September 8, 2011
Yoga Journal
I've done a few images for Yoga Journal over the years, but about a year ago I really started getting into yoga more, so it was a real treat to get a call from Ian Goldberg there.
This piece was for a review of the book "Four Desires". The main point of the review seemed to be listening to your soul in order to figure out your higher purpose. But just in case I mixed in some roughs that could go with the "Four Desires" title. Luckily Ian saw the potential in the star to pearls sketch.
I probably did more than enough roughs, but when I get a spiritual story like this or something I'm really interested in, I can't stop concepting.
Here's the piece in print. Thanks Cathryn for sending it. I love when the AD's email me a quick screen shot or pdf of their design, because it means I'm going to blog about it!
June 30, 2011
Hemispheres

Here's a full page for Hemispheres Magazine the inflight magazine of United and Continental.
The article was about a researcher who was able to increase healthier choices in school cafeterias by a few very inexpensive presentation tweaks. Art directed by Christine Bower-Wright.

June 17, 2011
Gold in 3x3 Professional Show No. 8

Found out my "Memphis to Boston" piece won Gold in editorial in the latest 3x3 Professional Show
This piece has also won Silver in the Society of News Design and 2nd place in the AltPick Awards.
Which made me feel good, especially since I had done 28 color studies, and probably a half dozen compositions for that piece!
I also received a distinguished merit award for "Evolution of China"
Which also made me feel good, because I painted it completely once, wasn't happy and trashed it, and started over on it. Which at the time bummed me out, because that was alot of hand painted hairs to throw away.
And a merit award for "Dodger's Divorce"
http://blog.3x3mag.com/2011/06/3x3-professional-show-no-8-winners.html
June 13, 2011
Creator or Copycat of a Copycat

Got a call from ESPN the magazine, not to spoof Roy Lichenstein of course, but to illustrate the Seattle Mariners rebuilding their baseball team and possibly trading their star players Felix Hernandez and Ichiro Suzuki. The editors suggested a garage sale scene or the player's sitting on a pile of dynamite, which I explored.


And the explosion I was drawing kept reminding me of my favorite Roy Lichenstein painting "Explosion" 1965.

Of course I could have easily drawn my own explosion, but I thought how fun would it be to spoof the Lichenstein, and maybe, just maybe, some readers would enjoy the spoof as well.
I knew the art directors would, and Oliver Yoo who art directed this, went for it, thanks Oliver!

I love spoofing famous artworks, just for the fact alone to closely study their compositions.
Of course I didn't want to hide this fact, so I wrote "Apologies to Lichenstein" along the bottom of my illustration, like Bob Staake wrote "After Escher" on his brilliant New Yorker Cover last July.

Later while researching the painting, I stumbled across this website "Deconstructing Roy Lichtenstein" put together by art historian, David Barsalou who has spent 25 years (looking through 30,000 comic books!) to find examples like these:





Of course everybody knows Lichenstein was inspired by the comics but I had never realized how directly he drew from them, including the text. I figured he had and but never really thought too much about it, because I got what he going for. But after seeing these maybe he should've have written "Apologies to Tony Abruzzo, John Romita, Jim Pike etc etc." under his paintings....


And the Boston Globe article of which I spoofed their headline:
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/living/articles/2006/10/18/lichtenstein_creator_or_copycat/
http://davidbarsalou.homestead.com/LICHTENSTEINPROJECT.html
June 7, 2011
AI30 Selected

Just found out this piece I did for Ed Mann and Siung Tjia at ESPN got into American Illustration 30.
Thrilled because I mis-read the entry deadline and didn't enter anything, so I'm so glad the art directors at ESPN did, thanks Ed and Siung!
Which is cool, because they included the whole spread with the typography which isn't typical of AI.
http://www.ai-ap.com/slideshow/AI/30/?status=selected#174
May 23, 2011
Cover for Emory

That was the challenge Emory magazine Art Director Erica Allison Endicott gave me.



But when she returned with this idea approved, I knew she could have a second career as an corporate negotiator if she wanted.



May 11, 2011
Double Page Spread for APlus

This was for a Chinese magazine APlus about whether property tax will put a dent into soaring real estate prices in China and create an opportunity for homebuyers.




A bit of detail from the center.
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