Rebel Art, Indie Spirit, Outlaw Marketing - Since 2005

Killer new Jason Shawn Alexander Art for Marvel Zombies Return

It’s no secret that we’re huge fans of the art of Jason Shawn Alexander around here. His pen and ink artwork is quickly ranking up there with the masters and his painting skills are second to none. He’s been updating his blog with a lot of new pen and ink sketches, oil paintings and comic book art.

He’s been working on the Marvel Zombies Return series which features one my favorite renditions of Wolverine that I’ve seen in some time. The artwork has a manic and insane quality to it that fits in with the lunatic humor of the ongoing series of miniseries.

jason shawn alexander zombie wolver Killer new Jason Shawn Alexander Art for Marvel Zombies Return

In addition Jason’s been drawing and painting up a storm for his upcoming gallery show at the Corey Helford Gallery coming up on May 8th.

jason shawn alexander painting Killer new Jason Shawn Alexander Art for Marvel Zombies Return

jason shawn alexander figure sittin Killer new Jason Shawn Alexander Art for Marvel Zombies Return

Artist Adam Schmidt Talks Illustration, Tools and Technique

Masters of Ink Artist Adam Schmidt Talks Illustration, Tools and Technique

By Jason Thibault

Adam Schmidt is an accomplished illustrator based out of Brooklyn, NY and has quite a unique style that shines through on any project or assignment that he tackles. For this third series of Masters of Ink interviews I wanted to make sure to include a healthy dose of illustrators and Adam was at the top of the list.

What inspired you to first start drawing? Did you struggle in your formative years or did it come easy to you?

I really can’t remember when or why I started drawing, it is just something that I have been doing my whole life, but I am sure my dad played a part. He was actually my art teacher for my first three years of elementary school, and as result there were always encouragement from my parents. As for my formative years, I feel like I am still in the middle of them.

adam schmidt cycle Artist Adam Schmidt Talks Illustration, Tools and Technique

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

I was taking an editorial illustration class my final year at RISD taught by Chris Buzzelli, and he had somehow convinced a very game art director to basically have our entire class audition for an illustration about new journalism for a collegiate magazine . My piece ended up being the one selected. Looking back, it was a total disaster. The drawing was pretty janky and I had never colored anything digitally before, so it wound up looking like neon vomit. Nevertheless, it was a lot of fun, and it got me thinking that maybe this was something that I could actually succeed at.

adam schmidt caitlin Artist Adam Schmidt Talks Illustration, Tools and Technique

Were you self-taught or formally educated? (or mixture of both, mentors etc…)

A mix of both, I graduated from the Rhode Island School of Design‘s Illustration program and I have taken classes at various other institutions, but in the end, if you want to improve and absorb the lessons of your instructors you need the ability to teach yourself. The best teachers preach self reliance and provide you with a framework that allows you to instruct yourself . Fortunately, I had many great professors at RISD, and I shudder to think what my work would be like without the help of Jon Foster, Nick Palermo, and Chris Buzzelli in particular.

adam schmidt ink impala Artist Adam Schmidt Talks Illustration, Tools and Technique

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?

Mostly all different kinds of brushes, from series 7s to cheap brushes that come in packs of five, if it keeps a nice point I’ll use it. But my favorites are definitely my beloved Kamei and Pentel brush pens, which I am constantly abusing.

adam schmidt impala Artist Adam Schmidt Talks Illustration, Tools and Technique

How has your toolbox evolved compared to when you first started out?

Things haven’t really changed very much for my toolbox when it comes to ink, I went through the vast majority of my schooling aspiring to be a painter, and I had never really worked with any ink until a few years ago. I only went into the illustration department because they happened to have the best painting instructors. Eventually, I realized that illustration was where my real aspirations laid, and ink drawing was something that had a lot in common with my painting. The only real difference from when I started and today would be my computer and Wacom tablet. Previously, all of my inking was done over gouache or silk screened colors.

adam schmidt vision sketch Artist Adam Schmidt Talks Illustration, Tools and Technique

Favorite brand of ink:

Yasutomo Sumi is my favorite, but I’ll use almost anything that isn’t too watery.

adam schmidt vision no color Artist Adam Schmidt Talks Illustration, Tools and Technique

Type of paper:

Bristol, hot press water color, or stone henge printmaking paper depending on what’s needed.

adam schmidt vision Artist Adam Schmidt Talks Illustration, Tools and Technique

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

Mazzucchelli, Mignolla, Powell, Kurtzman, Caniff, Kirby, Bernet, and Loomis.

adam schmidt buddy holly sketch Artist Adam Schmidt Talks Illustration, Tools and Technique

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?

Every job is a little different, but it always involves carefully reading the brief and trying to conceptualize a visual solution. Something that will serve the editorial needs of client while at the same time creating a nifty image. Often I start with words, trying to wrap my head around the all of the possibilities and move on to loose sketches. Eventually the bad ideas get weeded out and the sketches get more refined. The best ideas get sent back to the AD and they let me know which I should take to final. From there a brush and ink drawing is made with some acrylic painting for texture. All that gets scanned into Photoshop where I color it.

adam schmidt buddy holly ink Artist Adam Schmidt Talks Illustration, Tools and Technique

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

I listen to a ton of different stuff but recently I have been favoring: A.C. Newman, Beck, Band of Horses, Belle & Sebastian, Blitzen Trapper, Built to Spill, Constantines, David Bowie, Deertick, Eagles of Death Metal, Explosions in the Sky, Dirty Projectors, Elliott Smith, Elvis Perkins, JAMC, James Brown, Johnny Cash, Kaki King, Low, Mew, Mastodon, MGMT, New Order, Phoenix, Sun Kil Moon, Tallahassee, Wolf Parade, Yo La Tengo

adam schmidt buddy holly color Artist Adam Schmidt Talks Illustration, Tools and Technique

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

I’ve got a lot of junk hanging all over the place, but my favorite stuff is some pages from my friend Jason Hoffman’s comic MINE and some ridiculous inks by Wesley Allsbrook.

What’s the last novel you read and last movie that you saw that you’d recommend? Which movies and books do you always return to?

Last novel read was the always satisfying Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson, and the last movies that I really loved would be Let the Right One In and Pixar’s Up. But for repeated viewings/readings I always go back to The Royal Tenenbaums, Blade Runner, Sandman, and The Name of Rose.

adam schmidt big chair Artist Adam Schmidt Talks Illustration, Tools and Technique

Current and upcoming projects?

Presently I am working on a bunch of personal projects, a few random illustrations here and there, a little piece appearing in this month’s Complex Magazine and Plan Sponsor Magazine, plus an ongoing poster project involving a Spike Lee anniversary festival. Basically, things are pretty busy, but I am really striving to improve my craft and express more with every drawing.

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?

Well, working constantly is definitely the most important thing, but as someone who is also trying to break through to that next level myself, I can definitely say that all of the not so much fun stuff is just as crucial. Promoting yourself, setting up meetings, blogging, updating the website, making cold calls, going to interviews, submitting portfolios, building a rolodex, networking, and everything else besides making the actual work takes constant hustle but pays serious dividends.

For more information on Adam Schmidt visit him at http://www.aschmidtstudio.com/ and read his blog

Masters of Ink with Artist Tim Doyle on Quitting Your Dayjob

Masters of Ink Masters of Ink with Artist Tim Doyle on Quitting Your Dayjob
By Jason Thibault

Poster artist Tim Doyle is a creator who steadily grew on me over a period of months. I believe it was his Deniro or Bill Murray series that first made me take notice. Then I started to piece together all of the work that he had done over the past 18 months. He set the net on fire with his Obama / Optimus Prime Change Into a Truck poster. He now runs his own shop and is clearly an ambitious and talented designer and artist who is not stopping anytime soon.

What inspired you to first start drawing? Did you struggle in your formative years or did it come easy to you?

Well, a lot of that credit goes to my parents, my Mother in particular…she would sit me down and we’d draw for hours…this is about the same time I started learning how to read, like around 4 or 5, so communicating visually is probably all tied in with my language skills as well. I pretty much learned to read through comics. There are several issues of Iron Man I have from the mid 80’s where the covers are indented to hell from me tracing them multiple times. Those were all drawn by Bob Layton originally, who was one of my favorite artists when I was a kid. His work appealed to me at the time as being so bold and clean, I strived for that. (Funny story, my dad took me to a convention when I was around 12 or so, and I met Bob Layton…funny thing was that my ‘portfolio’ was filled w/ tracings of his work! He was very, very diplomatic.)

I don’t know if I’d say drawing came easy to me, as I spent years learning and struggling, but at no point was it not fun. Part of the problem later on, like in High School, was figuring out what I wanted to draw. A bunch of my peers in art class in HS and College seemed to be able to BS their way into imbuing their art w/ ‘meaning’ while I just wanted to draw Batman. I’m probably still at that level, but I’ve managed to fool everyone into thinking there’s meaning behind some of my stuff. But deep down, I just really, really want to draw Batman. That’s the only real struggle I can think of. Figuring how to monetize my talent was tough for a while, but I think I finally got that worked out.

tim doyle robocop Masters of Ink with Artist Tim Doyle on Quitting Your Dayjob

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

I used to do gallery shows here in Austin until I got tired of that scene. I sold quite a few paintings, starting back in ’99, so I GUESS that qualifies as professional work, but it felt a little ‘dirty’ compared to the purity of something like doing a T-shirt design…I didn’t have to blow any smoke about ‘intent’ or an artist statement for those gigs. My favorite commission I ever did was a portrait for a family that owned a Chinese restaurant by one of the comic book stores I used to manage. He wanted a painting of his daughter and I agreed in exchange for a few hundred meals. I don’t know if they were really happy w/ the result, but I was totally happy w/ the sesame chicken.

Were you self-taught or formally educated? (or mixture of both, mentors etc…)

Both? I didn’t do anything cool or fun for most of my childhood, instead I spent my summers drawing and reading comics. I was in the ‘advanced’ art program in my High School, but dropped out my senior year to take life drawing at the Community College. I followed through with that until I got an associate of the arts degree, and realized I still had no idea on how get art jobs, or really anything useful. (I took studio art instead of the practical stuff). The only thing I learned regarding art at school was that there was (for me, at least) no point in going to school for art. The only thing it can give you is time to do more art…the ‘education’ was secondary. I learned TONS about the poster trade from the omnipotent Rob Jones, as he mentored me through running the wildly successful (at least while I was there, wink wink) Alamo Drafthouse Cinema Poster series. Rob is like a chain smoking, balding, mumbling, fairy-godmother for the gig poster scene. He’s the guy behind just about every graphic you’ve seen for the White Stripes and Raconteurs, and has done amazing work all around. He’s the closest thing I’ve had to a mentor in the poster trade…now if I just listened to what he told me to do, I’d have a better ‘win ratio.’ Kevin Tong is a real up and comer (actually, I think he JUST can now be called ‘arrived.’) and he’s been an invaluable resource on Photoshop techniques…he came from the world of product design, so he’s got all the tricks in his tool shed. It took him like an hour to totally change how I handle dot screens. The man’s a genius. And Nick Derington is a buddy of mine from way back, and he’s always got pointers and advice.

tim doyle big trouble in little chi Masters of Ink with Artist Tim Doyle on Quitting Your Dayjob

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?

I finally gave up on using normal pencils, and am all mechanical pencils now- the Alvin Draft/Matic .05. I’ll use a 2B lead, and a non-repro blue for the structural work. I’ve actually been skipping the penciling stage and have been going straight from the blue-line to the finished ink art recently. For ink on my comics work I’m using mostly Pitt Pens by Faber-Castell. I used to be REALLY against using pens until I heard an interview w/ Darwyn Cooke and he said he used the Pitt Brush Pens. I have a couple of sables I use, but I save those mostly for the larger pieces and outlining. I did just pick up a Kaimei cartridge brush pen that has really great ink flow- but it can’t keep up w/ fast or fat lines like I wish it would.

And god-bless the Wacom Intuos. I use the 9×12, but have my eyes on larger. I rarely totally create art w/ the Wacom, but I sure use it for the seps and clean-up work.

Oh- and how was art for production work done before Photoshop?

How has your toolbox evolved compared to when you first started out?
I did mini-comics and zines for years w/ just a sketchbook and a stolen Kinko’s card. I used to be rabidly anti-technology in art. That was just really me being self-limiting, as I couldn’t afford a computer and didn’t know how to steal Photoshop properly even if I had one. It took me totally bombing an animation try-out for ‘A Scanner Darkly’ that used a Wacom and a Photoshop like program to make me angry enough at myself to hurdle that, and get w/ the rest of the industry. My father had given me a copy of ‘How to Draw Comics the Marvel Way Masters of Ink with Artist Tim Doyle on Quitting Your Dayjob when I was young, and I held to the tools Stan suggested using like a nun to a rosary for years…but fuck man…who uses a dip pen anymore? That took a little bit to overcome. I do still use Dad’s old High School drafting supplies he gave me- rulers and oval templates and stuff. Those supplies are older than me by at least a decade. That’s crazy, now that I think about it.

I did just build a silkscreen shop in my garage- there’s some photos on the blog for the web-store I now run- NakatomiInc.com. That was a crazy-fun project. Modern screen-printing is a great blend of old-world and new technology. You design and tweak and sep the images using your computer, and then go to the garage to print with a method that’s pretty much remained the same for decades. That’s a big, big toolbox I’ve got now. That shop was co-designed by my buddy Clint Wilson, a gig poster artist here in town. He worked for years at a shop that was ‘doing it wrong’ and took that knowledge and helped me build a shop to do it ‘right.’ It’s pretty liberating controlling the means of production, eh?

Favorite brand of ink:

When I do use brushes, it’s always FW Acrylic…it’s black as fuck, but it does have a tendency to get ‘gummy’ if you let it sit for too long. And if you lay it on too thick, it’ll pool up in a glossy spot on your art, and will take forever to dry. Never mind, I hate that ink now. Dammit! Whatever toxic evilness that is in Sharpies is really amazing. Just not for detail work. They do fill a black spot like no-one’s business, though.

tim doyle bill murray Masters of Ink with Artist Tim Doyle on Quitting Your Dayjob

Type of paper:

Strathmore Bristol Vellum finish 400 series. Has been my choice for years. Although- I must say I happened into Asel Art Supply on MLK here in Austin, and saw that Canson started making pre-printed 11×17 comic book art boards, w/ all the borders measured out perfectly, and on decent paper as well. I’m doing the comic I’m working on now on those, and am loving it. See, if you’re working for a major company, they’ll send you art boards that are pre-printed w/ the guidelines and whatnot on ‘em, but if you’re an indie dude, you gotta cut and rule out all that stuff for yourself…which is a giant bitch. But now, all those would be comic artists can just dive right in, the little jerks! I’d be twice as far in my career now if I hadn’t had to do all that ruling and cutting myself all those years! The really strange thing is that the paper comes packed in the ‘Fanboy’ line w/ a truly offensive drawing of a typical ‘dork’ in the logo and the tagline, ‘Get out of the Basement.’ Thanks Canson…way to elevate the art form. But I really would have killed for something like this back when I was 10.

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

Geoff Darrow. No matter how much detail I put in a panel, he’s done more. Bryan Hitch a lot recently. I don’t care what anyone says, I like his work on FF more than his Ultimates stuff. Frank Quitely. His figure work is so beautiful…it kills me. Paul Pope- that guy packs in the energy. There’s guys who can do so much w/ so little line- the aforementioned Nick Derington has just a beautiful line quality, and uses it sparingly. Darwin Cooke is another. When I’m doing posters, I look more to Tyler Stout (perhaps a little too much…sorry Tyler!) In many ways I feel a little more like a tourist in the poster industry, despite working in it in one capacity or another for four years plus now…my heart is always in comics…so I might not be as influenced by my peers there as others might be.

tim doyle change into a truck Masters of Ink with Artist Tim Doyle on Quitting Your Dayjob

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?

Well, it’s totally a crapshoot. It’s a matter of taking what the client wants, and then convincing them to do something that’s ACTUALLY good. And that’s really the key to a lot of art gigs- if the client had a lick of art skill, they wouldn’t be coming to you, now would they? But it mostly entails doing what you can get away with, while still pleasing the client. I don’t deal w/ a lot of clients, as I mostly just do art prints for my site, which is really, really nice.

Now, for the comic work, it’s totally different. The book I’m working on now, ‘The Intergalactic Nemesis’ is written by a good friend of mine, Jason Neulander, and we’re adapting his radio-serial stage play into comic book form. I’ve done art and back-drops for that play for a good 8(?) years off and on now, so I have a history with the project. Jason will hit me w/ a script, and I’ll go back and forth w/ him for a while on making sure it’s going to read well in the comic form, and then I’ll thumbnail out the whole issue in Photoshop w/ the Wacom. Then we talk that out, and then I start cranking the pages. This project is being colored by Paul Hanley, who has done a little work professionally in the past, and I really hope this catapults him into some high-profile gigs. The guy’s a mad genius on so many levels, but no-one’s noticed him yet. Watch out.

But I wouldn’t really call Jason a ‘client’ as the Nemesis book is really collaborative. I mean, I have to make sure he’s happy w/ the end results, but it’s more of a healthy relationship than a ‘client’ set up.

See, I guess for me, I am more into working WITH people on a project than FOR someone, so I don’t hop on board something unless it’s truly collaborative. I quit my job at the Alamo/ Mondo to pursue this, and I’m not in any rush to get back in an employee/ employer relationship ever again. (Actually, I had to promise my wife that I would never work for anyone ever again…and I’ve stuck to it for a while now. Success!)

I’ve never had any complaints from Clients in the past, so I guess I’ve got something figured out there, whether I’ve consciously realized it or not.

tim doyle robot painting Masters of Ink with Artist Tim Doyle on Quitting Your Dayjob

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

Oi- music wise, it’s a lot of TMBG, Girl Talk, Guided by Voices, Stereolab, Climate, Frank Black. But mostly what I listen to while I’m arting are podcasts. The Skeptics Guide to the Universe is like a regular workout for my critical thinking skills, and really should be required listening for anyone who plans to attempt to really exist in the world and function properly. Word Balloon is a real inspiration…hearing these guys talk about their craft in that long-format informal interview style John Suntries has is great. And soooo much better than that screeching pre-pubescent voice that claws at my brain every time I listen to Fanboy Radio. iFanboy is lots of fun, too…but only if you read comics on a weekly basis, as I do. And of course, This American Life rocks my face off like a unicorn riding a rainbow, firing a grenade launcher at the bad guy from Short Circuit 2.

tim doyle DeNiro Masters of Ink with Artist Tim Doyle on Quitting Your Dayjob

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

My walls are mostly being used as storage for a lot of my unsold paintings from back in my gallery days, but I do have a lot of framed prints that I had done back when I ran the print series at the Alamo. Tyler Stout’s Warriors poster is in my living room, and Klaussen’s Tron print as well…that’s just a beaut. I really, really need to update my wall art, now that you mention it.

My wife did some killer paintings of pigs that are hanging in our bedroom. The problem is, once you have something like that hanging up, people start giving you ‘pig’ themed gifts, which culminated in a former employer giving me a life sized nude painting of Miss Piggy. That’s hanging above my bed. The artist is totally unknown on that one, as he found it at a flea market.

Although, my favorite piece greets me every time I walk out of my bedroom, and it’s a glitter portrait of Pee-Wee Herman done by local artist Sue Zola. I commissioned her to do it for me years ago, and damn, it makes me smile every time I look at it.

tim doyle phantom of the paradise Masters of Ink with Artist Tim Doyle on Quitting Your Dayjob

What’s the last novel you read and last movie that you saw that you’d recommend? Which movies and books do you always return to?

Last book I read I think was ‘Missionary Position’ which was a scathing expose on Mother Teresa. That chick was bonkers. It was either that or ‘Parallel Worlds’ by Michio Kaku. String theory might turn out to be total bunk, but it’s a fun mental exercise either way. I try to read Slaughterhouse Five once a year, and have kept up on it. Same with Watchmen (not a novel, but might as well be). I do find myself coming back to Snow Crash quite a bit.

I did just watch the original ‘Taking of Pelham One Two Three Masters of Ink with Artist Tim Doyle on Quitting Your Dayjob’ on Hulu the other day…Walter Matthau is the most unlikely lead ever. It’s freaking great- I’d put it up there with other great 70’s NYC movies like Serpico or Dog Day Afternoon…it’s lighter, almost a comedy in some parts, but you really get into the grit and grime of the characters that populated a NYC that’s now dead. And the villain in ‘Pelham’ goes out in one of the most disturbing ways I’ve seen in a while. (Note- I’m not interested in the remake.)

I don’t re-watch a lot of films, but my desert island movies are Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure, Raising Arizona, and probably Babe 2: Pig in the City. And I am not joking about that last one- if you don’t cry while watching that movie, you are not a human. Robot! ROBOT!

tim doyle godfather detail Masters of Ink with Artist Tim Doyle on Quitting Your Dayjob

Current and upcoming projects?

The Intergalactic Nemesis comic is going to also be incorporated into the performance of the play, making it a moving backdrop. Nemesis is truly inches away from exploding all over in several media venues…I’m really honored to be a part of the project. We’ve started getting back some art from promotion companies, and they’ve been incorporating my designs into the ads, and that’s just nuts seeing that happen.

My webstore NakatomiInc.com has been like a wish machine for me for a few months now…I draw something, print it, and people buy it. That’s a project that’s not going to stop anytime soon. And the artists that I’ve lined up for the Invitational series of prints have been staggering, and the things coming up…yikes! We just inked a deal with Famous Monsters of Filmland to produce some art for them…and that looks like it’ll be a relationship that’ll keep rolling.

Back on the personal front, the show poster I did for the Crazy 4 Cult 3 show at Gallery 1988 just went live.

And I’ve started taking outside jobs for my print shop, which is a nice way to pay the bills.

I’m really at the point to where I have to start saying no to some projects, but things keep popping up I can’t say no to. But luckily I have the organizational skills and artist contacts that I can delegate things out to people I can trust to do good work.

And, I have my first baby currently in development. That project should be finally out in December…I’m anxious to see how it turns out. But something tells me that THAT project is something that might require a lot of maintenance once it’s arrived. Hopefully it won’t distract from the other things I’ve got brewing. Stupid babies.

tim doyle crazy 4 cult poster Masters of Ink with Artist Tim Doyle on Quitting Your Dayjob

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?

Quit your fucking day job. It’s killing you and you don’t even know it. Save up some money, line up some gigs, and fucking quit. If you can’t do that, you’re never going to be anything other than an employee. I feel so odd giving advice, as I don’t feel like I’ve ‘made it’ in any way shape or form, but I took that plunge this year, and feel so unbelievably free and empowered, I can’t help but advise others to do the same. Oh yeah, and stop playing video games. God-damn that’s a time waster.

For more info on Tim Doyle visit his website, MySpace and Nakatomi Inc.


tweet it button Masters of Ink with Artist Tim Doyle on Quitting Your Dayjob

Sean Gordon Murphy – Pure Talent and Hustle

Masters of Ink Sean Gordon Murphy   Pure Talent and Hustle
By Jason Thibault

Late last year Newsarama had a feature on rising stars in comics. Artist Sean Gordon Murphy was one of the featured creators. I stopped dead in my tracks as soon as I saw his art. I read the interview twice, sought out his website and just knew that I’d have to track him down for more Q&A’s. Seven months later I give you this interview. Let’s get to it.

sean gordon murphy portrait Sean Gordon Murphy   Pure Talent and Hustle

What inspired you to first start drawing? Did you struggle in your formative years or did it come easy to you?

Drawing came easier to me than it did to the other kids in my kindergarten class. I remember one day when the teacher asked us to draw self portraits, so I did mine and then looked around at the other kids’ drawings: they were awful. I couldn’t understand why they couldn’t see that the nose was located between the eyes and mouth, not underneath mouth. Or why they thought people had four fingers instead of five. Like with most talents, I think being a good artist starts with having a knack for it.

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

My first pro work was for Tidal Wave doing a comic called Zack Raven. I never got paid. From what I can tell the owner has published that stuff illegally and is continuing to burn people under a new name, Bluewater. I think they’re with Alias Comics or something like that.

But shortly after that I got my first PAID gig with Dark Horse doing a Star Wars Tales 8 pager with Scott Lobdell. The Tales stories were a lot of fun.

sean gordon murphy batman pinup Sean Gordon Murphy   Pure Talent and Hustle

Were you self-taught or formally educated? (or mixture of both, mentors etc…)

Both. I had a master/apprentice type of thing with an artist named Leslie Swank who was a WWII vet and a great illustrator. He put a brush in my hands at an early age, and as much as I hated it, eventually the brush made sense. But I stupidly switched to microns and sharpies for a while. It wasn’t until I was inking a Zach Howard (Aliens, Shaun of the Dead) on a Vertigo project that I picked up the brush and quill again. It was a little like riding a bike.

I also went to MassArt and SCAD, but formal art education is a little overrated. We all spend a TON of time in a room alone, working from scripts, analyzing lines and messing with perspective that I think it’s safe to say that we’re ALL mostly self taught. Every time you draw something you’re giving yourself another lesson in art.

sean gordon murphy spiderman Sean Gordon Murphy   Pure Talent and Hustle

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 brushes: Da Vinci sable hair #1-#3, also a 102 crow quill nibs and calligraphy nibs. I use rough 500lbs Bristol and speedball ink. For mistakes I use Pro White mixed with some water. I rarely use microns except for quick fixes.

sean gordon murphy hellblazer 38 Sean Gordon Murphy   Pure Talent and Hustle

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

The three guys whom I keep going back to are Sergio Toppi, Jorge Zaffino and Bill Watterson. I’m basically a blend of those three guys, but dressed up a bit to hide the fact that I’m ripping them off. I think “normal” American comic styles are stale, so I tend to seek out the guys who have a more interesting take on style and storytelling. Sloppy styles are grabbing me more lately because a) they have more energy, b) they’re illusively easy but hard to master, and c) they’re more organic and natural.

Other favorites of mine are Mignola, Nowlan, Brunner, Coker, Andrew Robinson (older stuff), Leonardi, etc. But I also dig me some Buscema and Wrightson.

I have nothing against mainstream styles at all, in fact I’m glad they exist because they fuel 80% comic book sales. Without mainstream styles, the indy styles would have zero funding. Plus they’d have nothing to revolt against.

sean gordon murphy hellblazer 33 1 Sean Gordon Murphy   Pure Talent and Hustle

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?

First I’ll try to read the client. Is he picky? Does he know what he wants, or is he allowing me to just be myself on the project? Then I’ll operate accordingly, doing my best to be thorough and ask lots of questions. I think clients like to be let in on the process as much as you can allow them. Sometimes I’ll specifically ask them for references or other questions just to keep them busy while I get to work. If a client is unreasonable or wants to make me into a monkey, I’ll usually sense it quickly and then decide not to do the project.

After the project is done I’ll explain what I did and why I did it. Usually the client is happier knowing that you gave his project a lot of thought, and throwing him nuggets about this or that is like him watching the “extra features” on a DVD. He can go back to his meeting with the “inside scoop” and feels more involved with the process.

But not all clients need to be handled like that. Comics are great because usually the editors don’t really care. As long as you’re on time and follow the script, they’ll leave you alone.

sean gordon murphy hellblazer 26 Sean Gordon Murphy   Pure Talent and Hustle

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

I’ve been listening to a lot of Clutch lately.

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

I own a Rocketeer print signed by Dave Stevens. I bought it from Golden Apple in LA when they were switching locations a few years ago. It was only $200, framed and everything. I don’t own a lot of original art, and I have even less comic book “stuff”, so it’s weird that my favorite thing is a Rocketeer poster. But it’s nice reminder of an artist who was wildly talented and widely unappreciated. But maybe some of that is Stevens’ fault. Some people don’t want the limelight of comics and I respect that.

sean gordon murphy hellblazer 23 Sean Gordon Murphy   Pure Talent and Hustle

What’s the last novel you read and last movie that you saw that you’d recommend? Which movies and books do you always return to?

Last book I read was Demon Haunted World by Carl Sagan. The last movie I saw in the theater was Moon with Sam Rockwell. I recommend both.

sean gordon murphy wolverine Sean Gordon Murphy   Pure Talent and Hustle

Current and upcoming projects?

Right now I’m penciling and inking issue 2 (of 6) of a Grant Morrison book called Joe the Barbarian. I’m also waiting for my Hellblazer work to finally be scheduled. But after my exclusive contract with DC is up I plan on working on my next OGN.

sean gordon murphy leatherface chai Sean Gordon Murphy   Pure Talent and Hustle

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?

To pull off being a self-supporting professional artist, it’s not enough to just want it. You have to be smart about it, constantly analyze your work and your business plan, utilized new technology like Deviant Art and have a website on the side, plus you need to reach out to other artists who you have something in common with. I think people should be as creative with their 5-year plan as they are with their art.

To an artist who’s still struggling after many years, I might ask, “what could you be doing wrong? Is it your artistic ability or are you not hustling enough on the side?” Some might say that they’ve had bad luck, and that I understand because I had bad luck for a long time, too. But you can defeat luck by creating opportunity, and you create opportunity by continuing to hustle and though brutal scrutiny of every line that you’re putting down. It’s important to find that next gig, but I think it’s also important to think about your entire career as a legacy. Legacy is a strong word but what’s the harm in taking your life that seriously?

For more on Sean go to seangordonmurphy.com and his deviantART page.

sean gordon murphy avengers 2 Sean Gordon Murphy   Pure Talent and Hustle

June Contest #2 – Win a HUGE ass piece of black and white art

We’ve almost hit the end of June. Summer’s on and the year is half up.

We’ve got our book now sitting in the July issue of Previews. You may have spotted this postage-sized image in it. It can be found in the independent comic section under Optimum Wound. Order code for your local comic shop is JUL09 1019. It’s hitting shops in early September. You can pre-order it at your comic store and soon on Amazon.

Optimum Wound Volume One 2x3 diamon June Contest #2   Win a HUGE ass piece of black and white art

Congrats to Margo for winning our first contest a few weeks ago. Your package finally went out and you should be receiving your artwork and Rex graphic novella shortly. And now we come to our second contest in celebration of the release of Optimum Wound Volume One. This is a larger pen and ink drawing measuring 11 inches wide and 17 inches tall.
optimum wound contest 2 richard 1 June Contest #2   Win a HUGE ass piece of black and white art
And it’s yours to win.
As the usual bonus I’ll send you a copy of Danijel Zezelj’s Rex in the package.

THE RULES
Just answer this question in the comments section.
Now that 2009 is almost half over what do you most hope to accomplish by the end of the year?

1. Leave your answer on the comment section of this blog.
2. You’re only allowed to post once. I read every comment so I’ll know.
3. Private messages or emails don’t count, it has to be posted on this blog.
4. You have to leave a comment before 11.59pm PST on Monday, June 29th, 2009 to be eligible. BEST ANSWER WINS. Then I’ll contact the winner by email and announce them publicly next Friday, July 3rd on the Contest #3 blog.
5. This contest is open to ANYONE in the world. If I have to pay shipping to South Africa or New Zealand, that’s MY problem.

Good luck everyone.
-Jay

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