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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: loomis, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Jack and Jill… by Walt Whitman?

Well, I don’t know about any of the other Brits in the audience, but I could do with some light relief after a week of political intrigue! Hopefully this will be the very thing to cheer us up. From the Oxford Book of Parodies, edited by John Gross, here is the nursey rhyme Jack and Jill, as Walt Whitman might have written it.

I celebrate the personality of Jack!
I love his dirty hands, his tangled hair, his locomotion blundering.
Each wart upon his hands I sing,
Paeans I chant to his hulking shoulder blades.
Also Jill!

Her I celebrate.
I, Walt, of unbridled thought and tongue
Whoop her up!
Her golden hair, her sun-struck face, her hard and reddened hands;
So, too, her feet, hefty, shambling…

[And a good deal more in the same vein]

Charles Battell Loomis

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2. This Strange New World...

Hello, again. Where to begin? Well, we can re-cap the last post with a screnshot of the Dolly Parton portrait on SFWeekly.com:


Hopefully, this will be seen by someone either online or in print. "The best promotion is published work" is what I keep reading. We'll see I guess.

I'm a little bummed out as I have not gotten any responses from my end-of-July postcard mailing. I know to give it time, but I really get anxious when I'm not working on paying gigs. Plus, its been almost 10 days since I sent the invoice to SFWeekly, and that was really my last "official" freelance work. The client list and website are freshly updated so really its been the waiting game all over again. Obviously I'm working on projects for the site, but time moves so slowly here in Beacon!

The days seem twice as long as there really isn't anything exciting going on here. I am in this routine of getting up, working on projects over coffee at the local coffee shop until lunch (I love th econvenience of working digitally), and then working at home until dinner. Then I try to spend time with Aliyah and then I'll work until I'm off to bed. Errands work their way in as little distractions here and there but its really just working with bits of excercise and chores. On a positive note, I did get my fishing license :) For those who don't know I love to fish for bass. Sadly, I'm out of my element here in NY so I'll have to adjust. Still, just catching little guys feels good.

So even though its slow here, I 'm working alot and THINKING alot. Boredom either begets lethargy or creativity and I'm glad to say that so many concepts for pieces keep entering the ol' noggin. So I can defintely keep myself busy if work does slow down. But I got my fingers crossed that something comes along. I'm waiting to hear back from a dude at the ispot as I have decided to go with an online portfolio for now (as opposed to adbase which I want to do later). Hopefully, that will bring in some work too.

For now, I was very lucky to have found a bit of a time-passer this week. One night ( I think it was Monday), I was tired and bored so I was looking at our bookshelf for something to read. I remembered I had printed out PDFs of some art books years ago that I had only flipped through. I grabbed one titled "Creative Illustration" by Andrew Loomis and gave myself a bit of a re-fresher. Awesome. So much good stuff in that book and I'm only finished with Chapter 1. Its a goldmone of info, and you can't buy it at Borders or Barnes & Noble as its out of print (from like the 1940s). I have a couple Loomis books that I printed out years ago. ANYWAY, this brings me to my point: I happened across TWO Loomis books in an old shop called "Beacon Reads" along with what looks to be a pretty awesome book on pen-and- ink and another on cartooning and illustration:
All four of these hardbound, out-of-print ANTIQUES cost me a whopping eight bucks! Then Aliyah noticed "The Ultimate Portfolio" on a "Free Books" cart. I insisted on paying the standard two dollars for this hardback as well as the money appears to go to a charity. I was a little too excited to really pay attention :) So I have plenty to work on, plenty to read, and plenty of visual concepts in my brainworms to weather the storm (actually, an eerie calm).

Until the calm recedes, I'm doing pieces in which I take turns with the syles (i.e. one linear, one graphic, another linear, another graphic) to keep my skills up. So here's a linear piece:
Its about burnout, something we all suffer from time to time. I really like the way this piece looks when super-big on my screen :) I am thinking I need to get archival prints of some of my favorite images at large scale. Perhaps for sale as well as for myself. If anyone has any leads on a affordable archival printing place in the New York area, please let me know!

And whats next? I think a certain "gangsta" or maybe science :)

Enjoy the Day,
Chris

4 Comments on This Strange New World..., last added: 8/26/2008
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