NEW SERIES – SCI-FI BOBS!

SCI-FI BOBS – Launching today January 6, 2020

Bob the Squirrel as the First Doctor from the series DOCTOR WHO

the first doctor - doctor who

About the series: I will draw Bob the Squirrel as some of the more famous characters from the genre of sci-fi. The series will probably go as the Rock and History series have gone… 100 images, 100 characters.

Patreon supporters at the $5.00 level and above get a sneak peak at the FIRST FOUR images in the series.

If there are any characters you’d like to see Bob-ified… let me know…

Categories: art illustration

Back to Family Portraits…

Just when you thought it was safe to go back to something… the FAMILY PORTRAITS are back!

After a brief jaunt into individual portraits, I’m back with family images. Today’s image, done in the style of contemporary artist Shepard Fairey, is the 91st in the series.

I may or may not end it at 100.  Funny, I said the same thing when I hit 50.  Oh well.

 

Categories: art

A “Family” of One

SQUIRREL WITH A PEARL EARRING

After 83 images in the series, I do a solo image.

The idea came to me in the shower… and I’m reasonably sure I’m not the first person to ever think of this.

I mean, “Girl with a Pearl Earring” by Dutch painter Johannes Vermeer has been around since the year 1665… surely it had to of crossed a mind or a canvas in 354 years.

Hell, I’m sure if I go back in my sketchbooks somewhere, I already had this idea.

Now that I think about it, I think I did.

But, either I abandoned it outright or did something with it not that great… either way, it’s back again. I’m very proud of this image. Prints and other products are available in my Society6 shop right now.

I still consider this one part of the “Family” series though… It’s  just that the idea was too good to go and mess it up with dogs and people.

I will have info soon on the new Bob the Squirrel collection and possibly another book.  Aren’t you excited? 🙂

Categories: art

“Good Times” and the discovery of art…

My favorite painter was James Evans, Jr.

Let’s go back a bit.

It’s the mid 1980s. I’m drawing. I’m watching cartoons like Voltron, GoBots, Thundercats… and I loved the art of those.

But my favorite artist?  James Evans, Jr. And he was about as real as Lion-O and Cheetara.

James “J.J.” Evans, Jr, a.k.a. Kid Dy-No-Mite, was a character on the 1970s Norman Lear sitcom “Good Times”. By the time I saw it it was in reruns.  Every day. Between the hours of 4 and 5pm, on channel 13. It followed the lives of a lower income African-American family living in the Chicago housing projects.  The parents, James Sr. and Florida Evans, hard-working people just trying to make it to the next day… their goal was to give their kids everything they never had. Michael was going to be a lawyer, Thelma was going to go into the performing arts and J.J. was going to be (and already was) an artist.

I gravitated to J.J. immediately. Didn’t hurt that he was the funniest character (which go old in later seasons… but that’s for another post).

They lived in a small, two-bedroom apartment.  J.J.’s working area was right behind the couch… near a window to get the best light. He was a painter. Every day I hoped that J.J. would be painting something else. If he wasn’t, maybe one of his pieces would be on the easel. Up until J.J., paintings to me were either in church or in my grandparent’s house. (I’d yet to discover Bob Ross… definitely another post).

J.J. let this little kid see that painting could be really, really, cool. I may not have grasped what was happening to me at the time, but it definitely happened. Hopefully I was the only one to see painting a in a different way because of J.J.

“The Sugar Shack” by Ernie Barnes

I found out later that all the pieces featured on the show were done by a man named Ernie Barnes. And that sent me on a path of discovery… really cool discovery… of an entire group of African-American artists doing amazing work.

I always wanted to try and create an Ernie Barnes inspired piece. His expressiveness with the human form and fearless use of bold colors appeals to the cartoonist in me. So, I did. It’s an homage to the man who got me excited about art.

Trust me when I say that the theme to “Good Times” was on a non-stop loop in my head while working on this.

I’m telling you all this to tell you this: You never know where your influences will come from.

Categories: art