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This Week’s Art: Insignificance in Booth’s inks
Franklin Booth, The Valley of Silence

This Week’s Art: Insignificance in Booth’s inks

After being in awe for the hour, after what was supposed to be a quick minute checking out just one piece for this article, I came to the realization that many of Franklin Booth's ink pieces show something magnificent. With his intricate linework, wonderful composition, and hectic scene, I find it hard to look away.
Mar. 28, 2018
This Week’s Art: Sickert’s “The Camden Town Murder”
Walter Sickert, "The Camden Town Murder" or "What Shall we do for the Rent?"

This Week’s Art: Sickert’s “The Camden Town Murder”

What I find fascinating about art is how much the idea of audience interpretation comes into play. Whether it’s a detailed illustration, or something abstract, there’s always a sense that good art brings the viewer into this new world, for better or for worse. In this case, in a much more overt way than the painting […]
Mar. 26, 2018
This Week’s Art: Kuindji’s “After the Rain”
After the Rain, Arhip Ivanovich Kuindji

This Week’s Art: Kuindji’s “After the Rain”

For most of my life I have been a fan of truly intricate artwork. Not necessarily photo-realistic, which I can take or leave, but art pieces that have wonderfully tiny details throughout. Think the engraving work of Gustave Doré, the incredible works of Franklin Booth, or the fascinating details created by Bernie Wrightson in his adaptation of Frankenstein. […]
Mar. 22, 2018
This Week’s Art: Kirchbach’s “Lenore”
Frank Kirchbach, "Lenore"

This Week’s Art: Kirchbach’s “Lenore”

So, let’s get this out of the way first. I haven’t had a chance to read the story that inspired this illustration yet, but a story about death carrying off a dead soldier’s beloved is right up my alley. Having been an inspiration for Poe, vampire stories, and all manner of 18th and 19th century horror, […]
Mar. 18, 2018
This Week’s Art: Magritte’s Le modèle rouge III
René Magritte, "Le modèle rouge III"

This Week’s Art: Magritte’s Le modèle rouge III

It may be clear to some of you who are familiar with my (more or less) past life as an illustrator and fine artist, but I have a bit of an odd streak. That’s what makes us all unique, and I wouldn’t try to be normal for all the money in the world. I think […]
Mar. 18, 2018
This Week’s Art: Falero’s “Witches going to their Sabbath”
Luis Ricardo Falero, Witches going to their Sabbath"

This Week’s Art: Falero’s “Witches going to their Sabbath”

When I am talking about art, I often point to nudity and gore as being the “easy way out.” Much of the time they are both overdone, mostly for shock value when there is no real concept behind the art. Here’s some nudity! We’re awesome! There are times, though, where an artist has taken the […]
Mar. 18, 2018
This Week’s Art: Cole’s “Course of Empire: Destruction”
Thomas Cole, "Course of Empire: Destruction"

This Week’s Art: Cole’s “Course of Empire: Destruction”

Every morning, I wake up and look across the room at a Thomas Cole painting. Well, let’s face it, I’m not enormously rich so it is actually an old print. The print is of one of Cole’s five “Course of Empire” paintings, in this case “Consummation.” It’s been a personal favorite for a very long time, but […]
Mar. 18, 2018
This Week’s Art: Rockwell’s “The Problem We All Live With”
Norman Rockwell, "The Problem We All Live With"

This Week’s Art: Rockwell’s “The Problem We All Live With”

“The Problem We All Live With” is one of Norman Rockwell’s most famous paintings, and has been discussed frequently by so many others that I encourage everyone to seek out those articles. That said, it being one of my favorite pieces, I hope I have something to add to the cacophony of voices in the […]
Mar. 18, 2018
This Week’s Art: Schikaneder’s “Abandoned”
"Immersed in thought" or "Abandoned", Jakub Schikaneder

This Week’s Art: Schikaneder’s “Abandoned”

Sometimes, I see an image and I feel that I’ve been in that situation, that I’ve lived through something similar. It might be the artist’s technique, or the medium that was used, or maybe it’s just something in the way the character looks. This Schikaneder painting is one that has always given me pause, based on all three […]
Mar. 18, 2018
This Week’s Art: Gentileschi’s “Judith and Her Maidservant with the Head of Holofernes
Artemisia Gentileschi, "Judith and Her Maidservant with the Head of Holofernes"

This Week’s Art: Gentileschi’s “Judith and Her Maidservant with the Head of Holofernes

When it comes to painting any religious doctrine, particularly the Old Testament, there are literally thousands of paintings. It’s a popular, yet somewhat touchy, subject. There is a reserved reverence for many biblical paintings, and you often lose the sense that the stories within are based on mythology and the intimation of a higher purpose. […]
Mar. 18, 2018
This Week’s Art: Henry Ossawa Tanner’s “The Banjo Lesson”
Henry Ossawa Tanner's "The Banjo Lesson"

This Week’s Art: Henry Ossawa Tanner’s “The Banjo Lesson”

One of the challenges of memorable art is capturing an emotional moment between people. It can be something extreme like a moment of action, or something very subtle in the way a profile looks. Hitting the middle ground of softer actions and subtleties is difficult, it can lean one way or the other very quickly. […]
Mar. 18, 2018
This Week’s Art: Goya’s darkly satirical painting “Witches Sabbath”
Closeup, El Aquelarre, or Witches Sabbath, Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes

This Week’s Art: Goya’s darkly satirical painting “Witches Sabbath”

There’s a lot to unpack with Goya, especially for someone like me. I love traditional art, the kind you find in paintings that are hundreds of years old. I also love horror art, for those few fans I have left or those who have visited my art site it’s a fairly clear thing. So Goya speaks […]
Feb. 24, 2018
This Week’s Art: Spitzweg’s “The Butterfly Hunter”
Der Schmetterlingsjäger (The Butterfly Hunter), Carl Spitzweg

This Week’s Art: Spitzweg’s “The Butterfly Hunter”

Being a slightly eccentric and sarcastic person, I am often drawn to characters in books, film, and art who are also eccentric and offer a bit of satire. Carl Spitzweg painted quite a few images that are perfect for my sensibilities, and looking at "The Butterfly Hunter" hits me right where it should on a cold, dark day. Considering the darkness of last issue's Doré painting and the upcoming Goya piece, I thought a nice break with something more humorous would be good.
Feb. 24, 2018
This Week’s Art: Doré’s “La Famille du Saltimbanque: L’Enfant Blessé”
La Famille du Saltimbanque: L'Enfant Blessé, Gustave Doré

This Week’s Art: Doré’s “La Famille du Saltimbanque: L’Enfant Blessé”

It is not a small painting, which is certainly part of it. Doré's La Famille du Saltimbanque: L'Enfant Blessé is over six feet tall, and seeing it made me literally stop in my tracks. Those are the moments I live for, the very reason why it is important to see art in a museum or gallery.
Feb. 24, 2018
This Week’s Art: Levêque’s “La Parque (The Fates)”
Auguste Levêque, La Parque (The Fates)

This Week’s Art: Levêque’s “La Parque (The Fates)”

Levêque was really hitting all manner of emotions with this piece.He painted the Roman versions of the fates, the Parcae. Rather, while I think he captured the essence of the Parcae, what he really captured here was existence itself. This is the spectacle of fate, on hand to show life and death in action.
Feb. 24, 2018
This Week’s Art: Schoonover’s “Hopalong Takes Command”
Hopalong Takes Command, Frank Earle Schoonover

This Week’s Art: Schoonover’s “Hopalong Takes Command”

I’ve always loved this piece by Frank Schoonover, though that can be said for many of the pieces I’ve seen by the artist. He was one of the classic illustrators, and being primarily an illustrator myself it’s easy to see why he’s always been one of my favorites. Hopalong Takes Command is an exceptional example of Schoonover’s […]
Feb. 24, 2018
This Week’s Art: Yaroshenko’s “The Prisoner”
The Prisoner, Nikolai Alexandrovich Yaroshenko

This Week’s Art: Yaroshenko’s “The Prisoner”

There’s probably something to be said about me when it comes to the reasons why I like “The Prisoner” by Yaroshenko. Maybe I’m a darker soul, a lonely one, or even just someone who contemplates life frequently, but this type of image really speaks to me. It’s not that this painting is particularly complex, either. […]
Feb. 24, 2018
This Week’s Art: Processions in the art of John Singer Sargent
Cashmere; John Singer Sargent

This Week’s Art: Processions in the art of John Singer Sargent

As I was looking at John Singer Sargent’s work, in anticipation of writing today’s article about his wonderful “Cashmere” painting below, I started looking at many of his other works. Now, that’s not at all unusual, I find myself leaping down the rabbit hole when it comes to art most of the time, and looking […]
Feb. 10, 2018
This Week’s Art: David Roberts’ Great Temple of Aboosimble Nubia
David Roberts, Front elevation of the Great Temple of Aboosimble Nubia

This Week’s Art: David Roberts’ Great Temple of Aboosimble Nubia

There are certainly artistic sways to and fro, but his accuracy is truly astonishing. Roberts not only captured the sense of being there, but accurately captured the details as well. He used time honored tricks for showing scale as well, such as the fine folks shown in the close-up below. They don't seem very interested in being so close to these epic statues, I guess that's not the reaction I would have personally.
Feb. 3, 2018
This Week’s Art: Gérôme’s “Bashi Bazouk”
Bashi-Bazouk, Jean-Léon Gérôme

This Week’s Art: Gérôme’s “Bashi Bazouk”

When I talk about art, and believe me that’s pretty much every day of my life, I often touch on the things that I really love about particular pieces. Sometimes it’s composition, or texture, even just a color within the piece. Sometimes I get very technical with it, often it probably comes across more like, […]
Jan. 27, 2018
This Week’s Art: Souls on the Banks of the Acheron
Adolf Hirémy-Hirschl, Souls on the Banks of the Acheron

This Week’s Art: Souls on the Banks of the Acheron

Welcome to the first of what I hope are billions of words about art, and mostly what I think about certain pieces. Before I get started, let me just preface the whole works with the idea that the wee image here probably isn’t going to do much justice to the work. So, on all of […]
Jan. 21, 2018
Coursework: 5 Unique Tools To Take Control Of Your Paintings

Coursework: 5 Unique Tools To Take Control Of Your Paintings

Artist April McConn looked out the window of her studio, taking in the flat landscape of the Colorado plains as she started her new painting of ancient Rome. McConn has spent the last two years creating popular paintings of life in the Roman empire, despite not having access to the massive architecture the Romans are […]
Jul. 19, 2017
Creating Fan Art: The Artist’s Perspective
time_enough_at_last_rdickerson

Creating Fan Art: The Artist’s Perspective

It is truly interesting that fan art is this week’s topic, since it is something I am not only intimately familiar with as an illustrator, but this week my freelance life centers around that very idea. One of the things I enjoy doing is interviewing the cover artists for Apex Magazine, and I am sending several […]
Jan. 16, 2017
Original art is always better than a reproduction
icebergs-in-museum

Original art is always better than a reproduction

The transcendent experience of seeing an original piece of art in a museum is substantially better than any reproduction could possibly be. Seeing the original artwork in a museum offers reflection, education, and admiration that a reproduction can not provide. The unique crafting of the original artwork piques interest for further works by the artist, and similar artists and movements, far more than any reproduction can match. This article was originally written for my classwork with CSU-Global, a portfolio project. I have adapted it from a strict APA style to a more web-friendly style.
Oct. 18, 2016
Customizing the sketchbook for the muse

Customizing the sketchbook for the muse

I like to customize my Moleskine sketchbooks before I start using them, and sometimes that can be quite an elaborate process. Partly, I customize them so that they are easier to recognize and find if lost. Instead of just looking for a generic, small sketchbook, I can tell people to look for something more unique. […]
Oct. 21, 2015
Unimaginable is not a word in my vocabulary

Unimaginable is not a word in my vocabulary

When I was standing in line at the local coffee shop, I overheard a couple of people talking about something awful. That happens, certainly, it’s not unusual at all (I often stand in coffee shop lines). One of the women in the group, after hearing the full details of a plane crash, said, “That is […]
Sep. 29, 2014
Oh. You’re one of “those” kinds of people.
Museum of the weird

Oh. You’re one of “those” kinds of people.

Whether I’m creating some new piece of art, or taking a photo, even writing a story (wait, “he writes?”, you say), I have always loved creating things. I especially love to create things that have, shall we say, an unusual feel to them. I love the fantastic, the supernatural, and all of the strange things […]
Aug. 29, 2014
The huge events in an otherwise boring life

The huge events in an otherwise boring life

Most of time, life is pretty boring. We go through our lives, through our day to day procedures, and very little changes. Sure, each day and each week have their little ups and downs. After all, I did just eat a Snickers bar and stub my toe, at nearly the same time. But for the […]
Aug. 21, 2014
Life influencing art, scaring the bejesus out of me
Rabbitfield

Life influencing art, scaring the bejesus out of me

Earlier this week, author Ray Garton (who’s awesome, and you should read all his stories) asked on one of the social networks (the blue one) about sleep paralysis. For those who aren’t familiar with the phenomenon, sleep paralysis, also known as night terrors, is perhaps the scariest thing you could ever imagine. You wake up […]
Aug. 20, 2014
This Week’s Art: Beksiński

This Week’s Art: Beksiński

I’ve been a big fan of the works of Zdzisław Beksiński for a long time. They are like dreams and, often, nightmares, come to life. Beksiński himself even said as much about his own work, and from what I’ve read about him he was a fascinating person. Especially in the many ways that I feel the same […]
Jun. 17, 2014
This Week’s Art: Boldini’s Newspaperman in Paris
Giovanni Boldini, Newspaperman in Paris

This Week’s Art: Boldini’s Newspaperman in Paris

Some of my favorite art pieces are those that show emotion, that have an energy to them. True, most beloved pieces have an energy all their own, even if it’s subtle. But there are some pieces where that energy is something more evocative. I’ve seen many of Giovanni Boldini’s paintings over the years, often of the […]
Jun. 13, 2014
This Week’s Art: Dore’s Death, Life-In-Death, and the Ancient Mariner
Rime of the Ancient Mariner

This Week’s Art: Dore’s Death, Life-In-Death, and the Ancient Mariner

I read a lot of poems, and one of my very favorite poems is The Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Samuel Taylor Coleridge. It’s a dream made for an illustrator, filled with such great visions, and it’s probably one of the reasons that it’s been a popular poem for so long. I have a […]
Jun. 12, 2014
This Week’s Art: Cornwell’s $2,000 Reward

This Week’s Art: Cornwell’s $2,000 Reward

I love the illustrators of the early-mid 20th century. Rockwell, Wyeth, Pyle, and many more, they just have this great sense of drama and storytelling in their work. Even without knowing the stories that they went with, as is sometimes the case, the images still cause a reaction. Case in point, this image by one […]
Jun. 10, 2014
This Week’s Art: Polenov’s “Birchwood Alley”
Vasily Polenov, Birchwood Alley

This Week’s Art: Polenov’s “Birchwood Alley”

The first of my renewed “This Week’s Art” articles, where we discuss a particular piece of art, is Vasily Polenov‘ Birchwood Alley (Oil on canvas, 1880). Here’s what it looks like, and click on it for a larger version. 19th century Russian art is something I’ve become more and more intrigued by over the years, and this […]
Jun. 8, 2014
Art & Design: Promotional materials to leave behind

Art & Design: Promotional materials to leave behind

It is a good idea, after an interview or portfolio review, to leave behind some manner of promotional material for yourself. That could be as simple as a business card, or as complex as a brochure. The idea is that the person doing the review will have something to refer to later, hopefully to get […]
Apr. 30, 2014
This week’s art: Myasoyedov’s The road in the rye
Myasoyedov

This week’s art: Myasoyedov’s The road in the rye

I think it’s important as an artist to look at various kinds of art each day. Just as it is important for graphic designers, filmmakers, authors, and anyone with a creative side, seeing the works of others can help a creative person learn more about what they do. In that respect, I used to write […]
Nov. 5, 2013
Digital/Published: Delphine Dodd
Delphine Dodd

Digital/Published: Delphine Dodd

Delphine Dodd
Nov. 4, 2012
Digital/Published: Dereliction

Digital/Published: Dereliction

Dereliction  Digital; cover of the book Dereliction by Ray Garton, Cemetery Dance (2012)
May. 7, 2012
New ink art and Alphabeast: J is for Jikininki

New ink art and Alphabeast: J is for Jikininki

I’m gradually starting to get caught back up, after a disastrous few months. I decided that I didn’t want to end 2011 with nothing completed, so I manged to kick out two pieces of art in the last couple of days. The first was the skatedeck art, The All-Mighty Dollar (see it here), and below […]
Dec. 31, 2011
New art and experiment: The All-Mighty Dollar

New art and experiment: The All-Mighty Dollar

For awhile now, I’ve been interested in trying new materials to work with, something other than canvas or paper. A few artists that I know paint on wooden skateboard decks, and I thought that would be something very interesting to try. My friend at the local Rendition Gallery (go check it out folks) ordered a […]
Dec. 30, 2011
New cover art & design: Fleshbags

New cover art & design: Fleshbags

I’ve been busy for some time now, and I haven’t been able to post the newest ebook cover that I created a couple of months back. I thought it was time to show it off, so here it is. For those that follow this blog (both of you), a few months back I was in […]
Dec. 28, 2011
Alphabeasts: A is for Algul

Alphabeasts: A is for Algul

This is my latest ink for the Alphabeasts project, and hopefully the last one I need to catch up on. I started with “C” (here), coming in a little late, so this one catches me up to the current letter. An algul is a mythical/legendary vampire woman, in Arabian mythology, and I thought it would […]
Dec. 21, 2011
Digital/Published: Eternity in the Old North Hall

Digital/Published: Eternity in the Old North Hall

Eternity in the Old North Hall Digital; cover of the ebook Knock Knock by author S.P. Miskowski (2011)
Aug. 19, 2011
Digital/Published: Vortex

Digital/Published: Vortex

Vortex Digital; cover of the book of the same name by author Ray Garton (Cemetery Dance Publications, 2011)
Jun. 14, 2011
Digital: Of History and Sacrifice

Digital: Of History and Sacrifice

Of History and Sacrifice; Digital, unpublished
Jun. 8, 2011
Digital/Published: A Gathering of Crows

Digital/Published: A Gathering of Crows

  A Gathering of Crows; Digital; cover of the book of the same name by Brian Keene; Maelstrom imprint of Thunderstorm Books, 2010
May. 29, 2011
Digital/Published- The Rising: Deliverance

Digital/Published- The Rising: Deliverance

The Rising: Deliverance; Digital; cover of the book of the same name by Brian Keene; Maelstrom imprint of Thunderstorm Books, 2010
May. 29, 2011
Digital/Published: Six Days

Digital/Published: Six Days

Six Days; Digital; cover of the book of the same name by Kelli Owen; Maelstrom imprint of Thunderstorm Books, 2010
May. 29, 2011
Digital/Published: In The Wrong World

Digital/Published: In The Wrong World

In The Wrong World; Digital, story illustration for Peter Straub’s story Variations on a theme from Seinfeld Published in Cemetery Dance Magazine, 2009
May. 29, 2011
Digital/Published: The Final Act

Digital/Published: The Final Act

The Final Act; Digital; interior illustration for the novella Scratch by Brian Keene (Cemetery Dance, 2009)
May. 21, 2011
Digital: Winter Holiday

Digital: Winter Holiday

Winter Holiday; Digital; unpublished
May. 20, 2011
Digital: Night of the Innocents Revisited

Digital: Night of the Innocents Revisited

Night of the Innocents Revisited; Digital, unpublished
May. 14, 2011
Digital/Published: Death From Below

Digital/Published: Death From Below

Death From Below; Digital; published as the second endpaper for the novella Scratch by Brian Keene (Cemetery Dance, 2009); Companion piece to “Death From on High”, also on this site.  
Apr. 5, 2011
Digital/Published: Death From On High

Digital/Published: Death From On High

Death From On High; Digital; published as the first endpaper for the novella Scratch by Brian Keene (Cemetery Dance, 2009); Companion piece to “Death From Below”, also on this site.
Apr. 4, 2011
Digital: A Violent Reaction

Digital: A Violent Reaction

A Violent Reaction; Digital; unpublished
Mar. 24, 2011
Digital: Mama Aint Happy

Digital: Mama Aint Happy

Mama Aint Happy; Digital, unpublished
Feb. 14, 2011
Digital/Published: Join Us You Shall

Digital/Published: Join Us You Shall

Join Us You Shall; Digital; story illustration for chapbook Come on in and join us by Guy N. Smith (Horror Express)
Jan. 14, 2011
Digital: No Savior in the darkness

Digital: No Savior in the darkness

No savior in the darkness; Digital; unpublished
Jan. 14, 2011
Digital: Rabbitfield

Digital: Rabbitfield

Rabbitfield; Digital, unpublished
Jan. 14, 2011
Digital/Published: Fetal Position

Digital/Published: Fetal Position

Fetal Position; Digital; story illustration for Fetal Position by Joel Arnold (Wicked Hollow Magazine #1) Also featured in the Spectrum 9 annual
Jan. 14, 2011
Digital: Asylum Days

Digital: Asylum Days

Asylum Days; Digital; unpublished
Jan. 14, 2011
Spectrum coming up

Spectrum coming up

Most years, when I can spare a little extra money, I try to enter a couple of competitions. First on the list is always the annual Spectrum competition, for the best of the current year’s fantasy/genre art. I was lucky enough to have been chosen for Spectrum 9 many years ago, and I’ve always wanted […]
Jan. 4, 2011
Digital/Published: The Attic

Digital/Published: The Attic

The Attic; Digital; cover of the published short comic The Attic by Russell Dickerson and Marc Shemmans (Horror Express)
Jan. 1, 2011
The Golden Ratio or Fibonacci Spiral

The Golden Ratio or Fibonacci Spiral

Now, before we begin, let’s just say that my years of being an engineering student are way, WAY behind me. But I was looking at a couple of sites today that discussed the Golden Ratio or the Fibonacci Spiral, a quasi-magical scientific idea (let that roll around in your head for a minute) by which […]
Dec. 21, 2010
Back to the beginning

Back to the beginning

I think it's good for all artists to look back at where they've been, to see how they've improved.
Sep. 12, 2010
Galleries I’m in Part 1: The Gallery Underground

Galleries I’m in Part 1: The Gallery Underground

Last night was my first night in The Gallery Underground, an alternative art gallery in Fort Collins, Colorado.
Sep. 4, 2010
From start to finish: The Cover of Brian Keene’s Scratch

From start to finish: The Cover of Brian Keene’s Scratch

I like seeing how art evolves, from the beginning of the thumbnail sketches all the way through the final product. I think you can literally see an artist’s though processes as they work through issues, try new things, and complete what their vision is. In my case, it might be more like watching chaos unfold […]
Aug. 29, 2010
Approaching art from all angles

Approaching art from all angles

I never just charge into a piece for the sake of doing art, I always let it mull around in my head some first. Sometimes I have a pretty good idea and I just need to smooth things out. Other times, there’s a lot of thought in what the scene portrays, who’s in it, what’s […]
Aug. 28, 2010
My current Apex Magazine blogs
Apex Magazine

My current Apex Magazine blogs

Since January of 2010, Jason Sizemore and MG Ellington over at Apex Magazine have given me the opportunity to talk on their blog each month about art, and how I create it.  Now, so far, it’s been mostly rants about the things I see wrong with art and with the various genres I’m a part […]
Aug. 15, 2010
My art for Brian Keene’s novella Scratch

My art for Brian Keene’s novella Scratch

I’ve been very anxious to show everyone this, and now, upon the release of the novella, I can do just that. Below I’ve attached a number of pieces of art that I did for author Brian Keene’s book Scratch, just released from Cemetery Dance Publications. Scratch, if you don’t follow Keene’s work (and his followers […]
Aug. 2, 2010
Now at the gallery

Now at the gallery

I’ve been a part of a local gallery for several months now, and it’s been a great experience.  Having been an illustrator for so many years, it’s been interesting to explore the prints and fine art side of things. Luckily, the On Display Gallery in Fort Collins, Colorado (just up the road from home) specializes […]
Jul. 30, 2010
New Art: My first acrylic – no giggling
The Thing That Crawled

New Art: My first acrylic – no giggling

Sometimes, I shudder to post new ideas or new techniques that I try. I never know if they really work out, if they are ok but just need work, or if they are so awful that the sun will shrivel up and we’ll all die. But, I also think that as an artist I always […]
Jul. 28, 2010
Technology can actually be fun sometimes
QR Code

Technology can actually be fun sometimes

QR codes are images, much like bar codes on most things you buy in a store, that can contain information.
Jul. 17, 2010
Behold! The mighty Moleskine!

Behold! The mighty Moleskine!

Last year, a couple of friends (Mike Oliveri, Cullen Bunn, and a few others) were really talking up using a small writing or sketching book to jot down quick ideas. I’ve carried a larger sketchpad in my backpack for a long time, but I’d considered something smaller to compliment it.  So, I ended up purchasing […]
Jul. 7, 2010
Seeing it in real life: Church’s The Icebergs

Seeing it in real life: Church’s The Icebergs

Awhile back (and by “awhile back” I mean “over a year ago”) I wrote an art blog of Frederic Edwin Church’s beautiful painting called The Icebergs (check out the blog here… I”ll wait.) I won’t bore you with the specs again (I’ll be boring you with other ways now), but seeing it in person I […]
Jun. 29, 2010
New art! Finally!
infection

New art! Finally!

I call it, Infection. As always, let me know what you think, either here, Twitter or Facebook.
May. 4, 2010
New art for Cemetery Dance
Memories

New art for Cemetery Dance

I happened to be in the local Barnes and Noble earlier, and the latest issue of Cemetery Dance (#63) was on the shelf.  I did art in that issue for the great Peter Crowther’s story “Memories”, which was a nice story and visually fun to work with. Here’s what that art looks like, comments always […]
Apr. 18, 2010
Updates and a new gallery
Rabbitfield

Updates and a new gallery

Now that the visitors are all gone, I’m getting back on track with things. There have been a few developments, and there are a couple of reminders here, so let’s get going. My art is featured in an actual, physical gallery locally now. The On Display Gallery in Fort Collins, Colorado, has a number of […]
Apr. 6, 2010
A gathering of art blogs: the current index

A gathering of art blogs: the current index

I was thinking about creating a quick index of all of the art pieces I've featured since my site/blog came into existence
Mar. 6, 2010
The life of the artist

The life of the artist

I get a vision of the next bit of time in my head, whether that's weeks, months, or even years, I'm not sure.
Mar. 1, 2010
My thoughts on the coming year

My thoughts on the coming year

But I think this new year brings a different feeling, one I haven't felt in a long time: hope.
Jan. 27, 2010
My first con art show and “guesthood”

My first con art show and “guesthood”

Today I'm leaving for VisionCon, and my first shot at being a guest.
Jan. 22, 2010
Hey imagine that: New art by me!

Hey imagine that: New art by me!

I’ve been trying to get back into art as strongly as I can, especially with my being a guest at VisionCon in January.  It’s been tough, between family life, day job, being out of town for said job, and so on.  But I managed to squeeze in some time this afternoon, and I created an […]
Nov. 29, 2009
New Artwork: Deathly Reflection

New Artwork: Deathly Reflection

I think as an artist, when you hit one of those blocks, you just need to let it go and start creating.
Oct. 21, 2009
Making prints of my art

Making prints of my art

I still get the occasional question from folks who want to buy a print of my work. So, I thought I'd ask if any of the below pieces would be good print choices.
Aug. 5, 2009
Crossroads come to all

Crossroads come to all

I think where art can be a good thing is the ability to get the feelings and emotions out on the table, without necessarily having to explain all the things you are really feeling.  I’ve always felt that art comes down more to what I want something to look like than any emotional release for […]
Dec. 2, 2008
Fun with Photoshop: The Big Adios

Fun with Photoshop: The Big Adios

I don’t always get to just experiment and have fun with Photoshop, and tonight I had a chance to so I ran with it.  This takes the place for tonight’s sketching, something I’ve been trying to do every day. The images below are for possible use with the great site The Big Adios (or at […]
Sep. 8, 2008