Showing posts with label Donald Kilpatrick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Donald Kilpatrick. Show all posts

Plug Me Proclamation



“Plug Me” opens this Friday, April 15 at Subtext in San Diego and thought to share part of the journey over the prelim years trying to discover my inner artist. Five years ago I started doodling each day and dedicated myself to develop a better understanding about the artists I work with. Almost instantly otherworldly creatures began to present themselves in thematic fashion within my sketchbooks and I was hooked.




The creatures were loose, figurative, non-anatomic, existing within their own political, socio and religious environments. Some angry, while others complacent within the world they occupy. And as the sketchbooks filled obsessively, new lessons were noted and experimental forms began to take shape. Twenty-two sketchbooks have now been filled corner to corner.




In 2006, I documented the first group of drawn meanderings in a limited edition book entitled, “Scribble: Pushing Line Round and Around.” “Scribble” featured 38 drawings created over 18 months and was an honest attempt to share the importance of developing creative potential while revealing an individualistic voice (aka “style).




Later in 2006, with the oil crisis on our hands, I decided to create a thematic body of work upon the pages of a 1924 fur trapper’s ledger acquired on Ebay. The final compilation was an editorialized oil perspective about Johnie West’s ledger that detailed his hunt for fur vs. the United States over indulgence and search for “mo” black gold. The group of 30 drawings were mixed with oil factoids and comic like characters. The 40 page “zine” was distributed at the 2006 San Diego Comic-Con. Newsweek noticed, picked one up and then published “Oil” in their October 9th issue.




In 2008, I continued to create oil inspired paintings. The featured characters found themselves scrambling for steady ground as their environmental habitat was being unearthed in the search for more oil. William Shakespeare provided a quote about oil and Napoleon provided a font created out of human bone and “Oil Too” was published and released during Comic-Con.




The latter half of 2009 and half of 2010 was spent focused on “Survey Select,” an exhibition featuring 32 live events, 68 fine artists and 100 paintings celebrating Narrative Art. During the opening event in July, Dylan and Don from Subtext invited me to exhibit a solo collection of personal work on April 15 the following year.




Ok, never have done a solo, but knew I wanted to create a cohesive body of work. At the time I reflected on what affected me most in the media: The bail out—a political gush that rewarded bad behavior; the war in Iraq—more political and economic discharge that invited the question, “What about our own backyard?;” environmental and climactic shifts—the BP oil spill; and personal upheaval dealing with intellectual property theft and financial embezzlement by greedy foes disguised as friends… Art became my refuge.




“Plug Me,” short and to the point—an opportunity to make light of the often “too heavy” onslaught of media rumpus, political clamor and socio brouhaha. To immediately get right into it I took two major trips to the Midwest to learn more about the letterpress—worked in Cleveland at Zygote Press with Cathie Bleck and Detroit at the College of Creative Studies with Don Kilpatrick and his students. This was a great opportunity to collaborate, learn and focus on getting work completed for the show.




Collaboration is an important dimension I partnered up with Tasha Rae Jewelry to create a line of creature inspired jewelry hand forged out of sterling silver. Tasha’s creations and signature expertise add a great dimension of original thinking as she added her own unique voice and eye for detail. Can’t wait to share out the “bling.”


“Plug Me” features 40 framed pieces, 5 watercolors, 4 mixed media collage pieces, 5 hand painted letterpress pieces, 1 mono-print, 26 block prints, 12 sterling silver one-of-a-kind jewelry pieces created by Tasha Rae Jewelry and one installation piece featuring an assortment of random drawings and unique prints. “It’s time for a beverage!”


Please join me this Friday at Subtext for the premier opening of “Plug Me.” Opening reception Friday, April 15 6PM—10PM at 2479 Kettner Boulevard, San Diego, CA 92101 and generously sponsored by Vitaminwater Zero and Smartwater by Glaceau. Please email for preview list or jump in and follow the news on Twitter or hit up the FB event page. See you soon and looking forward.

Detroit Rock City Recap

Last week was a whirlwind visit to Center for Creative Studies in Detroit, Michigan. Upon landing I knew plenty of work was implicated and the expectations of the students high.




Arrival was swift, Don Kilpatrick, illustrator, letterpress aficionado and all around great guy picked me up and we headed over to Heidelberg Park just before sunset. Jack Frost was busy at work, but the vision of Tyree Guyton was dazzling, as his honest portrait of neglected city searching for clues to reestablish community was visually realized.




Sunday, I cruised over to the Detroit Institute of Arts Museum. The DIA has always been one of my favorites, as Diego Rivera’s famed panoramic mural, “Detroit Industry,” occupies a floor to ceiling mural totalling 27 panels. Diego Rivera (1886-1957) painted this tribute for the city’s manufacturing prowess and worked on it over eleven months. This particular Mexican fresco is probably one of the greatest examples of paint upon wet plaster in the entire world. Just saying, it’s worth the trip.




DIA expanded their museum, as art is big business, and I was happy to discover John Singer Sargent, Pablo Picasso and a striking graphic piece by Jean Metzinger (1883-1956). Countless classics fill the halls and a recent acquisition of Kehinde Wiley (1977) “Officer of the Hussars” dominates one entire wall in the contemporary wing. Rock City delivered and I was ready to teach a letterpress “Zine” workshop, infuse some visual stimulation and meet a ton of illustrative, graphic and fine art students all around the CCS campus.




Monday’s class delivered an invitation to the students and the school to make ready, connect with unknown students (as you never know who will march into history), and take in a 4 page brief focusing on self-promotion. Essentially, students were invited to design a 16 page “zine” while proclaiming a sense of style and creative focus that can be shared, exchanged and used as a significant promotional device. The crux of the matter was to design a landscape piece that occupied 2 8 ½” x 11” pieces of paper. The assignment delivered parameters for the class to follow, however the concept was open for their individual expression and due in three weeks. The class will be graded through Skype, email and Don Kilpatrick’s leadership. Nice.




Tuesday was an all out Mark Murphy fest. Kidding, 11:20 am Delivered a compelling speech about cultivating partnerships, collaborating with others, exploring unknown territory and dedicating yourself to your craft. Essentially, a 48 slide presentation featuring original artwork, design, artists, typography and motivational notes. Questions were requested at the beginning of the talk and all those that asked a question, prizes awarded—questions were answered during the entire talk to keep people from falling fast asleep. 6 pm and a matinee screening of Scribble.08.




Wednesday, was an all out student discussion, receiving input and promoting project development from 10:30 am to 11 pm. Wow, what a day, but great work in progress and many talented students really going for it. Nice job!




Thursday was spent on the letterpress preparing for my upcoming solo exhibition at Subtext on April 15 entitled, “Plug Me.” Before I departed to CCS I created a limited edition certificate and header card to compliment the packaging of all of the prints created for the exhibition. Don helped me get set up on a Vandercook proofing press, taught me many great techniques and I cranked on printing about 100 impressions. Later that night I set up a grid of six Staedtler blocks that were carved before I arrived and assembled into one 11” x 17” original featuring six images quilted together with hand applied color. Printing included 3 editions—16 initialed proofs to be given back all of the students in the class, 8 chipboard impressions, 10 impressions on Rives BFK White, 250gm paper. Lastly, first monoprint created and printed—loved that process and can’t wait to explore it further.





Thursday ran into Friday. 1am Carving of my first linoleum block, 7 ½” x 12,” which is a fussy material or at least made me weary of stabbing myself with the carving knife. 9am back on press printing “In the Neighborhood of Politics” (details above), featuring other worldly know-it-alls who spill too frequently at the mouth. Christian and Ray, students at CCS focusing on advertising and illustration helped out immensely and worked along side with me. Without them, not sure I could have pulled it all off.




Friday was a stop over to the famed Scarab Club formed in 1907 by a group of artists dedicated to the arts and cultural fabric of Detroit and often referred to as a great reference for costume balls in LIFE magazine. Needless to say, if the building could talk, there was a great history of artists who made their way through and signed their name on the ceiling of the second floor reception room.




Final notes on this great trip to CCS—Detroit is making its way back, transforming bombed out looking structures from the turn of the 20th century into creative opportunities for young people to work at an affordable rate. Housing is $1000 in the core of the city, however, as Juxtapoz recently proved, can offer creative inspiration as Tyree Guyton visually expressed in Heidelberg Park. Jack White, originally from Canada, actively calls attention to Detroit and Mies Van der Rohe, Diego Rivera and a 150-year history of art and culture by design has left an indelible mark that offers an industrial Detroit the distinct privilege of sharing this rich history to compel an eventual comeback.

Heidelberg Park Detroit



After arriving in Detroit, my kind friend Donald Kilpatrick asked what I would like to do. “Let’s take a ride over to Heidelberg Park.” Heidelberg Park is the vision of Tyree Guyton, founder and artistic director who took it upon himself to transform a down and out eastside Detroit neighborhood into an outdoor art park.




At first glance, the grey of the industrial horizon is decorated with the spectacle of color—a mix of discarded toys, stuffed animals, telephones, boats, cars, houses, shopping carts, scraps of wood and then reassembled into a 2 block long curiosity trail.





Twenty-five years have passed since the first property was transformed into an urban Disneyland that displays Mickey nailed to a tree. Heidelberg Park’s website describes the park as a place to heal and an opportunity to reflect upon positive solutions for challenging times.




While visiting, I could not help but look at the entire park as a political statement about the challenges of urban living—drug abuse, neglect, political injustice, religious conviction, abandonment and displacement. The park’s beauty could be compared to Howard Finster’s “Paradise Gardens” in Georgia or Leonard Knight’s “Salvation Mountain” in California. The American art styles of folk and visionary styles are a way of life—direct responses to the challenges of social condition.




Thankfully, Tyree Guyton has paved a space in Detorit that invites the world to take notice. I believe, Inner city Detroit is working hard to change National perspective. Artwork is much more powerful when you see it in person. Heidelberg Park is no exception. Thanks Don.

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