Monday, May 29, 2017
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band Redux
For a retirement gift to himself, a client commissioned me to create a new version of the Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band album cover by The Beatles. With a couple of exceptions, he chose the personages.
Pictured are:
1. Godzilla 2. Beany 3. Cecil 4. Jean Shepherd 5. Charles Dickens 6. Thomas Jefferson 7. Barack Obama 8. Franklin Roosevelt 9. Abraham Lincoln 10. Langston Hughes 11. Toni Morrison 12. Emily Dickinson 13. Robby the Robot 14. Mars Attacks! 15. Invasion of the Saucer Men 16. Robert Oppenheimer 17. Don Bosco 18. Dracula 19. Batman 20. Frankenstein's Monster 21. Zacherley 22. Tim O' Brien 23. Dorothy Day 24. Mark Twain 25. Edgar Allan Poe 26. Steve Ditko 27. Spider-Man 28. Jack Kirby 29.Captain America 30. Human Torch 31. Frederic Wertham 32. Pope Francis 33. Jesus Christ 34. Santa Claus 35. M.C. Gaines 36. John Lennon 37. Ringo Starr 38. Paul McCartney 39. George Harrison 40. Truman Capote. 41. Green Lantern 42. Ringo Starr 43. John Lennon 44. George Harrison 45. Paul McCartney 46. Walt Disney 47. Mickey Mouse 48. Freddy Krueger 49. Bob Dylan 50. Wonder Woman
The original art is 21" x 21", watercolor and ink.
Note: The original album cover has Sgt. Pepper's spelled without an apostrophe.
Friday, May 19, 2017
Colorful History: Eisenhower
To celebrate Memorial Day,
Pop Culture Classroom (the nonprofit that organizes Denver Comic Con), hired me
to write, color, and letter a four-page comics story about President Dwight
Eisenhower. The pencils are by Billy Tucci, who is best known for Shi, the nineties-era
"bad girl" comic, and Sgt. Rock: The Lost Battalion for DC Comics. This is
the first time I've ever written a comic book for someone other than myself, so
it was most interesting to see how my script was interpreted. To download a PDF of
this story, the original script and layouts, or a teacher's guide, please visit:
Tuesday, May 16, 2017
The Bar Car Mural
Here on top is my original drawing that the owner of The Bar Car commissioned me to draw as the basis for a new mural on the side of the building...and beneath it the muralist's interpretation of it.
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