Going
through a dusty old portfolio this morning I found an illustration I
abandoned halfway through a long time ago. It was for a project, jazz
greats. Impossible to finish now since I’m not even the same person that
drew this, and I no longer draw like that—If that sounds weird, maybe
it is. It was me, all Going
through a dusty old portfolio this morning I found an illustration I
abandoned halfway through a long time ago. It was for a project, jazz
greats. Impossible to finish now since I’m not even the same person that
drew this, and I no longer draw like that—If that sounds weird, maybe
it is. It was me, all right, but I hardly know the guy. Call me
superstitious. That’s Charlie Parker and Diz, and John Coltrane penciled
in the back.right, but I hardly know the guy. Call me
superstitious. That’s Charlie Parker and Diz, and John Coltrane penciled
in the back.
Saturday, October 19, 2024
Wednesday, October 9, 2024
Self-portrait of the Artist as a Young Dog. In need of an image for my illustration work, I spoofed the time-honored RCA Victor logo, "His Master's Voice" (also known in French as La Voix de Son MaƮtre, in German as Die Stimme seines Herrn, in Italian as La voce del padrone, and in Spanish as La voz de su amo). Always alert to new tricks, this old dog is listening carefully to a Grammophone cylinder phonograph. The original painting, used by RCA since 1899, was by Francis Barraud.
A wild T-shirt design for my high school reunion meant to evoke an era when muscle cars like Camaros and Dodge Chargers roamed the parking lot with eighteen layers of candy apple red lacquer meant to be polished with a chamois cloth. An homage, with apologies to Ed "Big Daddy" Roth and Washington Irving for his use of Rip van Winkle, who overslept half a century
and nearly missed the party.
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