Working my way out of the fog
Back to the Grind
Phew! meetings and meetings. Done! The picture today is Mr. Zipperhead--talking to the silence that is reinforced these days on all issues. Want to get started on an image for a "Google Monkey"--a phrase tossed out by Al Franken yesterday--to describe the people that google everyone and everything. I think I might be a Google Monkey too.
almost on the heron
ohmigod...yet another wild night!
Another reception at the Embassy--the ever fabulous, Boy with a Fish played. Nice group of people--had some fun. Love their mid-tone drone...and the use of the moog (part of the Tburg pride as Moog had his factory H E R E).
More thinking on the protest stuff. This may have thesis potential...I am kinda on fire about this. Later.
Another Wild Night!
We went to see "Why We Fight", a startling and realistic view of the industrial military complex--and how politics, the president and cabinet, the congress, big business and the new add, the "thinktanks" are driving war and conflict throughout the world--driving US imperialism and capitalism. It is very current and a must for anyone who is confused, angry and lost in the US today. Dead on. Shocking. My daughter cried.
Saw some terrific shows at the Herbert Johnson Museum at Cornell. First off was the work of Willie Cole--an african american artist who uses irons and methods of burning as his lead technique. He burns wood, canvas and kente cloth in a very inspired and decorative way to express servitude and slavery. The work is gorgeous and very bold. He has an enormous chessboard of lawn jockeys modified to express their chess roles (king, queen etc)--also expressing tribal roles (king, queen, shaman etc). Well worth the trip to see.
Also saw a nice show on illustration and book design. Fabulous Ben Shahnprotest serigraph/poster that says Stop across the top with this wonderful ripped shape that becomes a bold and jaggety devil's head. This is really pushing my buttons because the take-away for me from the Fight movie is that so much of this insane crap going on in the government and world is truly beyond our reach. We are not being communicated to...and that our role as US citizens is to stand aside and shut up...and take the dumbed down media, stupid news, obvuscated truth--and smile....and pay the $3.00 a gallon and buy a new big dumb car. We illustrators, designers, communicators must get up off our lazy duffs and at least spend some time in expressing our disgust to begin to move the everyday headset off the big, dumb and stupid (and right wing), unquestioning idiocy before it is too late.
So to that, I am inspired to do some Ben Shahn inspired protest work and challenge each and every one of you to do the same. I don't want this to be the world we hand our children. Our work can make a difference.
Images are by Ben Shahn. Thought you should get a little looksee at what I mean--Aren't they gorgous? simple? and a straight shot?
Back from a wild night out
Well, the Hot Club of Rongovia was good and very sweet. Lively group--with many of the tried and true Rongovians doing a little guest spot singing to bring it all a little closer to home. We had drinks and chips there with a new best friend. It was great...felt like we were on vacation in our own hometown. Then, over to the Pourhouse for some music full of energy and Tburg "family".The Pourhouse group was younger and just as tight...and they were so into their work and music that the floor shook as the music rang out. It was charming with the lead violin and his inciente partner singing sweetly together while this old shrew anticipated the first year with their first. Car seats, diapers, late nights and learning what patience really is! Certainly, a lot of learning together! What a great way to go into the future, singing! It was great to have such huge choices literally within the same block.
How lucky are we?!
Rongovian Hot Foot Club

In the hamlet of Rongovia, tonight at the Embassy--the Rongovian Hot Foot Club will be performing. As noted on the site:
"free , 6-9pm , Performing classic compositions in the spirit of Django Reinhardt, originals by Dave Davies and the best of the Blues Age. Harry Aceto- Guitar Dave Davies - Guitar, Trombone, Vocals Doug Robinson - Guitar, Vocals Eric Aceto- Violin Brian Earle - Clarinet Jim Sherpa - Washtub Bass or .Bernie Upson - Upright Bass"
The Acetos are wonderful--and worth the trip--plus with all the other musicians, it promises to be great music in a small town, tonight!
Picture is a crop of a gouache sketch for my SF Saint Francis. He is very dour and inspired by the stellar byzantines. It is, however,unfortunate that he looks somewhat like Mr. Bin Laden (not a patron saint of San Francisco).
peek under the tent
The heron yesterday is a little peek under the tent insofar as work in progress. As I said before, more birds of California for the SU SF project. Got a California Quail (state bird), Brown Pelican--Blue heron in the works. Possibly a plover and maybe one more.Am concerned the critique might center around how I am knocking off Nancy Stahl--but I am not. I am working on a vector look and feel that jumps off the work done for NYC. Nancy's work is gorgeous & inspiring, but she can't be the only person to do an egret using vector work. Plus, my work may be vector, may be illustrator(flat colors)just like her, but her sensibilities and aesthetics are different than mine. I bring my own history, my experience as a graphic designer, and my me to my work. I shouldn't worry about this...and shouldn't step around doing images because someone else has "done it" before. But, I am full of insecurities around this. Hopefully, I will get over it.
Would like to do a dodo bird (as Kitty and Alex are requesting it...albeit Alex wants his to have a "Horatio Hornblower" hat and a sword with his). Nancy doesnt have a dodo.Maybe go extinct and own that? No mo' Moa..etc.
The dodo is a gouache sketch for future reference.
heron in progress
Another day in paradise
I love dogs...and the way they can express things that one might be reluctant to have another creature express.Brilliant day today. Saw a big fat ole turkey girl traisping in front of a bank of forsythia at the lake. Those turkeys are such ninnies...not graceful walking or when necessary, flying. Brilliant day.Going to be a bluesky week. Turkey vultures still doing their thing.
New Juxtapose is great. Was reading all the ads (my favorite) and came across the most wonderful inspiration. To backtrack a little, we saw the movie, Walk the Line, and though the movie was good...the poster was a homerun. I was jealous of the artist who illustrated itbecause it was totally dead on...Flat planes of color, could be a woodcut--really descriptive lines, powerfully simple stuff. I thought it might be the Hatch Press people (they are based in Tennesee and do some beautiful, limited edition work)...but it turns out its my new favorite guy, Shepard Fairey. Wow. And, Walk the Line was nothing compared to the body of his work (particularly the posters). See for yourself here. He rocks!
slow going
Spring is coming!
It was animal planet in the front yard this morning. These smarty pants deer were having a nice old time, eating whatever looked good (not close enough to the hosta to worry)-- So, I ran out on the front porch,stomped my feet and the bold things didn't even flinch. Then,I ran down the path & the four legged ones got the idea when I came within 10 feet of them that the buffet had closed. Go somewhere else for your springtime breakfast sandwich. And no, we do not throw in the homefries.
Bold as paint. Dumb as paint too.
Big nasty turkey vultures have returned and started their spring rituals in the back yard. I think they nest in some of the really tall pine trees--and caw and crow and circle until you are made crazy by it. Then, they strut around (neighbor says that they do this to dry their wings), flapping those big wings...and close enough to see their heads which look like its made of raw meat--framing their yellow, beady eyes. I think there may be a picture in there. I used to think they came for carrion, but now that we have been here for 3 winters, it seems they come for their spring holiday--to "share the love". And we do.
Avian Flu
This is an example of the 13 Avian Flu images that I did late last year. I have been alarmed by the prospect of this disease for well on a year now--and am startled with the blaise attitude the media, artists and people in general have with this threat. If it is anything like the flu that struck in the early part of the last century, it could wipe out as much as a third of the population. And, what with our being more global--where it is easy to fly from coast to coast or from country to county...if it engages...we could be looking at more. For all the flu shots and medicine we have, this is another surprise attack (a la 9/11)--albeit natural--that could level us as individuals and as a nation.
This image is called "It started with a goose"-- you get the idea. This was created in Adobe Illustrator CS1, and finished in Adobe Photoshop CS1. Hand-drawn images are merged into this design.
sketch crawl
There is a rough plan that during "Festival of Flowers" weekend--we will do a sketch crawl of a part of Main Street to gather interest in the Main Street Project, encourage drawing and gathering in a new way and begin to generate some interesting visuals around Main Street. The inspiration comes from Enrico Casarosa (see his blog listed to the right)who has done this in San Francisco and Japan. His Sketch Crawls are on a set date --so that people from around the world can do this--and add to his postings etc. about their crawl. He is a very engaging fellow--who felt that he needed to get out and draw for himself--and posed this idea to himself...which grew to be a community (arts) activity.He goes to different locations for inspiration etc.
Generally, the plan is to go from one location to another....starting early in the morning and ending up in mid/late afternoon--at a location that all the artists can gather at and share their work with each other.
I would like to sync up with his schedule, but ours should link to a Tburg activity to get the publicity and attention we will need to get a group together.
finished yesterday
Birthday bunny
Random Fortune
This is the skull/fortune cookie picture that I will knock some texture into for the Syracuse San Francisco picture. Have been working textures into the image (yesterday's blog)--to discover (after I over gilded the lily twice--3.5 hrs. later) that you just need a "little something" versus hitting the poor image with a hammer. Tonight,I am pulling out the paints and work out a few ideas that you poor souls will get the chance to participate in the generation. I figure that the paint is going to get me closer before I start really "working" my St. Francis image. Have to install "Painter" again as it might get me closer with texture etc. That simple stuff is what Painter is good for...not rendering images. Also have some new cool textures that I just found that might work too. The fog and drizzle have cleared...and we have a big, bluesky day.
Sacred & Profane
Three books sit atop the pile that is my desk. New inspiration for the weary (me). They are:
Wayne Thiebaud, a Painting Perspective
by Steven A. Nash and Adam Gopnik
Copyright ©2000 Museums of San Francisco
Thames and Hudson Publisher
Thiebaud is the max. This is a guy who can break an image down to simple parts and render it in a way that is "throw the windows open" fresh using his paint as really part of the structure of his painting...not just the medium. He is not shy with white space--and uses it to build these brilliant compositions. His use of color is masterful--using outlines in contrasting colors to really aid in the description of the object, but at the same time delivering graphic simplicity. If you don't know Thiebaud, run to your library and check out this book. If you are lucky enough to live in a major metro area, get your sweet self to a museum and see the work with your eyes. Be prepared to be stunned.
Byzantium, Faith and Power (1261-1557)
Edited by Helen C. Evans
Copyright ©2004 The Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
As you are aware, I am loving the Byzantine thing these day. This is the lodestone of Byzantium. I saw this show at the Met a while back and bocked at the price and size of this tome--and didn't commit to buying it. Now its on my desk. No book or catalog in the world could fully articulate the spectacular show about this subject. The objects were amazing, and a vast wide range of them too. The curation of the work gave, just by association, a peek into the world of art, architecture and decorative objects that was the impetus of my love of this stuff. However, show aside, this book rocks! Lots of well written copy. Lots of tales of the saints (love!) All written in a manner that it is not inconcievable that you could sit down and read this book cover to cover.
The Hermetic Museum
Alchemy and Mysticism
by Alexander Roob
Copyright ©2005 Taschen
whoooh! Taschen always does a great job putting these reference books together. I could randomly buy a Taschen book and be really happy with anything. Chock a block images,good copy, big fat pub. Plenty to look at. This book is filled with strange and wonderful stuff from the Masons (love), Blake (love) Kaballah (you get the idea) with illustrations and quotes from the texts they are illustrating. Roob touches on everything from how Genesis is described through topics of Macrocosm and Microcosm...through good stuff like the Philosophic Tree, Oedipus chimericus, the Torment of Metals. I might have to stop right now and dive in!
The picture above is the beginning of a skull in chinatown idea for my San Francisco images. Your thoughts?
bunny rabbits
My daughter's dear friend is having a birthday next week and we are all making pictures for presents. Theme, bunnies...or rabbits...with top hats (?) or without. Seems appropriate for the time of the year--but this crowd of teen gal pals, all have animals they identify with--wolves, cats, cows...bunnies. Sometimes it's just the animal. Sometimes it's morphed with manga gals..Go figure.







