Danny & Annie Animated Short

Danny & Annie from StoryCorps on Vimeo.

If you haven’t watched these animated interpretations of interviews from NPR’s StoryCorps…grab a box of kleenex and be prepared to be touched by something we sometimes and too often take for granted…our loved ones.

Wonderful animation by the Rauch Brothers, background layouts by Jim Smith, backgrounds painted by the incredible Bill Wray, music by Frederik.

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Wonderfully creepy short film from Pixar’s Rodrigo Blaas.

Alma from Rodrigo Blaas on Vimeo.

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Mickey Mouse Sketches

A variety of concepts designing Mickey Mouse in different styles.

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Budget Raygun “Objects d’ art”!

Buck Rogers had his iconic “Atomic Disentegrator” gun, Flash Gordon had his ear piercing “Signal” gun and Tom Corbett, Space Cadet had his “Atomic” rifle, but none of these interstellar, weapons of alien destruction hold a candle…errr.. rocket flare, to Budget Raygun’s “Applesauce Fire-Fighter” by artist/writer Kevin Skinner.

One is instantly captivated by the images of Mr. Skinner’s “Buget Ray-Guns“. They look like props right out of an old ’50s b, Sci-Fi film like “Zombies of the Stratosphere or from a classic Golden Age issue of “Planet Comics”. Yet, they also hold a strange familiarity that can be tough to put your finger on. Something you’ve perhaps seen in your grandfather’s garage filled with relics of early, electric tools and gizmos. Or…some sort of utilitarian object you caught a glimpse of at an estate sale in a kitchen that never left the mid-century, an era when things were still made in the good ‘ol USA and made to last with stainless steel like an old “Waring” blender that if left in the middle of the road would cause a “Smart” car to crumble and flip on impact. Yeah….those were the days when things were made with pride, with heart.
Just like these incredible ray-guns.

The imaginative construction and minimalist, yet stunning photography almost cloaks the notion that these works of art are made from found objects. They all look like they dropped out of a time machine from the past and at the same time the distant future. Explore every facet of Mr. Skinners site and also discover his incredible gift for prose, which will feed your curiosity further and propel you to a universe where you will yearn for the “Applesauce Fire-fighter”, “Wild West Bend” or the “Universal Speedgun” to be in your grasp.

Navigating to Budget Ray-Gun for me is more than a visit and eyecandy, it’s inspiration, it’s entertainment, it’s anticipation… it’s an experience.

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Michael Buckley’s Comic Strip Awesomeness!


I have a huge passion for comics strips old and new, from Winsor McCay’s “Little Nemo in
Slumberland” to Joe Matt’s “Peepshow”. And recently, I’ve become very enamoured with the web-comic
60 Ways To Leave Your Mother (Alone)” by artist Michael Buckley.

The strips are based and influenced by Michael’s young children who try to stay out of Mom’s hair, thus the strips namesake, and their adventures which are beautifully documented and drawn by their dad. What I really enjoy about the strips is, they evoke that magical, childhood innocence that the classic “Gasoline Alley” Sunday pages had but with a wonderful, personal and modern narrative all it’s own.

I just gawk in awe at the wonderful ilustrations, inking, layouts and hand lettering.
Who even does hand lettering anymore?!
One of the most thoroughly enjoyable and clever comic strips out there!
Check it out here.

And…

…what I’m reeeeeally excited about is that Mr. Buckley is trying to self publish the series thru Kickstarter so that folks can have an actual book of these awesome strips collected in one limited edition volume! This is one comic-strip book that’s a must have for my library!

For more info go to the Kickstarter site to see how you can get signed copies, prints, even original art, not to mention how your help can make this talented author/artist’s dream come true!

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Ogon Bat, Deceptions of a Tear: Kaiju Attack Show-Barcelona, Spain


10.75″ x 5.25″ final


Sketch 3


Sketch 2


Sketch 1


Detail of final


Detail of final


Detail from sketch 2


Detail from sketch 2

I took a break from working on my Wonder Woman book over the weekend to finish a piece for the Kaiju Attack Show in Barcelona, Spain. It’s always an honor to be able to participate in a group show especially one curated by Emilio Garcia & Mark Nagata. What I like even more when I can find the time to do a show is the nice mental break it gives me from what can sometimes be a ” Groundhog Day” monotony. And the freedom to do whatever I like, in most cases draw my favorite subject matter, monsters and heroes.

Ogon Bat, also known as Golden Bat, Fantaman or Phantoma is one of my favorite comic book heroes of all time. He was created by Japanese writer Ichiro Suzuki and artist Takeo Nagamatsu in 1930 so he pre-dates Batman and Superman. Considered Japan’s very first Super-hero, he first appeared in either a pulp style magazine or for the time, a popular one man, traveling show in Japan known as Kamishibai, in which big cards of art (or comic book style panels) are shuffled thru a viewer as the story is told to live audiences. You can read more about Kamishibai in an earlier post here.

Know as the protector of Atlantis and “god of justice and protector of the weak”, Ogon Bat had a maniacal laugh as he thwarted evil and villains, thoroughly enjoyable in the 1960s anime and 1966 Sonny Chiba live action film. The animated series featured a young orphan girl, Marie Yamatone, who discovered Ogon Bat in a tomb. Whenever she or her family were threatened by danger, her tears and cries for help would reawaken Ogon Bat. Weilding his cane and leaping thru the air in his billowing cape, Ogan bat came to the rescue. A scary skull faced fellow laughing like a loon, helping fellow man… doesn’t get any better for me.

For this piece, which I’ve been sketching out sporadically for a few weeks, I choose a simple medium that I’m most comfortable with and can work efficiently in, pencils and markers. I also choose to illustrate it on tracing paper for a few reasons, I love the texture it gives the subtleties of my pencil work and because I can get really interesting effects with a marker on the surface which isn’t porous so the marker stays wet for a short time allowing me to move it around, rework it or get splotchy bleeding effects kind of like watercolors, and I can work super fast in it.

The last image I choose to post above this text was the head detail of one of my initial sketches in pencil and marker. I always end up liking my quick, impulsive and gestural roughs a lot more than my final illustrations. These quick sketches always have a dynamic, kinetic and emotional quality that I can never seem to replicate.
I need to gather all the sketches I have buried in folders and compile a sketch book that’s nothing but the first roughs of my ideas on paper.
The show runs June 17th thru 31st 2010 in Barcelona, Spain.

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Gallery 1988 “Twilight Zone Show”

I squeezed in some time to create a piece for Gallery 1988‘s  ”Another Dimension” show.
The exhibit consists of work by several artists inspired by the classic “Twilight  Zone” television series.
My initial thought was to do a piece from the “To Serve Man” episode with  a young, gigantic Richard Keil playing the Kanamit that comes to earth with the “cookbook” Lol! Great episode btw!

But more than the great stories, characters and creatures of the series, the image of Rod Serling narrating is just so synonymous with the Twilight Zone show and one that stuck in my head as I imagine it did with most other folks,  I opted to create my own illustration/caricature of him.

A few months back while rummaging thru the flat files of paper in Hallmark’s art store I came across these enormous sheets of vintage rag paper made in india. I bought up a stack of them not really knowing how I’d use them until the piece for this show needed to be completed. The paper is so incredibly beautiful. My photographs certainly do it no justice. Every square inch is filled with different specs, pieces of reused paper including tiny shreds of newspaper in which you can barely make out letters from some long lost article of a tragedy, a story about politics, love or an ad for a movie from Bollywood, who knows, that’s what I loved about it. I thought the rag paper was perfect for this project so I decided to create an image that would be graphic enough to let the paper become an integral part of the illustration. So as you looked at Rod Serlings face you’d get glimpses of the texture and tiny specs of paper that tempt you to look closer…you try to make out what each shred is or says….
suddenly you find yourself in the fibers and tapestry of …”THE TWILIGHT ZONE!”
Tadddatahtun! Hahaha!

Anyway, Rod Serling was a semi short fellow but I wanted to depict him much taller, bigger like his views and opinions on politics and society were.
Above, starting from the very bottom piece, I thought I’d share the entire piece but from start to finish including my first marker doodle, to the full size drawing on my wall ( the illustration is 40 inches tall ), to the final piece, done in white acrylic and appropriately, in India ink.

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The Poop with No Name!

Sorry Sergio Leone, but I’m creating a new genre of crappy westerns!
Maybe I can animate this character and bring this doodle…errr poodle to life!

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Motuku Jan 3rd, 2010