Showing posts with label path. Show all posts
Showing posts with label path. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

The Artist's Path - Part 2

My Birthday Cake c. 1975

My Family

I grew up with 2 brothers and my mom and dad in Costa Mesa, California. My one set of grandparents lived in the house right in front of ours and my other set of grandparents lived across town. We also had our aunts and uncles and their kids living on the same block as the rest of us. So there was always a lot of family around.


Art Sale


My grandfather, George, who lived in front of us was an artist at heart. He was always working on watercolors. Their house was filled with his work. Occasionally he would set up out on the front lawn with his work, all his favorites had prices in the hundreds insuring that they would never sell. I don't ever remembering him try to show them out in the world. Maybe to him the art was not completed with the sale but instead completed by the creation. I remember one time as a teenager, he gave me a watercolor lesson.

My grandmother, Alice, was a cake decorator. Earlier in life she had been a photographer but throughout my childhood she made cakes. Wedding cakes, birthday cakes and even nudie bachelor party cakes. As a kid I loved seeing all the cakes but the cakes were made to be sold and not for us kids. But every birthday, she would make me a cake and they were incredible. the one I remember most was a prehistoric scene with dinosaurs and a giant blue ocean.

My other grandfather, Lowell, was a swordfisherman. A real man's man. His wife, Josie, was a hairdresser. One of the things I remember most about Josie was the little gift store she ran for a while. Also for a period she made resin ashtrays in backyard. The smell of cooking resin is always pleasant to me because it takes mr right back to my childhood (while also killing off some brain cells).

the Lab


My father, Dave, is an engineer. Throughout my childhood he worked in the aerospace industry. But always on the side, he was working on projects. We had a room in our house called the Lab. A room full of screws, gears, saws, soldering irons, maps of the universe, oscilloscopes, lead bricks and any just about anything else you might need. There was paint there but it was spray paint and enamels not oils and acrylics, functional paint. And the Lab was not just for our fathers place in fact it felt like it was more for the kids. A place for use to explore science. On weekends we would make things, sometimes we would find plans in books or my dad would work something up.

My mother, Cheryl, is a crafter. She knits and crochets and makes all sorts of things. I remember she would participate in Christmas sales and for months in advance, she would be making. Hundreds of clothespin reindeer, pompom & felt Santas, little angel bells and a host of others would fill boxes in the house. All these little reasonably priced curios would be gone by the time Christmas rolled around.

I will talk about my brothers later. Sorry if this seems to be going off tangentially to where I started but I want to really dig deep into how I got where I am. Already I am seeing connections that I had not thought about. Next I will look at these influences and how they have deeply ingrained themselves into my own process.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

The Artist's Path - Part 1

IMG_0791

A few weeks ago was Wondercon, one of the many lesser iterations of Comic Con. I have been doing Wondercon and Comic Con for the last 6-7 years. As part of Wondercon, Wendy, of I Heart Guts, decided to host a panel on independent toy designers. She was nice enough to ask me to be on the panel. She had hosted a similar panel at the NY Comic Con last year, which I was able to attend but not be a panelist on. The panel in NY was great, very inspiring. It really got me thinking about some of the ideas and experiences I thought I might share with aspiring artists.

So in advance of the panel at Wondercon, I made some notes and put together a few images. At the panel, I attempted to take the second chair, so that I would talk second. I always find it better to try to build on what was said before. As luck would have it, the first panelist was late, so I got the uncomfortable position of going first. I fumbled through 5 minutes, saying a bunch of stuff in a fairly disjointed way. I got to make some of my points but not in the way I would have liked. The rest of the panel was great but in the time restrictions we only had time for a few questions. Since I was set up at the show, I had to hurry back to my table.

In the past few weeks, i have thought about what I wanted to say at the panel and realized that 5 minutes was not enough time to properly present my thoughts. So that is what leads to this first post. I have long had this blog but up to now, I have just used it for announcements and image postings. With this series it is going to change a bit. I am going to present my history as an artist and many of the lessons I have learned along that path. Hopefully this will be of interest to fans of my art but also maybe helpful to all the struggling artists out there in the world.

Next I will run through some of my history. My memory can be terrible, so bear with me. And as Mark Twain said "Never let the facts get in the way of telling a good story."