And . . . I have updated my site with some new goodies if you want to see, including some more of the History of the World show, as well as new editorial.
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Wet Hot American Summer Show! (and website update)
The Wet Hot American Summer Show opened up at Gallery1988, and my "Camp Firewood" map sold! Yahoo! I love doing these maps - they're a little bit of a nightmare, but gratifying when they're done. My "History of the World" buddy, Dr. Owen Sherwood, contributed these guys (below) which look pretty sweet too - and if you want the Michael Showalter as Alan Shemper, too bad. It's already gone. Check out all the piece on the Gallery1988 site.
And . . . I have updated my site with some new goodies if you want to see, including some more of the History of the World show, as well as new editorial.
And . . . I have updated my site with some new goodies if you want to see, including some more of the History of the World show, as well as new editorial.
Saturday, June 4, 2011
Turtle Opening!
It was pretty jam packed in a tight space, but a lot of fun to see the show on a First Friday in Philly. Thanks to the Autumn Society and Brave New Worlds! (mine's near the middle of the wall in the spot - nice to have such a good spot!!)
Thursday, June 2, 2011
Memorial Day Weekend - Lets Go Mets!
I almost forgot to post this! I had a great memorial day weekend with my fam going out for a lovely dinner on Saturday night, and then watching the Mets lambaste the Phillies on Sunday followed by a sweet BBQ on my cousin James' and his fiancee Emily's rooftop deck in Astoria. It was such a pounding by the Mets that I even found time to squeeze in a four inning drawing of the stadium . . . I thought it would be quicker, but man - stadiums are complicated, and baseball is glorious and therefore distracting. I've been back in the city quite a bit since moving to Philly and let me tell you, New York's a nice place to visit. Even made me a little homesick. That is, until I came home to my big studio, AC'd apt, and did laundry IN the apartment. Adios homesickness. If only the Mets and Phillies could do a sort of exchange program for a season or two . . .
Wednesday, June 1, 2011
Turtle Power!!
I'm happy to be a part of the Autumn Society's (a Philly illo collective) "Shell-Shock - A TMNT Art Show and Tribute" opening this Friday at Brave New Worlds, a great comic book store in Old City, Philadelphia. I really wanted o re-explore the sort of dry brush I did with the "Heavyweights" (below) in a little bit more of a serene setting with a little softer palette. Why are they doing laundry? Well, I do love nude turtles, but I really just thought they would have interesting laundry - those colored strips, and it's such a drudge job for teenagers, and I figured not a lot of people would do "slice of life" type images. Just another day in the sewers . . .
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
Thursday, May 19, 2011
History of the World Press!
Whee! Owen and I got a nice write up in the Times Union about our "History of the World" show which we awesome. We were even referred to as "drawing nerds", which may just be my new job title. Plus I thought I'd throw in another (sick of History of the World posts? I hope not . . .) piece from the show I'm finally getting the time to tile together from the scans I have. Here's my Ronald Reagan, a companion piece with Owen's Maggie Thatcher.
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"Endangerous", 22" x 28" Gouache on BFK |
Monday, May 16, 2011
NY Observer Piece
Here's a new piece for Scott Dvorin at the New York Observer about a drug ring based out of the Park Slope. These geniuses had their main dealer driving around on a red Can-Am Spyder tryke with heroin in Sephora bags or some other highly conspicuous vehicle tossing drugs into cars . . . super low key, fellas. How ever were you found out?
Saturday, May 7, 2011
Friday, May 6, 2011
History of the World . . . With MORE!!
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"A Concept of Four at Two", 22" x 22" Gouache on paper |
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"Bicentennial", 22" x 22" Gouache on paper |
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These are Owen's "Primordial Action Figures" which are both pretty and funny. They totally take on little characters in my head. He makes these from the scraps of some really beautiful wood from his job, and brings them home for his daughter, Mae. These ones are special for the show.
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"We Are All Descended From Homeless People", 22" x 30", pencil and gouache |
Just a little reminder from me to you.:)
The right is a collection of Owen's subway drawings from London. Top left is this collection of drawing about his mid-life crisis when he buys a sweet car and goes and hangs out at Stewart's all day. Below that is my beloved "DMV".
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"Ghosts of the Reign", Gouache and pen |
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"The Lord's Typewriter" 22"x 22" Gouache on paper |
A close up of the canonball battle that got pretty experimental - love the color of those tickets and the craft paper!
This is my homage to the internet - a series of tubes that always ends up at cat videos.
Wednesday, May 4, 2011
Huckster!
I had a blast doing this little piece for Maureen Adamo at Las Vegas CityLife about a skeevy ticket firm out there: multiple instance of fraud perpetrated by a non-lawyer running a law firm (which in itself is illegal.) Reminded me of some kind of wild-west huckster from "Deadwood".
Monday, April 25, 2011
The Wright Brothers
Piece for the History of the World show about the Wright brothers as kids, and finally got to use the Guillow's Jetstream Glider I've had tacked to my wall for three years. These things are the best! I used to get these instead of candy at our local drug store on our way back from church, and play with my big brother. Thought it made a nice parallel with Orville and Wilbur who were inspired by a toy helicopter as kids. As well as amazing - the glider pioneered somewhere around 500 BC, powered manned flight pioneered in 1903 - a rather large time period of improvement, and yet 50 years after Kittyhawk we were testing the edge of space and traveling at supersonic speeds.
Friday, April 8, 2011
Studies in Orbs and Years for the "History of the World" Show
The year was "1953", suburbia was sprawling, and baseball fields were shrinking to back yards, and balls were slowly evolving "wiffles" . . .
The year was 200 - or rather two hundred years since Earth collided with another planetary body, blowing it to smithereens (which would eventually become the moon), and then began it's re-coagulation into the orb we all call home. Fireworks were millions of years in the future but I thought it would be nice to commemorate the "Bicentennial" of this collection of rock, molten rock, rock ice, and bits of water. Why Legos? Well, it was just a planetary toddler: innocent, but constructive in it's own growth.
Side note: we got our window vinyl! Designed as a wacky grid by Owen Sherwood and myself, and photographed by Caroline Corrigan, Education + Exhibitions Manager up at the Art Center. Thanks, Caroline!
Tuesday, April 5, 2011
History of the World - How to install a *#&@!% in 6 easy steps!
1. Insall something on your face. See how you like it.
2. Get Matt Shropshire to help you (background). He's super, super helpful. Optional - do the show with an old buddy (Owen Sherwood, foreground). Can your old buddy do a pensive look like this? If not, cut him out of your life. If he can, have him do half the work. What a buddy!
3. Tchotchka. You need it. You're not all that creative, so the crap you collect in your studio? Use it. Again, you're not that creative, and this makes you look smart and sophisticated. The best places to look are Wal-Mart and the crawlspace under someone else's house.
4. Install giant drawings on the wall of the gallery. This ensures a memorable show: at least by the guy using the 15 gallons of matte white to cover them up when the next show goes up. He'll go to his grave saying - "It took me eight coats to cover up that guy's painting, and he had no hope whatsoever of selling it. What an idiot." Zang! He'll remember you for life!
5. Spread crap all over the place while you're doing it. During the installation, give the space that care-free "there might just be paint rags in this bag, but it could be an unfinished sandwich from Monday" vibe. This is imperative. AND - on day five, chicken curry smells like watermelon. Fantastic. You're almost there.
6. Right by the front window, place a hand drawn icon featuring a famous internet cat. I chose Maru (thanks Courtney). While most people feign interest in politics, the Arab Spring, health care . . . at their core, they just want cat videos, and preferably of cats who, like Maru, are bad at spacial relationships. Famous cats are the currency of the new millenium. Draw those folks in. This also works if you own a pet store.
In conclusion - feel free to do your own twist! Play jazz! Remember, we created the exact history of the world in a gallery. You may want do something different, and lesser! Good luck.
PS - I'm super proud of the work Owen and I did - and thanks to Caroline Corrigan, Amy Williams and Matt Shropshire at the Arts Center in Troy. Even with the long days, and no sleep, it was fanti-billy-tastic, and It'd be great to see as many folks as possible at the reception on April 29th!
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
The Upcoming Show . . .
Mr. Owen Sherwood and myself will be hanging our show "History of the World" at the Capitol Region ArtCenter in Troy, NY in two weeks! The work's coming along really well, and it's been great to step outside myself a bit and try some new approaches. I'm mixing a more personal interpretation of history with a bit of autobiography. It's sort of a mental cheat sheet of the "History of the World" more than a linear start to finish. The image above is actually a drawing from a photograph of my great grandfather, Jessie Wood (in orange) and his ball team in the late 1800's. Threw in a couple more preview images below. The show opens on April 4th, with a reception on the 29th.
New PCWorld Spot
New spot for Beth Kamoroff at PCWorld about Firefox creating software to make it's users untraceable to advertisers. I have a few more to upload - but blogger is being a real pain with not allowing pics up . . .If anyone has a solution for the dreaded "server rejected" thing that pops up, I'd love to know!
Thursday, January 27, 2011
The New Deal Pieces!
Had another opportunity over MLK weekend to work with the great Larry Gendron from The Deal. The magazine uses lots of illustration and great illustrators, so it was really nice to get a cover and interior piece. The basic angle on the piece was about risk management, and companies changing their financial stances to be more protected. I got going on this sort of circus theme with the first two sketches and was really happy that Larry wanted to use both. It made for a long weekend, but a good one. I even squeezed in a little cross country skiing with the fam, and a gigantic leg of lamb dinner courtesy of my Aunt Grace and Uncle John.

Friday, January 21, 2011
Losers
The Times ran a little story about the amazing losing capacity of New York teams, including my beloved Metroploitans along with a nice little photo gallery. As the snow falls, and the Mets gear up for a "rebuilding" year, I'm taking another long deep breath. I'm wondering if it's possible to hibernate through summer . . .
Let's go Mets.
Let's go Mets.
Friday, January 7, 2011
Great Job!
Gallery1988 is opening the "Is This Thing On?" show tonight at their Melrose gallery at 7 tonight, and here's my submission: Tim and Eric in a piece called "The Nephews Muscles". I'd seen a bit of their stuff before, but it was great to watch all the "Tim and Eric: Awesome Show, Great Job" episodes. Holy hell - funny, crazy - sort of insane anti-funny really. Check it out if your out in the left coast sunshine!
Wednesday, December 22, 2010
Popular Mechanics
Got to do some fun little spots for Michael Lawton at Popular Mechanics dealing with navigation systems - something I can identify with. My girlfriend has one - we call it "Carol" as in the Horatio Sanz character on SNL. She, for it has a female voice, barks out instructions in her tinny voice in the middle of conversations, recalculates in drive thru's, and is a general nuissance, and yet a source of great amusement since it leads to us talking in that monotone authoritarian voice - "I NEED TO GO TO THE BATHROOM IN POINT THREE MILES, TURN RIGHT AT THE COWBOY SIGN, WHERE'S MY POINT THREE MILE DOUGHNUTS, . . . . . . . I'M CAROL!!"
Saturday, December 4, 2010
"Goonies" print on sale!
My "Goonies" print from the Crazy4Cult show is on sale here from Gallery1988! The signed numbered edition of 35 is ready to order just in time for Christmas. A great gift for that age old question: "What do you get the "Goonies" fan who has everything?"!
Friday, December 3, 2010
New PennStater Piece - Hip Displacement
New piece for the super nice Carole Otypka at the PennStater about a hipster who moves to the 'burbs, and finds life fulfillment in TMNT pops, bragging about his cost of his 4$ pants. Do kids today know the Turtles only in pop form? Maybe so . . .
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