored one, but I needed to see if I could get close enough to pulling it off. Luckily Pam liked it as well.

Here's the tight drawing, after a dozen re-drawings trying to get the black rabbits legs right.
After looking at reference photos of rabbits confined in little "stocks", I decided to crop in on the space also.

I actually ended up doing two versions of the final, because I felt the texture in the first one, on the left was distracting. What do you think?

May 16, 2009

Tiger TIME


Here's a full page for TIME magazine's international edition I did a few weeks ago, but just got it in the mail. The subject was about how unsold exports are piling up at the docks of Asian countries, giving them quite a shock. Art direction by Cecelia Wong.

Here's the roughs. Cecelia liked the boats going off the fever line water cliff, but asked me to put in some tigers instead. No problem! I love drawing animals.

Tight sketch.
An inside quarter page.

And in print.