Comics!






I mentioned earlier that for the latter half of October I attended a 3 week residency with Paul Pope in NE Florida. I had a remarkable time! I worked in a wood studio in the middle of a swamp - it was perfect to decompress and think. At first I was confused as to why we weren't really drawing that much, but rather talking...a lot. But I came to understand that this was a workshop on comics, not drawing. The conversations my group had were life changing. Paul is a force, and his dedication to his unique vision and beliefs is incredibly inspiring.

I was also able to spend time with the other groups, led by the terrific Craig Thompson and Svetlana Chmakova. Jimmy Palmiotti (the owner of the craziest, jaw dropping collection of original comic art..that he brought!!!!), Amanda Conner, Sam Hiti, Kostas Seremetis, and Jeff Newelt all took the journey down for a few days to give talks and keep the inspiration flowing. It was great to hear so many differing perspectives.

I highly recommend artists look into residencies. There are a ton out there, with money ready to support your trip. You just have to seek them out and be persistent. I applied for 14 residencies in the months prior, and failed, before I was fortunate to receive this one. It turned out to be the perfect one for me!

As far as the art goes..... Paul had us take an image and interpret it with our own vision. I created three versions: one for color, one for tone, and one for just black and white. The next image was fan art created for Sam Hiti. He recently published part 1 of his Death Day trilogy (which you can read in full online), and this is a little thank you for the info he shared! The final image is a study of a page by the great Attilio Micheluzzi, reinterpreted a bit in my own aesthetic.

Take a moment to check out the great work of the other artists that took part in the residency at Katie Shanahan's blog (first set of links on right). Thanks to everyone that made the experience legendary!

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What's this image? ^^

I've been working for months on a comic for Soleil, over in France. It's the first project where I feel like I have a clear, confident vision, and the work shows this. I am crazy excited, and nervous, but more excited! It's not due out for a while, but I'm creating all the art. Between this project and leading the studio at TAD I stay putting in work. I love it! I may sneak out images of the book here and there, but I want the content to be brand new when it's released, so imagery on this blog will be work I create outside of this project.

Don't hope that 2011 will be great, make it so!!!!

take care,
-francis

Inspiration: 2010 Hip-Hop

2010 was a very good year for hip-hop. I have a hard time time working without music. Most of it is hip-hop. These are the albums that stand out to me this past year. They inspire me as much as the pictures I post - in fact, I want you to hear a fresh rap track when you look at my work. Blam!



Roc Marciano - Marcberg. Tough New York rap. Real tough.

Snow (remix) ft. Sean Price:

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Kanye West : My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy. The Legend crafts another classic.

Dark Fantasy:

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The Roots: How I Got Over: The Roots are hip hop's greatest group, and Black Thought is top 5.

The Fire ft. John Legend:

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Yelawolf: Trunk Musik 0-60. Favorite new dude. Tough, technical, Alabama skate rap.

I Wish (remix) ft. CyHi da Prince and Pill:

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Celph Title and Buckwild: Nineteen Ninety Now. Buckwild gives Celph classics from the 90's to update. Pure spit.

Miss Those Days:

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Nas and Damian Marley: Distant Relatives. World rap music. Nas' 2nd Verse on "Strong Will Continue" is the verse of the year.

Strong Will Continue:

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Big Boi: Sir Lucious Left Foot, The Son of Chico Dusty. Your favorite rap nerd's favorite album.

General Patton:

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The Left: Gas Mask. Traditional Detroit rap done very well.

Frozen ft. Kool G Rap

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Big K.R.I.T. : K.R.I.T. Wuz Here. Southern smooth Mississippi rap.

Hometown Hero (remix) ft. Yelawolf

Figure Drawing
















Figure drawing is so relaxing. It's just you and the model(s), a chunk of dirt, and paper. These are all from life averaging about 20 minutes. I prefer working with models that haven't posed for artists before. Their poses feel more real to me, compared to "art school" models. Heindel is an obvious influence for the last set of drawings.

Check out Orlando's drawings from the same block of time! Bo$$. Trey, over at the studio in KC, is knocking out killer drawing after killer drawing!

best!
-fv

Inspiration!





^^ Contemporary Russian academic figure studies


^^ Ramon Casas

^^ Lilian Wescott Hale


^^ Gustav Klimt


^^ Robert Fawcett



^^ Anton Azbe

^^ James Montgomery Flagg


^^ Anders Zorn

^^ Jenny Saville

^^ Kent Williams


^^ Luis Jimenez Aranda



^^ _______

^^ Gustav Klimt

^^ Anton Azbe

^^ __________



^^ Dean Cornwell

^^ Mead Schaeffer



^^ Edmund Blair Leighton

^^ John William Waterhouse

^^ _______

^^ ______

^^ Robert Heindel

^^ _____ Ferriera

^^ Lucian Freud


^^ Golucho

^^ _______

^^ Edwin Austin Abbey


^^ Edgar Degas


^^ Dan O'Conner



^^ Jerome Witkin

Every morning, I send the students here in Austin a suite of images to get the inspiration proper for the day. I haven't made an inspiration post in a while, so hopefully this makes up for it...haha. These works are the premier selections from these morning emails.

Regrettably, in a few instances, I did not record the artist who created the picture, or it was not listed. This means a few of these are not credited. If you know the name of the artist for untagged images, please leave a comment, and I will make proper adjustment.

Stay inspired!
-fv