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Masters of Ink 7 – Nathan Fox answers 12 questions

Masters of Ink Masters of Ink 7   Nathan Fox answers 12 questions

Nathan Fox 4 Masters of Ink 7   Nathan Fox answers 12 questionsYou see Nathan Fox everywhere these days. He’s been designing skateboard decks for Instant Winner, doing editorial illustrations for places like MTV, creating t-shirt graphics and now drawing comics for DC / Vertigo, Dark Horse and Heavy Metal. Nathan is one of the new bright spots in comicdom and I hope he remains there for years to come.

First professional work (piece / year) and maybe a quick story behind it.

The First professional work I did was in NY. I had done some local work when I lived in KC,MO and Milwaukee, WI for a few papers and magazines but the first one I did when I was serious about it all was for the NY Times Book Review and Steven Heller, the AD at the time. I think that was in 2000 before I started grad school. We had just moved to NY so I could attend SVA’s MFAI program and I heard that Steven Heller doesn’t hire SVA students till they graduate but that he was one of the last art directors to see anyone and everyone in person. So before school I made and apt. and he tore my portfolio to shreds. My work was all over the place but he liked my drawing so I went back when I had some new work and he kept slicing it up. But out of no where he called for a review piece on an Antarctic explorer I think and I was hooked and I got my first break into illustration. That led to more and more newspaper work and eventually magazine and color work.

Nathan Fox FB10 leak1 Masters of Ink 7   Nathan Fox answers 12 questions

However, knowing I had tried to sneak in as a student since he never hired students, he of course being friends with the head of the MFAI program, came to our lectures class and spotted me off the bat. He never said anything, there is no proof the rumor was true but for some reason the book review work stopped. his secretary said he was busy and so on. I felt horrible but it was cool. He hired me back after a while but only during the summer time and holidays it seemed. I was always curious about that rumor. Steve’s a really cool guy and a hell of constructive critic… no doubt.

Nathan Fox DMZ2 Masters of Ink 7   Nathan Fox answers 12 questions

Self-taught or formally educated? (or mixture of both, mentors etc…)

Nathan Fox Carnival of Souls Masters of Ink 7   Nathan Fox answers 12 questions

Art schools. KCAI in Missouri for undergrad and SVA’s MFA program in illustration – Illustration as Visual Essay. Grad school was definitely mentor/competitive peer boot camp time but oddly enough we got along too well and still managed to hack and slash each others work when needed. I had an amazing advisor my last year and working along side the people who came through the program was as inspiring as finally living in NY. I know it sounds cheesy but I have to admit it was true. Was lucky to be surrounded by talent and in a city that fueled just about everything else.

Tools of the trade: Taking a quick glance over at your pens, brushes etc…what tools have you mainly been using over the last few years?

Mainly old rapidographs from high school/college, sticks, Windsor Newton series 7 brushes and scharff brushes. But to tell you the truth if it’s around and I think I can use it I usually do or try.
Quill pens, drafting and dental tools, etc. For illo work it varies but usually just straight brush and ink on Bristol.

Favorite brand of ink:

FW and Yasutomo and Co. Sumi. Love their orange/china-red sumi for gallery work

Type of paper:

Bristol, Velum and printmaking papers

Nathan Fox DMZ Masters of Ink 7   Nathan Fox answers 12 questions

Which artists or creators do you return to for a quick boost of inspiration? Who are the masters of ink?

Yoshitoshi, Samura, Hernandez, Davis, Otomo, Caniff, Bernet, Berthet…

Once a client has handed off an illustration job to you, how do you first tackle the job? Could you give us a quick overview of your process?

Nathan Fox 020108beasts chupacabra5 Masters of Ink 7   Nathan Fox answers 12 questions

loose sketches to hash out the ideas. Pick a few; hash out one or two still pretty loose sketches, sketch approvals and then the finals.
I’m pretty impatient so end up starting and finishing as fast and linear as possible for some reason. Over time my sketches have gotten super loose. Mostly out of necessity to retain some artistic freedom in the finish.

What’s currently sitting in your mp3 / CD player / turntable?

Here’s what’s on my recently played itunes:
Faith No More
Green Day
Tomahawk
Outkast
Johnny Cash
The Pugs
The Pharcyde
Bo Diddley
Tom Waits
Kanye West
Snoop Dogg
Queens of the Stone age
Elvis Presley
The Meters
Arctic Monkeys
Spoon
Sly and the Family Stone
Nas
The White Stripes
James Brown
Beck
Nirvana
Gogol Bordello
Mr. Bungle
General Patton V.S. The X-Ecutioners
Bob Dylan
The Beastie Boys
Goodie Mob
Gnarls Barkley
Sam Cooke
The Roots
John Spencer Blues Explosion…

Nathan Fox HardCases page1 Masters of Ink 7   Nathan Fox answers 12 questions

What’s hanging on your walls and what is your favorite piece of art that you own (not created by you).

I have a few I am pretty proud of.
A Sacred Monkey Drawing from Marshall Arisman, A tiki girl print from Mitch O’ Connell, A train wreck piece of Paul Chatems and over the fire place that doesn’t work, Corey Goering’s SOS painting.

Last novel you read and last movie that you saw (that you’d recommend)?

Currently Reading Snuff Masters of Ink 7   Nathan Fox answers 12 questions – Palahniuk, Lost Echoes Masters of Ink 7   Nathan Fox answers 12 questions – Lansdale, and The Brief History of the Dead Masters of Ink 7   Nathan Fox answers 12 questions – Brockmeier

Last movie I saw was Iron Man I think. It was good but I wouldn’t really recommend it although I am sure I will rent it again. Angel-A Masters of Ink 7   Nathan Fox answers 12 questions was a great Black and White Foreign Art Film if you haven’t seen it.
I rent a lot doing the work/fatherhood thing. Not a lot of time for art film houses and movies these days. Catching up on my anime lately. Paprika and Kite are great recommendations. Black Lagoon and Ergo Proxy are two solid new series I found on Disc. If anyone knows how to get a hold of the Gatchaman 2000 animated series, PLEASE drop me a line. Been searching for it for a long time. But then again, I’m a poor searcher…

Nathan Fox HardCases page4 Masters of Ink 7   Nathan Fox answers 12 questions

Current and upcoming projects.

I just finished part 1 of Fluorescent Black due out in the Sept. Issue of Heavy Metal and debuting at SDCC with a special edition cover they’re giving away. So if you are going please stop by and say hey or file a complaint. All are welcome. Wrapping up Pigeons from Hell #4 and getting really excited in the way it is finishing. Other than that there are some pending freelance gigs at the end of the month that I’ll probably be finishing during Wizard Con Chicago. I am on a few pitches that are floating around out there, but we’ll have to wait and see. If you dig the art and narrative or want to see more please send an email to Mike Richardson at Dark Horse. He is sitting on two killer scripts by Adrian A Cruz (http://www.chambersix.com) that I am dying to do. If no one else picks up any pitches I am hoping to take them to Image or the like and just do it on our own over the next few year. Hopefully Pigeons and FB are the beginning of many more to come. Just have to wait and see how it all unfolds. Keeping my fingers crossed.

What would you tell an aspiring artist who is working his ass off but still needs and wants to break through to the next level?

Man. I never know what to say to this one illo or comic’s wise. Feels like Im just getting started myself. I guess I could answer that when I’ve figured some more things out. Till then how about, good luck and look out. Honesty and persistence never hurt, on any level…

Nathan Fox 7 Deadly Sins BW Masters of Ink 7   Nathan Fox answers 12 questions

Above are the original illustrations for the 7 Deadly Sins skateboard series that Nathan did for Instant Winner. Below are the finished products.

Nathan Fox 7 Deadly Sins Masters of Ink 7   Nathan Fox answers 12 questions
You can find out a lot more about Nathan by going to the following places:
www.darkhorse.com
www.chambersix.com
www.freethegene.com
www.foxnathan.com
www.heavymetal.com
Previous Masters of Ink:
Tom Denney
Richard Serrao
Dan Mumford
Ryan Jones
Rufus Dayglo
Kody Chamberlain

OpWound picks Tom Denney’s brain

Masters of Ink OpWound picks Tom Denneys brain
By Jason Thibault
tom denney portrait OpWound picks Tom Denneys brain

Beauty and mysticism meet the grotesque. Tom Denney creates some powerful and striking imagery. He’s a reknowned poster, CD and t-shirt artist for many notable underground bands. He’s always pushing his own artistic limits and also happens to be a very skilled video and motion graphics artist. To put it simply, Tom has some heavy shit on his mind.

First professional work (piece / year) and maybe a quick story behind it.

The first design I did for a band was Tusk, who later became Pelican. This was when I moved back to Chicago after I graduated college. I started to do allot of the local bands like Buried at Sea and Lair of the Minotaur. That all started in ’02 and has sort of snowballed.

Self-taught or formally educated? (or mixture of both, mentors etc…)

I studied art and film in school. However, that was mostly art history and color theory that I found vapid and hardly applicable. As far as the practical and most important business aspect of serving as a freelance artist, I had to learn on my own. I have been very lucky in the way of having many talented working artist friends who could teach me these necessary lessons, like Tony Koehl and Stu Helm who could be turned to for experience based counsel. So in a sense, I have had a long string of impromptu mentors along the way. It has all been a matter of watching, learning, and asking questions when I get stuck. I spent allot of time emailing my favorite artists about technique. I used to write letters to my favorite comic book artists as a youth and would usually get important advice. It was a long hard road, and It would have been allot easier if someone said “look, being an artist is a personal business, here is a five year plan, and the software skills you will need to make it”. Unfortunately, I had to learn EVERYTHING the hardest way possible. Through trial and error, and error and error. So I consider myself to be self taught, and learning.

tom denney 9 OpWound picks Tom Denneys brain

Tools of the trade: Taking a quick glance over at your pens, brushes etc…what tools have you mainly been using over the last few years?

tom denney 3l OpWound picks Tom Denneys brain

I started with traditional nibs and dipping pens but was frustrated with the lack of control. It wasn’t until I started hanging around in tattoo shops that I figured out Micron pens. They are cheap and you can beat ‘em up and they lay a smooth black line. Now I use a combo of fine tip Rapidograph pens too. Brushes I like to use once in a while then leave them out to dry for a week or two without cleaning, and come back to them angered by their insipid uselessness.

Favorite brand of ink:

India ink, Higgins seems to be the most affordable. I can’t really say that I have the means to mess around with anything fancier than that.

Type of paper:

I used to prefer Borden and Riley’s Paris paper, it is smooth and the ink floats over the surface. It is hard to find where I live, so I had to switch to the Strathmore smooth Bristol paper. It is thicker and it is difficult to see detail when you’re using a light board, as I do. I sometimes have to turn out all the lights just to see the detail of my pencil work underneath this heavier paper. The benefit is that the thicker paper feels more impressive, and there is a stronger sense of the art having more value on the rigid Strathmore, rather than the flimsy Paris paper. I feel like a dork talking about paper.

tom denney 4 OpWound picks Tom Denneys brain

Which artists or creators do you return to for a quick boost of inspiration? Who are the masters of ink?

Frank Frazetta…How the fuck did he do all that? I acquire vast amounts of inspiration from Philippe Druillet, his work is just epic. Symmetrical alien landscapes and other world ornamentations, along with a simple yet complex coloring method, are just a few of the aspects I refer to in his work. Tom Crites I must say blew my mind. When I first saw his art, I didn’t even believe that those sorts of designs were possible. The mixed up mandala/occultistic trans-dimensional absurdities with precision inking made me realize that the summit was allot higher than I previously thought. I can’t deny a heavy influence. Of course Pushead, who set the precedence. You have to be AT LEAST that good, as far as technical ability. Same with Alfonse Mucha. The real trick is, once you have grasped the style, the true test begins. Trying to be as clever with subject matter and composition, without being a Xerox of someone else is the most essential element of what I consider relevant art. Frank Kozik was really important in that sense, he isn’t the greatest illustrator ever, but his compositions carry the load. Anyone can draw a sexy woman with scull face now, but the world needs something new. Just when you think you’re really on the right track, you look at what John Dyer Baisley is doing, and you quickly realize that you need to spend another 30-40 hours rendering stippling effects. The list goes on and on but I think those fellas are tops on this day.

tom denney 5 OpWound picks Tom Denneys brain

Once a client has handed off an illustration job to you, how do you first tackle the job. Could you give a quick overview of your process?

I first stress out a bunch and do allot of procrastination and bike ridding. Eventually I calm down and I employ allot of strange mental exercises that help me get to a place where my creativity can reach its full expression. I will spend a whole night working my ideas into a composition that I feel confident with. I don’t find thumbnails to be very useful. I just attack a full blank page; there is nothing more intimidating than a blank page, so I frequently stab at it a few times with the pencil to break the ice a bit. I come up with three different images, which the client can choose from. If everything is accepted, than I put it on the light board and ink on a separate piece of paper. Once I scan it, I do allot of secret things that I can’t tell you. Then it goes off to the printers.

tom denney 8 OpWound picks Tom Denneys brain

What’s currently sitting in your mp3 / CD player / turntable?

I can’t stop listening to Burning Witch and Electric Wizard. I try to listen to other things, these efforts are wrought with failure. Inevitably I succumb to doom. Alderbaran, Graves at Sea, Buried at Sea, Corrupted, all those types of sounds are what keep me…human.

What’s hanging on your walls and what is your favorite piece of art that you own (not created by you)?

I have this Sepultura poster that Michael Whelan did. I have carried it since I was about 14 and it has hung in every room I have ever lived in, and will likely have a spot over the fireplace well into my future. I have spent years studying it and can look at it right now and find something that I have never seen before hidden within its great abstractions. Also, an HC Clark image that I simply worship. I have David DAndrea prints on almost every wall…These images are quite groomy. Alex Grey and Stephen Kasner play prominent rolls as well as many others that are affixed on every bare surface to be found. Because blank walls, like paper, are much too intimidating.

tom denney 6 OpWound picks Tom Denneys brain

Last novel you read and last movie that you saw (that you’d recommend)?

tom denney 2 OpWound picks Tom Denneys brain

If you’re into “Zeitgeist”, I found a great one called “The Esoteric Agenda”, you can see these types of movies online. I have also been really into David Wilcock lately. I finally finished Robert Anton Wilson’s “Cosmic Triger III OpWound picks Tom Denneys brain” and “Martian Time-Slip OpWound picks Tom Denneys brain” by Philip K Dick. I don’t have allot of time to read, but the one I am working on now is “Atlantis, the Lost Continent finally found” by Arysio Santos. I’m not sure if these types of books and films are for everyone, so for good family reading, I must recommend “The Montauk Project; Experiments is Time” by Preston B. Nichols. I mostly hate TV, and find it much more interesting to scour the vast resources of youtube for things by David Icke and Art Bell and the like for entertainment and inspiration.

Current and upcoming projects.

I have a book of my illustrations being published by Lulu. This should be available in a couple weeks. This book took me a year to compile with 74 pages of full color prints on quality paper. It will be available on Amazon, Borders, and similar online book stores websites or you can order it direct from any store that sells books as it is listed in the ISBN directory under “Tom Denney; Illustration vol 1″. I am finishing up the ISBN registry this weekend, so if you go to www.tomdenney.com, there should be more info and a link to purchase there if you’re interested.

I am always involved in short films or music videos and even music of my own. I try to keep my site updated with these sorts of things, and links to images and sounds are always concentrated at www.tomdenney.com

tom denney 10 OpWound picks Tom Denneys brain

What would you tell an aspiring artist who is working his ass off but still needs and wants to break through to the next level?

Myspace and the internet in general is an amazing tool. In this day, you don’t even need to work your ass off, all you need is to put forth just a tiny bit of effort and your art can be seen by the entire world. This is new to history. So, if you’re working your ass off and no one is responding, than that is a strong indicator that the effort you’re exerting into promotion needs to be redirected to the art itself. If you first master your craft, and are serious enough, and dedicated enough to do so, then the break through will come to you naturally.

Personally, I followed Pushead’s method of; starting with DIY local flyers and band shirts, this then gets the attention of touring bands who come through looking for new art, who in turn, go on tour and thusly show your art to a great variety of potential admirers. It is not easy, and it will likely not pay the bills at first. However, if you’re dedicated and passionate it will translate into your art and people can either relate…or decide to exploit you. So, don’t be a slave, follow your personal highest excitement, and be unique and true above all things.

tom denney 1 OpWound picks Tom Denneys brain
Hit up Tom’s Myspace page or website for further reading.
Previous Masters of Ink:
Richard Serrao
Dan Mumford
Ryan Jones
Rufus Dayglo
Kody Chamberlain

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