Friday, October 2, 2009

Namtab on the Web!

sg
I was going to run my typical "From The Vault" segment this Friday, but there's another appearance of my work on the web I want to talk about!

The super-cool blog When Is Evil Cool? has a piece up all about my Monster PSA stickers, in glowing terms I'm not sure I deserve, but I'll accept! Be sure to go over there and check it out, along with all the other cool stuff you can find on WIEC!


Thursday, October 1, 2009

Time Out New York: Pink

sg
This week's "Hot Seat" portrait for Time Out New York is Pink, or, as she's sometimes called, P!nk!

I was really excited for this one, mainly because Pink's look and vibe is so high energy and fun, and I thought it was going to be a fun challenge conveying that.

But when I actually sat down to work on it, I found this portrait really tough to pull off--not the likeness so much, but the aforementioned sense of energy and fun. I originally went with a lot of blacks and hard lines, but that didn't look right, so I ditched all that and went the other way--very little black, instead going with all kinds of crazy color.


Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Namtab on the Web!

sg
Wow! Someone over at Turner Classic Movies must have liked the interview with me so that much that they put a link to it on the main TCM page!

Fire, bad--promotion, good!


Monday, September 28, 2009

Monster PSAs: Elsa Lanchester

sg
I really have the wind at my back, regarding these Monster PSA posters--they're quickly becoming my most popular set of pieces, and I've been coming up with ideas for them so fast I can barely get them all down.

For these PSAs, I've been toggling back and forth between the message being related more to the actor or to the character--in this case, of course, the sentiment is more from the Bride of Frankenstein's experience, not Lanchester's.


There'll be a new Monster PSA poster every Monday here on the blog for at least the next few months, so keeping checking back to see the newest one!


Friday, September 25, 2009

Namtab on the Web!

sg
In lieu of a "From The Vault" installment, today I'm highlighting an interview I did with Richard Harland Smith, over at MovieMorlocks.com, the official blog for Turner Classic Movies.

This was the first interview I've ever done about my work, and I'm really happy how it turned out--it was a lot of fun and Richard's a great interviewer. Plus--over there you'll see a brand new "Monster PSA" poster that will only be seen at Movie Morlocks! Hi-keeba!

Check it out, I hope you like it, and thanks Richard!

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Time Out New York: Michael C. Hall

sg
This week's "Hot Seat" portrait for Time Out New York is Dexter himself, Michael C. Hall!

Being a regular viewer of Dexter, it was fun getting to do this portrait. Having first seen Michael C. Hall as the neurotic brother on Six Feet Under, I was amazed how he could play this very different role, and do it so effectively.

Obviously, given what kind of character Dexter is, it made sense to use lots of red for this portrait. But I didn't want it to look like blood necessarily, so I went for this more painterly look.


Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Namtab on the Web!

sg
Wow, this was exciting!

Last Friday, one of my Monster PSA pieces appeared on MovieMorlocks.com, the official blog for Turner Classic Movies.

The article was written by Richard Harland Smith, and my mention was part of a bigger piece about Frankenstein in general. Richard was very complimentary towards the piece and my work, which of course I really appreciate.

Turner Classic Movies is, also of course, the channel for movie fans, so I'm thrilled that one of my pieces appears in any connection to it. Thanks Richard!


Monday, September 21, 2009

Monster PSAs: Lon Chaney Sr.

sg
These Monster PSA posters are turning out to be nearly the most popular set of pieces I've done, second only to the Universal Monster posters (a coincidence, surely).

For this one, I had a couple of ideas for taglines that I thought matched an image of Lon Chaney Sr., but for whatever reason this one seemed to make the most sense to me--from everything I've read, Chaney Sr. went to such extremes to create the monster make-ups he was famous for (subjecting himself through grueling physical demands in the process) that I can only assume he was utterly, completely obsessed with what he was doing.

In any case, I liked the contrast of the cheery text and the ghoulish image, which seems to the engine that drives these Monster PSAs in the first place.


Friday, September 18, 2009

From The Vault: Blue/Orange - 2005

sg
Another piece done solely as an experiment; this time with two contrary colors and some odd shapes.

I like how the hair almost completely fills the frame, and looks sorta like big puffy clouds; yet another visual approach I haven't followed up on much but should...


Thursday, September 17, 2009

Time Out New York: John Kraskinski

sg
This week's "Hot Seat" portrait for Time Out New York is John Krasinski!

Most famous, of course, from his role as Jim on The Office, he's also now a director, having directed the new film Brief Interviews with Hideous Men, adapted from the book.

Since he was promoting the film and not the show, I stayed away from any Office references, although I never have done that for any of the other show's cast members I've had the opportunity to do portraits of for TONY:
sg
sg
sg
sg
...I wonder who's next? I hope it's Creed!


Monday, September 14, 2009

Monster PSAs: Claude Rains

sg
In the middle of a very busy couple of weeks, I managed to work up another one of my Monster PSA posters, this time features Claude Rains as The Invisible Man, making a very self-aware statement.


Friday, September 11, 2009

From The Vault: On The Spot - 2004

sg
This piece was nothing more than me wanting to do a very slick, fashion-y type of image, not tied to a specific face.

I think its kinda cool, actually, I should try and do more of these...


Thursday, September 10, 2009

Time Out New York: Trey Anastasio

sg
This week's "Hot Seat" portrait for Time Out New York is musician Trey Anastasio.

For some reason, when I illustrate people with red hair, the black tones I usually have look very wrong to me--they stick out like a sort thumb, even more so than with blondes. So I took all of the heavy dark shadows out of Mr. Anastasio's hair and beard, and kept the blacks on his face to a minimum, which, along with the background, gives the piece a light, airy look, that I think works well for the subject.


Monday, September 7, 2009

Monster PSAs: Boris Karloff

sg
My latest addition to my "Monster PSA" series, this one took a little longer to come up with: not because the joke is so clever, but because Boris Karloff is such an iconic figure of 1930s movie horror that I had trouble deciding which image to go with!


Friday, September 4, 2009

From The Vault: Spencer Tracy - 1993

sg
One of the earliest attempts at illustrating in this cut-paper style--a portrait of a particularly haggard Spencer Tracy.

I was--and still am--a big fan of the actor, and around this time I was renting every movie with him in it I could get my hands on. Later in his career, he seemed to specialize in roles where he was made to look weathered, beaten, down and out--or some combo of all three.

While it's not that great a likeness, I do like the cartoony looseness of it, something I haven't been able to pull of that much as the style developed.


Thursday, September 3, 2009

Time Out New York: Juliette Binoche

sg
This week's "Hot Seat" portrait for Time Out New York is actress Juliette Binoche.

Any time I have a big time movie actress as a subject, I try for an old Hollywood glamour-type of shot, which is why I tend to go for black and white. When I do this, I usually have an old-timey glamour photo background, but this time I wanted something a little different, a little more ornate.




Tuesday, September 1, 2009

This American Life

sg
This is a piece I've wanted to get to for a long time!

A year or so ago, I did a portrait of This American Life host Ira Glass when he was interviewed for Time Out New York's "Hot Seat" feature. I was really happy how it came out, and I knew I wanted to use it as the basis for a full-on TAL poster. When I finally sat down to work on it, it was a huge amount of fun, finding the right balance of old-timey and modern design elements.

I think my favorite element is the last thing I put on there--the scratchy Chicago postmark, which I thought gave the whole thing a feeling like the show is a big postcard, sent from Chicago--via the radio--to the rest of the world.


Monday, August 31, 2009

Monster PSAs: Lon Chaney, Jr.

sg
My third attempt in the "Monster PSA" series, this one screamed out at me when I saw a still of Lon Chaney, Jr., in his breakout role as Larry Talbot, aka The Wolf Man, with his hand on a doorknob.

To me he looked like he was checking the door for heat, the way you're supposed to do when you think there's a fire. Voila!

I'm having a lot of fun with these, so I've been trying to come up with more of them in between working on other projects. We'll see how long I can keep 'em going...


Friday, August 28, 2009

From The Vault: Back Light - 2004

sg
I have no memory of the hows and whys of this piece--I was probably bored and just wanted to mess around with something and see what happened.

That heavy white outline is the one unusual element--its a nice effect, but one that for whatever reason I haven't used again.


Thursday, August 27, 2009

Time Out New York: Andre Leon Talley

sg
This week's "Hot Seat" portrait for Time Out New York is Vogue editor Andre Leon Talley.

Like last week's subject, Nina Garcia, Talley is a figure from the world of fashion, of which I know nothing about (watching What Not To Wear every week is as close I get).

So I was at a bit of a loss as to how to approach this, and since I had very little time to turn the piece around, I went with something cool and dignified and relatively simple (although I did add the dot pattern on his tie because I thought it looked cool).


Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Animal Care for Artists Initiative Logo

sg
Last month, I was contacted by Laura Menck, one of the board of directors of The Animal Care for Artists Initiative, a new non-profit dedicated to providing health insurance for pets of those in the arts.

Laura couldn't have known it, but she couldn't have found a cause I'm more passionate about if she tried. Being self-employed for over half a decade now, I'm all too familiar with the delicate balance that it sometimes takes to make sure you have adequate health insurance for not just yourself, but for your pets.

Laura and the ACAI was a dream client to work for--all they asked was for it to include their mascot Dolly (the dog on the left--so cute!) and it to have a sort of old-timey, WPA-ish feel to it. Of course, that's music to my ears, and I was so excited to work on this I ended up putting some other work aside to get to this.

It all came together quite quickly, and even the one element usually the most hard to pin down--the right font--fell into place. I sent it off to Laura and the ACAI, and they loved it, and its now on their website.

I hope that the ACAI is a huge success, and helps creative people like me the chance to provide for their pets--they deserve it.

Woof! Woof!


Monday, August 24, 2009

Monster PSAs: Glenn Strange

sg
I can never resist a series!

After finishing last week's Bela Lugosi PSA-type poster, I of course let my mind wander, trying to come up with some other, public service-type messages that some of the other Universal Monsters could deliver.

Once I finished the Glenn Strange portrait, I worked on crafting a gentle, reassuring message, since, from what I've read of the man, he was an exceedingly sweet guy. After all, who wouldn't want Glenn (as Frankenstein) telling you he's sure you're going to be okay? I know I would!

I actually like this one better than that Bela poster--this portrait especially has that simple, kinda cruddy look that a lot of the Frankenstein/Universal Monsters merch had from the 60s and 70s, before stock art guides took over.


Friday, August 21, 2009

From The Vault: Eric Clapton - 1994

sg
Sometimes the simplest ideas are the best. How else to portray Eric Clapton, then draped in the blues?

Maybe the likeness could be a little sharper, but overall this piece still works for me.


Thursday, August 20, 2009

Time Out New York: Nina Garcia

sg
This week's "Hot Seat" portrait for Time Out New York is fashion stylista Nina Garcia, former editor of Elle and currently a judge on Project Runway.

Most of the time on this piece was spent on the hair! I wish TONY would interview more bald guys...

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Charles Schwab On Investing - Summer 2009

sg
This is the most recent piece I've done for Charles Schwab On Investing magazine, for their Summer 2009 issue.

As I've stated before, I really enjoy these assignments from CSOI because they're all so different--each piece I've done for them (you can see previous ones here) is about a different subject and has a different look, and they're always a fun challenge.

I also enjoy seeing text laid over my work--since most of my printed work are portraits, they tend to stand apart from the text, but with CSOI the article is frequently integrated with my illustration, like it is here. I think it gives articles like this more flow and make them more visually appealing.

And I'm happy to report, I'm working on another piece for CSOI right now!


Monday, August 17, 2009

Monster PSAs: Bela Lugosi

sg
I have no idea how I came up with this idea--the image, colors and all, simply popped into my head one day and I tried to getting it down as best as I could.

If I wanted to analyze this (and why not?), I'd say I've always been interested in the idea that the classic Universal Monsters--so terrifying in their day--are now mostly considered warm, friendly icons, suitable for kids. How things change.

Running with that, I liked the idea of using the monsters in sort of PSA-style announcements. And since Bela Lugosi was so bedeviled with financial problems in his life, I think he would be concerned with the average American citizen's staggering amount of credit card debt.

I also wanted to it be a very quick, almost sloppy-looking piece--like those underground "street art" illustrations Shepard Fairey was famous for before he did that Obama piece (hey, I'd like some of my stuff to be in the National Gallery, too--although I doubt this'll be the piece that gets me in there).

Maybe I've put too much thought into this?

Friday, August 14, 2009

From The Vault: Let's Go - 2005

sg
This has always been one of my favorite pieces, because it captured the exact feeling I was going for. I had always assumed it had a permanent spot on my regular Namtab.com site, but after looking through the vault for something to post this week I see that isn't! Weird.

Simply put, I wanted something fun and cool, with a lot of energy--this woman is dancing the night away, the music is loud, everyone's having a good time!


Thursday, August 13, 2009

Time Out New York: Vincent Kartheiser

sg
This week's "Hot Seat" portrait for Time Out New York is actor Vincent Kartheiser, who plays the oily Pete Campbell on the superb series Mad Men.

Darlin' Tracy and I are both big fans of the show, and I was jazzed to get to do a portrait of someone from it. More than most of the cast, Kartheiser very different than he does on the series--with non-Brylcreemed-to-the-point-of-immobility hair, and the beard, I doubt most people--even die-hard Mad Men fans--would recognize him if they saw him on the street.

I initially thought about putting all sorts of vintage ads behind the portrait, but when that looked to junky to me I ditched that idea and went for something simple and clean.

Can't wait for Season 3 of Mad Men, which starts this weekend!


Monday, August 10, 2009

Chandu The Magician

sg
Still in a poster-makin' mood, I whipped up this piece for the very fun, very crazy Bela Lugosi movie Chandu The Magician (you can probably guess who plays the "mad man" mentioned in the tag line).

This was another one of those cases where I immediately saw in my head a visual--Bela, as the mad Roxor (not Chandu--that's Edmund Lowe), looming over the movie's title in a curve--and simply tried to build the rest of the poster around it.

Bela even starred in the sequel--the sensibly-titled The Return of Chandu--but I don't think I'll get around to that one...


Friday, August 7, 2009

From The Vault: Vertigo - 2004

sg
This was another one of my blind alleys, in that it was a approach I never continued with after trying this first piece.

This is based on a scene from the classic Hitchcock film Vertigo starring Jimmy Stewart and Kim Novak; and the hazy, wavy effect put on top of the two actors' portraits was of course my fairly unsubtle way of referencing the feel and theme of the movie.

Looking back at this piece, I don't think it came out too bad; but for whatever reason I never tried this illustrative approach again.


Thursday, August 6, 2009

Time Out New York: Ashton Kutcher

sg
This week's "Hot Seat" portrait for Time Out New York was is actor/producer/former Kelso Ashton Kutcher!

Kucther was promoting a new movie he's in called Spread, but I wanted to do something not more portrait-y. I've been messing around with actual paint strokes a lot the last week or two, so I put together this very colorful, lively background.

Working back from that, I decided I wanted Kutcher in black and white so he would *pop* more off of that background. Once I finished the portrait part and put him on that background, it looked exactly like I hoped it would. Another Hot Seat portrait was ready to go!


Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Has Boobs, Reads Comics

sg
One of the (too)many comics blogs I read is TheNerbyBird.com, written by the charming Jill Pantozzi. Her catchphrase is "Has Boobs, Reads Comics", because...well, she has and she does.

A couple of weeks before the San Diego Comic Con, she had a contest for someone to design a sign for her scooter (which she uses to get around because of her Muscular Dystrophy) that would work as a sign to tell people who she was and what her blog was.

Well, I'm a sucker for doing any sort of pure graphic design piece, so I whipped up the above little number, playing off her blog's logo (which also features various superheroines' bustlines) and even throwing in a cartoony version of Jill herself, speeding by.

I sent it in, and a few weeks later...I didn't win. Oh well, I thought, nice try.

But apparently Jill (and people who left comments) liked my design enough to want to turn it into a t-shirt, which she would wear to the SDCC! I thought that was great, and, sure enough, a few weeks later, there was Jill, rocking my design:
sg
...I am filled with pride, seeing my design on a shirt like that. And this is certainly the prettiest thing my work has ever been put next to, on, or near! Thanks Jill!


Monday, August 3, 2009

I Walked With A Zombie

sg
After finishing up my Curse of the Cat People poster a few weeks ago, I immediately started to think what movie should be next on my "to do" list. Since I'm such a big fan of the films of producer Val Lewton, I thought why not stay in his ballpark and try my hand at another one of his films?

I Walked With A Zombie is one of Lewton's best films--creepy, moody, and odd, nothing in it is quite what it seems. The most famous scene in the movie is when the main character (Frances Dee) literally walks "with" a woman in a zombie-like state, escorting her through a windy, eerily-quiet section of woods, where they encounter a real zombie, Carrefour (Darby Jones).

As soon as I decided to do a poster for this movie, it was that scene I wanted dramatize. And for whatever reason, the first and only design I saw in my head was a two-paneled approach, the first featuring the women walking, the second being what they're about to see.

I also wanted a rough look, much rougher than usual style, so I pulled out my old tubes of paint and slapped down some globs of it, spreading it across the paper and then adding them to the backgrounds. Once I dropped them in, it gave me the exact look I was going for. Hallelujah!

After deciding to use the same typeface I used for Curse of the Cat People, the rest of it fell into place.

I don't think I'm going to get bogged down into doing posters for the entire Lewton horror series (I just can't get that excited about, say, The Ghost Ship or Isle of the Dead), but there are some others--including my all-time favorite Lewton movie--I'd like to have a go at, eventually...


Friday, July 31, 2009

From The Vault: Neon Esther Williams - 1994

sg
This is one of my earliest attempts at my cut-paper illustration style, done when I was trying all kinds of different things to see what worked and what didn't.

It was intended as a portrait of 40s/50s Hollywood star Esther Williams, but in the end that's not what is the "point" of this piece--no, it's the almost neon-bright color scheme that I unwittingly employed this time around. Detail is at a minimum, and the colors seem to scream out at you.

This isn't an approach you can use too many times--its just too garish--but it has a more Pop Art type feel to me than a lot of other stuff I've done, and its weird I never went back and tried at least a couple more in this style.

"Eat at Joe's!"


Thursday, July 30, 2009

Time Out New York: Rob Riggle

sg
This week's "Hot Seat" portrait for Time Out New York was is actor/comedian Rob Riggle, one of the correspondents on The Daily Show, and also appearing in the new film The Goods.

I'm a big fan of Mr. Riggle, first seeing him on Saturday Night Live, then later on TDS, where his faux-aggressive persona never ceases to make me laugh.

Riggle is also a veteran, a fact that comes up every so often during his Daily Show segments. So I wanted something straightforwardly patriotic and classic, and this all came together pretty quickly.

I hope that, when it runs in the magazine this week, people don't think the stars and stripes motif is meant to be sarcastic, or a Colbert Report-style parody; because it isn't--its meant as a tribute to Riggle's service, and also a symbolic take on his comedic persona.


Monday, July 27, 2009

Double Feature: Laura/Gilda

sg
This is a custom-made poster for a double feature that never existed, but should have.

I was asked by my pal Eddie Muller, writer and film historian, to work up a poster for a Laura/Gilda double feature, to accompany an article currently appearing on his Film Noir Foundation website, called "Single Word Double Bills" by Don Malcolm, all about great, single-word-titled film noir movies paired together.

I got so excited about the prospect of putting this piece together that I literally couldn't wait to work on it, and ended up putting other work aside so I could get to this. I spent one wonderful, sunny Sunday putting most of this together, then finished it off the next day.

As soon as Eddie asked me about doing the piece, I came up with main visual motif in my mind--having both title women be (of course) the focus, and having their male co-stars match each other as monochromatic background elements.

From beginning to end, it was a pure joy to work on, and I'm proud that its up on the Film Noir Foundation site, and I'm so glad Eddie asked me to do it!


Friday, July 24, 2009

From The Vault: Teresa Wright - 2005

sg
Having worked at a video store for a few years, I became much more appreciate of older movies than I ever had been to that point. Since rentals were free, I devoured as many films as I could watch before my eyes popped out of my head.

Watching a lot of those movies from the Golden Age of Hollywood, one of my favorite actresses was Teresa Wright, who starred in such classics as The Best Years of Our Lives, Pride of the Yankees, and Hitchock's Shadow of a Doubt. She tended to play characters that seemed sunny and simple on the outside, but had a steely determination and a fierce intelligence on the inside.

So when Ms. Wright passed away in 2005, I put together this portrait of her, as my "tribute" (for lack of a better word) to a great actress and a great star.


(Around the same time, I wrote a letter to Entertainment Weekly, taking them to task for the paucity of their obituary for her, in contrast the to space they gave for "news" surrounding various reality TV "stars." They actually printed my letter a few issues later, meaning I've had my words inside the magazine, but not any of my pictures.)


Thursday, July 23, 2009

Time Out New York: Zach Galifianakis

sg
This week's "Hot Seat" portrait for Time Out New York was actor/comedian Zach Galifianakis, currently starring in The Hangover, and the Disney Film G-Force. Busy summer for the guy!

This was one of those "experiments" where I wanted to try something a little different and...frankly, I don't think it quite came off. Galifianakis has this very mellow, slouchy-type demeanor, and I wanted to try and capture that with the colors, and by partly covering up his eyes with "Z" and "G" in a sort of psychedelic look.

I got this week's subject late in the week, very late, to the point where I didn't have a lot of time left after drawing all that damn hair to really sit back and see if it worked. I pretty much put it together, went "Yeah, that works!" and sent it off.

But as I look at it now, I'm not so sure. It's my own fault for not taking a look at it again the morning I sent it in, with fresh eyes, to see if I could improve it at all. But I had to (literally) catch a train, and I didn't make the time.

I'm never thrilled to have something I think is less than my best in print, with my name on it, but over the years I've had to learn to live with it. They don't teach you that in art school...


Monday, July 20, 2009

The Curse of the Cat People

sg
While figuring out what movie I wanted to make one of my custom-made posters for, I had a couple of choices, ultimately going with The Third Man.

But Val Lewton's Curse of the Cat People was a close second, so I figured why not just jump right into this one the following Sunday, which seems to be becoming my most fertile day for producing these things?

Originally, I had wanted just to do a poster for the original film, the classic Cat People, but during my photo search for pics of both film's star, Simone Simon, I found an amazingly beautiful shot of her from some French fashion magazine in the 1940s.

I realized that I could use that to bathe her in shadows, and have her looking down upon the other characters, which meant that it would better as the poster for Cat People's sequel, The Curse of the Cat People, where her character, Irena, sort-of haunts the other characters from beyond the grave (Irena having died at the end of the original film).

RKO Films' publicity department slapped menacing pics of cats on both films' posters, even though its a highly misleading image, and I felt compelled to follow suit. Mrrrowwwrrr!


Friday, July 17, 2009

From The Vault: Seal - 2003

sg
During the summer of 2003, right after I had met Darlin' Tracy but was still living in my apartment, I was inspired to work on a bunch of animal-related pieces, and during a 2-3 week period I was cranking them out at a furious pace.

Thinking I might be able to sell them as original pieces of art, I decided to do most of them "the old-fashioned way"; meaning with cut paper, glue, and paint, instead of digitally. It meant filling the air with that nasty spray glue smell, but what the hell--what's a few lost brain cells in the cause of art?

I ended up with a pretty solid good to bad ratio with them--many of them I was very happy with (some of which can still be seen on my Animal Art page), some very good but not great, and some would never be seen again.

This one of the seal seemed to be in that middle category--a solid piece, but not one of the best, so it went into the vault, pretty much never to be seen again. But looking over it again now, I think its looks pretty good!


One footnote: In 2006, I was invited to hang some of my work as part of a small gallery showing in Philadelphia. Since most of the originals I had on me were the animal pieces, I just brought them. By the end of the show, I had sold all but two or three pieces, including this one! So obviously they struck some sort of chord.

Maybe I should start doing these again!


Thursday, July 16, 2009

Time Out New York: Adam Brody

sg
This week's "Hot Seat" portrait for Time Out New York was actor Adam Brody.

When the subject is someone I don't know much about, like in this case (I never watched The O.C.), I do a little research to find out what it is they're promoting, and try and key into that somehow.

Brody is in a movie called Death In Love, and I went and searched out the film's poster (which I thought was pretty cool). It had a rough look it that I liked, so I used some of its predominant colors (red and blue) and used some cheap construction paper as the background, instead of just dropping it in with Photoshop, which I thought would've been too smooth and perfect (although you can't tell the difference all that much from looking at it here).

I also wanted a lot of contrast, so I did the Brody portrait in black and white instead of color, which I thought worked out fairly well.


Monday, July 13, 2009

The Third Man

sg
For whatever reason, I've been in a mood to do nothing but poster work lately, even though they are 3-4x the amount of work that a simple portrait is.

I guess its partly because I've been watching a lot of film noir lately (The House on Telegraph Hill, Hangover Square), and that, more than anything else, I really enjoy working out the design of any given piece--figuring out where to place the text, the pictures, what colors to use, what graphic elements to put in--its a like a maddening puzzle I can't help but try and solve.

I had originally wanted to do a poster for a Paul Newman film, because I just finished a biography about him, but when I couldn't settle on which movie I wanted to do, I moved on and looked around for other classic films to, er, poster-ize.

Since I never get tired of doing Orson Welles portraits, I decided to have a go at The Third Man, arguably Orson's second-most famous movie (and my initial inspiration for this whole style of illustration), and full of great, captivating images.

Pretty quickly, I imagined representing Welles's character--the inscrutable Harry Lime--as just a shadow, looming over the film's two protagonists, played by Welles co-hort Joseph Cotten and Italian actress Valli.

After coming up with that, it was just a matter of building up all the elements around that central idea. And despite all the twists, turns, and blind alleys I went down while putting this piece together, it was that element that remained pretty much constant throughout the piece.

I worked on it all day, only adding the bright blue at the last minute, since it seemed a little drab to me (to that point, it had been mostly black and white, with just the two figures in color). Once I added the blue, though, the piece came alive to me and I called it a day!


Friday, July 10, 2009

From The Vault: Neil Diamond - 1994

sg
Sometimes picking the week's "From The Vault" piece is a total stream of consciousness process.

I was in the middle of making a CD mix of songs for Darlin' Tracy, something I do fairly regularly that she enjoys. Its generally a mix of some new songs I've discovered, some older songs in my collection I think she'd like, and some random songs she'll mention that she likes. One song from the last category was Neil Diamond's "Sweet Caroline", so as soon as I could I downloaded it from iTunes.

Then, as I was deciding what piece to put up here, I remembered back in 1994, my formerly-Kubert School pals Sean Tiffany and Dan Eaker had some weird thing going where they fell in love with Neil Diamond's music. I remember not being able to tell whether it was all a joke, or serious, or some combo of the two.

Anyway, at the time I decided to get in on the joke by doing this cut-paper portrait of the man rocking out. I didn't think it came out too bad, but now I wish I had let the orange part creep a little further into the yellow part, and not stop at the black, dammit! What was I thinking?


Thursday, July 9, 2009

Time Out New York: Rupert Grint

sg
This week's "Hot Seat" portrait for Time Out New York was Ron Weasley himself, Rupert Grint!

My first thought in terms of background was to reproduce a page from the Harry Potter books featuring Ron Weasley, but that quickly gave way to something I thought would work better visually--a piece of stock art of a castle that looked Potter-ish.

I faded it a bit, and then added the blue glow to give the whole thing a more hazy feel, which contrasted better with the portrait.


(Attention Ms. Rowling: If you would like to buy this piece from me, please send me a Paypal payment of $100,000 U.S. I know you can spare it. Thanks!)


Thursday, July 2, 2009

Time Out New York: Bruno

sg
This week's "Hot Seat" portrait for Time Out New York was Sascha Baron Cohen, aka Bruno!

For whatever reason, this subject was chosen very late in the week, so I ended up with less than 12 hours to turn this piece around and get it in to the magazine.

Once they had told me the interview was with the Bruno character, not Cohen himself, I knew I wanted to go with some crazy, collage-type background. So I grabbed some of the more discordant elements of Bruno's adventures, and slapped them together in a noisy, frenetic style. Umlaut's ahoy!