Friday, October 27, 2017

INTERNET

11 1/2" x 8 "
Uniball pen, watercolor and China marker in Moleskine sketchbook

SIETE CABALLOS

11 1/2" x 8"
Uniball pen, watercolor and China marker in Moleskine sketchbook

Wednesday, October 25, 2017

O'BRIEN, OREGON

11 1/2" x 8"
Uniball pen, watercolor and white China marker in Stillman & Birn Zeta sketchbook
We stopped in O'Brien, Oregon on our way to the California border. It's an unincorporated town of 570 people. Budget cuts left them with no Police force but this old Plymouth bubble top sits on the road.

DRURY CHANEY GROVE HUMBOLT REDWOODS

11" X 8 1/2"
Uniball pen and watercolor in Stillman & Birn Zeta sketchbook

Doing lots of preliminary sketches for future paintings. So glad these redwoods have been preserved.

SACRED REDWOODS CRESCENT CITY CALIFORNIA

11 1/2" x 8 "
Uniball pen, watercolor and China marker in Stillman & Birn Zeta sketchbook

When you are in the grove it feels holy, spiritual and clean.  I wish I would have brought balloons to fill with the air there.

Monday, October 23, 2017

POSTER FOR LEGION OF MARY

11" x 14"
Faber-Castell Pitt Big Brush pens in ProArt sketchbook

The Band members:
M.Fierro, R.Tutt, J.Kahn, J.Garcia. M.Saunders

Sunday, October 22, 2017

Thursday, October 12, 2017

Wednesday, October 11, 2017

REMINDER

8" x 10"
Ink and watercolor on Arches paper

Sometimes my drawing table is a blur of post it notes. When it is imperative that I remember something important like recycle day I refer to a poster I made instead.

Always be drawing!

Monday, October 9, 2017

WOO WOO MOMENT

18" x 24"
Mixed media illustration on Canson watercolor paper

" I'm in Portland, Oregon. I've made an appointment with a woman that I've been told is a gifted healer. I show up at her door and I am not prepared for the five foot five two hundred pound woman in a pixie haircut with a hot dog in one hand and a quart of Pepsi in the other.

Without speaking she says to me "Okay honey, just lay there on the table."

So I lay on the table. She's poking on me and she said "You think I'm fat, don't you honey?" And I say " No, Karen, you're big boned, you're not fat."

She said "I don't normally do this, but I'm actually going to show you what I look like. I'm also going to show you what to paint."

I sat up. I put my hands on her shoulders. I looked into her face that goes out of focus and blurs and reforms itself into June Upton, the first woman that I ever loved in the 5th grade. Her face then reformed into every single woman I've ever loved. At the end of it she winked at me and said "You know, honey, paint that!"



Story by Marshall Arisman - A Postcard From Lilydale

THE FEAST OF VENUS AFTER RUBENS

THE FEAST OF VENUS AFTER RUBENS
14" x 22"
Ink, Faber-Castell Pitt brush pens and florescent acrylic in ProArt sketchbook

Friday, October 6, 2017

COUCH PRELIMINARY STUDY

11" x 14"
Pentel brush pen and Kuretake Fude brush in ProArt sketchbook

Wednesday, October 4, 2017

BOOK ILLUSTRATION

11" x 14"
Ink in ProArt sketchbook

"You can't laugh at a gun. I had a gun put to my head in a bar, over the Pueblo incident.  A cop.  I got a load on and argued with these guys about shit in Vietnam.  I said, "Saigon's got a million-dollar police station and my brother's got a station a hundred years old.  Where's the money come from?  The cops and firemen are paying taxes and they're not fixin' up their stations."  This guy, Jim, who's a city cop for twenty-four years, is everything you want a cop to be.  When I was eighteen he was thirty eight, he was a supercop.  But the hate just fucked him up, and the war.

I was in the bar and Jim had his load on, too.  He's got personal problems, he's married twice,, divorced.  He said, "We should invade Korea, bomb it."  I said, "You're ready to drop a bomb on a country with civilians."  He said, "Ah, you fuckin' commie." So I turn my back. I feel this thing on my temple, he had a gun to my head.  Two guys next to me dived for the ground.  With my left hand I come toward his wrist.  The gun went to the ground and I grabbed him in a headlock.  Three other cops in civilian clothes broke it up.  You gotta watch that gun."  - Tom Gates quote in WORKING by Studs Terkel

TORSO STUDY

11" x 14"
Mixed Media in ProArt sketchbook

VEGAS ANGEL

11" x 14"
MIXED MEDIA in ProArt sketchbook

Friday, September 29, 2017

EMPEROR NORTON

11" x 14"
MIXED MEDIA IN ProArt sketchbook
Joshua Abraham Norton (b.1815) made a $$$ fortune during the California gold rush in 1849. If that happened to you would you be happy with a fortune? Yeah, well Norton wasn't, so "in 1853 he gamboled a quarter of a million dollars on an effort to corner the rice market in San Francisco, buying and stockpiling all the available supply, and thereby artificially inflating the price. However, just as he was about to cash in, several ships laden with rice sailed into the Bay, glutting the market. Prices plummeted, and Norton went bust."
He lost everything then realized that he had an empire to rule!
Completely realized, he began telling everyone that he was Norton the First, Emperor of California. For the next 21 years he patrolled the streets of San Francisco on bicycle and foot making sure that things ran well and the vibe was happy.
Norton wore a military uniform with officer's golden epaulettes, a "tall plumed beaver hat, a sword, and a rosette."
He issued edicts, printed his own money in five and fifty cent denominations which were "accepted freely in most shops and restaurants in San Francisco." He dissolved both the Democratic and Republican parties because their existence caused "dissensions". Emperor Norton was well loved by everyone. He died in 1880 and thirty thousand loyal subjects attended his graveside service.
Some people claim he was crazy. But he freely chose to live the way he wanted to. He certainly wasn't neurotic because "simply put, neurotics are miserable because they think they are not as good as everyone else, while eccentrics know they are different and glory in it." (Source Eccentrics Dr David Weeks and Jamie James)

Wednesday, September 27, 2017

TO BE YOURSELF

5" x 16"
Uniball pen and watercolor
I'm not a phone person mostly because I don't have much to say and I'm not interested in complaints or robocall sales pitches. Fortunately I have friends who will do all the talking when they call. I keep a sketchbook just for drawing while I'm listening. It's fun to always be drawing. Here's a recent 45 minute doodle.
The quote is by Emerson: "To be yourself in a world that's constantly trying to make you something else is the greatest accomplishment".

Tuesday, September 26, 2017

PORTRAIT OF MARSHALL ARISMAN

11" x 14"
Mixed media in ProArt sketchbook
A while back Jonathan Twingley turned me on to Marshall's work and I have been studying it and learning a lot from it. Both Heaven Departed and Postcard from Lilydale are fantastic books of his. I'm just now getting into using mixed media and different tools other than just a brush thanks to his very instructive DVD. It really is a fun and freeing approach to making art. Anyone who is takes his class at SVA is very lucky indeed!

Monday, September 25, 2017

DO YOU SEE WHAT I SEE

8 1/2" x 23"
Mixed media in Moleskine sketchbook

When I was a kid there was a woman who lived in my apartment building that everybody said was a witch.  Her name was Gloria. The laundry room of this building was in the basement and Gloria  had all of the dryers full of her clothing.  I wanted to get our laundry done and noticed that one dryer was finished,  so I emptied her clothes into a basket and carried them up to her apartment .  Her door was open and she was in the living room folding laundry, casting spells while singing along with Tito Puente music turned up full blast on the radio.

 When I looked in I saw things flying around and bizarre beings were making strange sounds.  The place was a vortex!  I heard her say "You see this too, right"?

 Before I could muster up a response everything  stopped swirling and the room returned to normal. "It's ok, cabron" she laughed.  "I know what I'm doing".

One of many woo-woo moments in my life.  

Wednesday, September 20, 2017