SOLD!
Monday, September 30, 2013
Character-a-Day: Wolfman!
Here's a wolfman. This guy took a few drafts. I wanted to try and find the middlest balance between wolf and human. When I was younger, I always gravitated towards the more straight-up-wolf's-head on muscular fore-and-aft body, but that design died with things like Van Helsing and Underworld. Anyway, this is what I came up with.
The original art for this one is available for sale. 8.5x11," ink on 80# stock, shipped the Tuesday after purchase. First come, first serve.
Sunday, September 29, 2013
Character-a-Day: Gremlins!
Today's character is actually two of 'em: Gremlins! I wanted to hearken back to their roots as mechanical mischief makers in the WWII Pacific theater, so their flat horn crests and long flappy ears are meant to evoke aviator cap flaps and goggles.
My favorite joke ever on 3rd Rock from the Sun was when William Shatner guest-starred as an alien. John Lithgow asked him how his flight was, and Shatner replied "Terrible! There was a creature on the wing, and no one would believe me!" John Lithgow replied "The same thing happened to me!" The joke being that Lithgow reprised Shatner's role as the Gremlin-glimpsing passenger in the movie remake of "Nightmare at 20,000 Feet."
The original art for this one is available for sale. 8.5x11," ink on 80# stock, shipped the Tuesday after purchase. First come, first serve. SOLD!
My favorite joke ever on 3rd Rock from the Sun was when William Shatner guest-starred as an alien. John Lithgow asked him how his flight was, and Shatner replied "Terrible! There was a creature on the wing, and no one would believe me!" John Lithgow replied "The same thing happened to me!" The joke being that Lithgow reprised Shatner's role as the Gremlin-glimpsing passenger in the movie remake of "Nightmare at 20,000 Feet."
Saturday, September 28, 2013
Character-a-Day: Witch Doctor!
Today's character is a witch doctor. I love old tribal masks - an affection probably wrought in no small part from the many Alex Toth-designed mask-inspired aliens and monsters that were on most every action/adventure Hanna Barbara cartoon that I watched on USA as a kid - and I wanted to use one for this guy. Also, I've decided that I'm going to do a total of thirteen of these Halloween/scary story characters, and have 'em as little craft sets for Trick-or-Treaters.
The original art for this one is available for sale. 8.5x11," ink on 80# stock, shipped the Tuesday after purchase. First come, first serve. SOLD!
Friday, September 27, 2013
Character-a-Day: Space Alien
Today's character is a space alien! Not an alien monster, which is something else entirely, at least in my mind, and not a martian, 'cause those guys have skull faces a la Mars Attacks. Just your regular alien visitor with a gun that freezes or disintegrates or shrinks you.
The original art for this one is available for sale. 8.5x11," ink on 80# stock, shipped the Tuesday after purchase. First come, first serve. SOLD!
Thursday, September 26, 2013
Character-a-Day: Frankenstein
Here's one of the big favorites, Frankenstein's monster!
When I was a young man and still dividing my energies between a variety of disciplines, I did quite a bit of theater, and once had occasion to play Victor Frankenstein. Trivia!
The original art for this one is available for sale. 8.5x11," ink on 80# stock, shipped the Tuesday after purchase. First come, first serve.
When I was a young man and still dividing my energies between a variety of disciplines, I did quite a bit of theater, and once had occasion to play Victor Frankenstein. Trivia!
SOLD!
Wednesday, September 25, 2013
Character-a-Day: Witch
Of all the staple Halloween movies, the one that never got a standardized Universal Monster iconic status was the Witch. Too bad! I guess the Wizard of Oz counts - we do have a stock icon version that stems directly from that. So I guess I shouldn't complain. Anyway, here's my version!
The original art for this one is available for sale.
SOLD!
SOLD!
Tuesday, September 24, 2013
Character-a-Day: The Mummy
Today's character is the Mummy! As a kid, I was fascinated by mummies, both the legit archeological ones and those of the horror-movie variety. The idea of archeology is (thanks to Indiana Jones and co.) so intertwined with exotic adventure that I've never been able to look at mummies as genuine horror; they've always rather been a component of pulpy adventure. Even so, Halloween ain't Halloween without a mummy or two. So here y'go!
The original art for this one is available for sale.
SOLD!
SOLD!
Monday, September 23, 2013
Character-a-Day: The Creature From The Dark Lagoon
It's the first day of fall, and it feels like it. It's breezy, and the outside door in my studio is wide open. Penny has a pumpkin, my fridge is stocked with seasonal brew, and my favorite holiday - Halloween - is just around the corner.
And given that it's now officially the season, I figured I'd do a few monster characters. I figured I'd start with a lake monster, which has always been one of my very favorite types of monsters, mostly 'cause I spent so much time on lakes growing up.
The original art for this one is available for sale. 8.5x11," ink on 80# stock, shipped the Tuesday after purchase. First come, first serve.
And given that it's now officially the season, I figured I'd do a few monster characters. I figured I'd start with a lake monster, which has always been one of my very favorite types of monsters, mostly 'cause I spent so much time on lakes growing up.
SOLD!
Saturday, September 21, 2013
Western Comics Class
This Wednesday the first issue of the Comixology-exclusive western comics anthology becomes available from Monkeybrain Comics!
The series is called REAL WEST, and the first story is written by John Arcudi (BPRD, A God Somewhere, The Mask) and drawn by A.C. Zamudio. And it's pretty great.
The anthology came about as a means by which to get a class that I really wanted to make happen become possible, from an administrative standpoint. I figured that if I could show a viable publishing outlet for work created in the class that it would make it in the school's best interest to approve the new course. My original desire was to create a "Genre Comics" class that could be put into the curriculum and altered depending on who taught it and the desire of the students. This first go 'round would be western, but you could do science fiction comics, crime comics, horror comics. Treat the class as a framework for a study of the genre in its larger scope and a means by which to exhaustively study the visual components that are a necessity of that genre, and learn to draw them well.
That ended up not being the case. The course did get approved, but as Western comics specifically, and as a special topic. I'm including the syllabus here, though, in case any teachers out there want to adapt it to their purposes. Or use it as is, if you're a western buff.
...in order to have enough mental ammo to do the horses assignment.
Series Cover art by Nick Zamudio |
The series is called REAL WEST, and the first story is written by John Arcudi (BPRD, A God Somewhere, The Mask) and drawn by A.C. Zamudio. And it's pretty great.
Art by A.C. Zamudio |
The anthology came about as a means by which to get a class that I really wanted to make happen become possible, from an administrative standpoint. I figured that if I could show a viable publishing outlet for work created in the class that it would make it in the school's best interest to approve the new course. My original desire was to create a "Genre Comics" class that could be put into the curriculum and altered depending on who taught it and the desire of the students. This first go 'round would be western, but you could do science fiction comics, crime comics, horror comics. Treat the class as a framework for a study of the genre in its larger scope and a means by which to exhaustively study the visual components that are a necessity of that genre, and learn to draw them well.
That ended up not being the case. The course did get approved, but as Western comics specifically, and as a special topic. I'm including the syllabus here, though, in case any teachers out there want to adapt it to their purposes. Or use it as is, if you're a western buff.
As you can see, we did our best to cover a lot of stuff. It was a small class and the students were informed at its onset of the crazy workload that it would entail.
We watched a lot of movies (not in class, but often the students would team up for viewings), each one chosen as an indicator of changes in the view of the west as a reflection of the times in which the film was produced. We also visited museums, a cowboy festival, what we thought was a Civil War museum but was actually just a really, really racist store... it was a really travel-heavy course.
We went horseback riding and did some from-life drawings...
Liz Enright pets one of the artists' models while Rory Morris watches another |
Melody Ledford waits her turn to ride while Chris Malone finishes his trot |
Liz sketching |
Kit, Maria, and Liz listen to Brian as Melody draws |
Nick and A.C. Zamudio watch the riders |
...in order to have enough mental ammo to do the horses assignment.
Actually, there were lots of assignments like this. The stagecoach:
Clothing:
Weapons:
Designs by A.C Zamudio |
Etc, etc, etc. My personal favorite activity was the quick-draw tournament. Now, before you freak out, I cleared this with security, we were in a closed-off space, and we had a big sign on the door that said something to the effect of "if you open this door and see firearms, don't be alarmed, they're not real, they're for class, etc." Anyway, I wanted the students to realize how darn hard it is to actually draw and shoot anything under any sort of pressure, so I made some holsters to fit single-action airsoft revolvers and we did a lesson, some target shooting, and a single-elimination tournament.
I had a great time teaching the class, and I feel like we successfully covered a lot of ground. My hope is that the immersive nature of it gave the students a good grounding in approaching other time periods and genres in the future, and I had a heck of a great time. I'll post some of my lecture images at some point, but I have to find them first.
Anyway, for their final project, the students did comics for the REAL WEST anthology. Some of them were written by existing comics writers (John Arcudi, Gregg Taylor, Kevin Church), and some were written by the students themselves. Don't think this is student-quality work, though. These guys are pros.
You can subscribe to REAL WEST, and doing so will go a very, very small way to helping these students pay off this and their other classes. So give these comics a shot, and note the names. Theses guys are gonna be big news in a few years.
Friday, September 20, 2013
Character-a-Day: Easy Rawlins
Today's character is Easy Rawlins, hero of his eponymous mystery novel series by Walter Mosley. I've only read the first two, but I really enjoyed them (discovered them through the old Denzel Washington movie, which I wish had spawned a few sequels). I've done a ton of drawings of his friend, Raymond "Mouse" Alexander, but I haven't been happy with any of them. It's a difficult line with him, trying to find that happy medium between cartoonish monstrosity (he's a terrifying dresser and a terrifying person) and believable representation. Someday, maybe. Anyway, here's Easy.
The original art for this one is available for sale. 8.5x11," ink on 80# stock, shipped the Tuesday after purchase. First come, first serve.
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