Author Archives: isaacparis

Happy Haloween

Maybe you are watching creepy movies as a part of your Haloween traditions. Here is a video I made in tribute to Peter Lorre.

If you enjoyed this, I made more

for Bette Davis, Cary Crant, and Toshiro Mifune.

I started one for Humphry Bogart, Norma Shearer, Marcello Mastroianni, Fred MacMurray, Audrey Hepburn, Samuel L Jackson, Javier Bardem, Jean Harlow and Clara Bow  and but never finished them. I suppose I ought to get around to that sometime.

Eleven Eyes

Eugene’s funk pioneers Eleven Eyes tore it up at the hi fi music hall. Andy plays in Bustin Jeiber and the Cherry Poppin Daddies. He subbed in on sax and kicked all the asses!

Is it a weird coincidence that there is an anime named “11 Eyes?” 
 I have drawn them before check it out.

  

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Killy Dwyer at Tsunami books

Killy Dwyer is on tour and passed through Eugene after Portland and before California. Of course she asked me to open. I had a great time and performed my comics, ” you don’t need money to have fun” and had audience members draw on my white suit, and played ” the anthropic principle lullaby” and handed out clave and the audience jammed with me.

Killy did a great set and showed us much variety of moods. Looping her voice and singing unapologetically about cancer, death, orgasms and other topics that make audiences squirm! She plays accordion, guitar, a tiny Casio sk-1 and she improvised with stuffed animals and other objects she found in the bookstore.


 This is the flyer I made for the show.

 And of course, We got a few shots of the two of us on stage together.  Follow her on Twitter, on Patreon and wherever!

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Utushi-e Puppets.

At Mecca here in Eugene, we have kid’s art workshop on Saturdays. Today we made these puppets. The trick to them is to have a character on two distinct poses. The puppets are double sided. Traditionally, the performers dress in black and have black gloves covering their skin. The character can flip and change its pose. This is the simplest form of animation: two frames! Dynamic!

  
 
The dowel or Popsicle stick is painted black and glued between two pieces of black matte board. 
   
  

This young artist made a pumpkin character with glasses.  
  

This young man made a colorful bird with teeth!  

Here I am with a little troll and a skeleton.
    
 
It’s Jacqueline Black the witch! (She’s friends with Janice the Jester and Nate the Knight) 

    
    

I eecially like the gag of a cute ghost who becomes fat by eating too much candy and the pop tart who is concerned that he is missing his corner.
    
   

  

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El Ten Eleven

 El Ten Eleven play complicated, shimmering, beautiful guitar based music. Using electronic drums the drummer can act as a bass player and add electronic noises. Using looping pedals and several guitars, some of whom have two necks, the guitarist can add layer upon layer of baroque melodies and embellishments. To say this band is deep would be an understatement. It’s best to say they are musician’s musicians.

  
If you know anything about double neck guitars, you’ll see that my illustration is inaccurate. Actually his bass is the bottom neck, and bass necks are longer. Also, he doesn’t have a fretless guitar neck on his double necked guitar- but I don’t care! I drew it! Notice I drew several hands to try and capture something about they way he composes and performs.

 
Maybe I’ll finish inking and coloring it someday. Here is a cool interview with Kristian Dunn and Tim Fogarty.

And here is their website.

People have lumped them into the same post rock genre as Battles and Tortoise. But they say they don’t listen to post rock! I think they sound sometimes like Ratatat. Great live show. It’s amazing that the guitarist has such control over timing and his pedals.

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The Boreal: Long Hallways, Paleons, the Union Trade, Coastlands

The Boreal is a fun all ages venue in eugene  with local art and zines and anarchist books for sale. It isn’t lit well, but I suppose that’s part of the charm.

  
This is Chris from Paleons. He plays a modular synthesizer. The kind with a dozen cables to connect the modules. The band has been going through changes and now includes a lap steel player.

  

The Long Hallways play beautiful shimmering Post Rock.Their bass player plays bass like its a lead instrument. Through strumming, tapping and virtuosic abundance of notes, he clearly is not content to have the bass stay in the background and establish the root of the chord. Hell, they could add a second bass player to do that, but their songs are fine just the way they are,

   
   
Then we heard the droney shoe gaze songs of The Union Trade. Keyboards are a nice addition.

   
   

Finally, a fourth post rock band played, Coastlands. This one had some loops of hip hop drums and ethereal noise samples. I think they play ebow guitar drones into a loop pedal. Their drummer was very tight. They eschew having a bass player at all and just bring on the full sonic assault if three guitars.

   
   

I tried out putting shadows behind their heads. I think their album art is beautiful and very fitting for their sound.

  
I took these photos of my drawings at the venue and just gave the drawings away. The bands were very pleased/ flattered. A member of coastlands saw me drawings long hallways and specifically asked me to draw them. I thought I probably wouldn’t have the energy or time to take them home and color them. My photography sucks of course, the room was poorly lit.

David Huntsburger and Tanya Kornilovich

   
 I went to see David Huntsburger perform at Sam Bonds. His humor was very personal. I enjoyed his stories of his grandmother passing away. He wasn’t afraid to have long awkward pauses and really spend time on a subject even if there were long passages without any joke that produced laughter. Look him up online here.
  
Tanya  Kornilovich is a Russian immigrant comic and takes fun of her family, Russian stereotypes and religion. She is one of the most enthusiastic comics I have ever seen.
  

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Lesson plans based on Freehand by Helen Birch.

I picked up this book at an Oregon art store and immediately began copying drawings from it. Nearly every page could be a “daily art challenge” or inspire a lesson plan.

  

Here is my drawing inspired by page 19 Maria Molares.

  
I think anyone could follow the basic rules of these patterns and make their own. Like it is meditative to color, it is also to draw the same image again and again. Once an artist figures out the rules of a pattern, or makes up their own, they can be followed continuously until the page is full. It’s quite satisfying, and the brain can stay occupied you might find the solutions to puzzles that have perplexed you when you were stamped.

Some people say they do their best thinking in the shower or while driving, by sketching, one could imitate the draining showering phenomenon while sitting at a desk. Lynda Barry suggests drawing spirals.

  
Or writing the alphabet. If you have the “tip of the tongue phenomenon” you might stumble across the answer if you just stop focusing on it. Imagine a scenario where you can’t come up with the Latin word for werewolf. Try writing out the alphabet… A, b, c, d,

After all, your brain is a collection of connected neurons, and considering we make sense of our world through language, the neuron cluster that make up our letters we make our language out if must have millions of connections!

Eventually you’ll think of something that will remind you of the answer. “L makes me think of Lyme, which makes me think of… Oh I just started craving a lime Rickey… Hmmm, m n o p… I remember now, it’s lycanthrope!” ( results may vary)

Here is my drawing inspired by page 21 by Julia Pott. 

  It features made up animals. Intentional distortions. I also included words that have nothing to do with the composition, forcing the viewers mind to make a connection that doesn’t seem to be there. By having one animal resting on the back of the other, I think it makes the animals that clearly don’t really exist, look a little more real, forcing the viewer to imagine perhaps the artist had a model he was looking at while drawing. It reminded me that as a child I would draw my own animals and dinosaurs, combining traits of many real animals into my own biologically feasible creations.

Here is my drawing inspired by page 31 by Stephanie kubo and  page 39 by Kristen Donegan.

  

It utilizes patterns like a Zentangle, some elements of collage, some random chance (I threw a cup down on the page to trace and there was charcoal in the cup that marked the page.) I have been researching about Dadaism lately… This peice also uses the technique of blending/ drawing with an eraser. I used color sparingly. One ” rule ” of composition, is if you have a color appear somewhere on a piece, have the same color appear somewhere else. I intentionally broke that rule.

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Emerald Valley Comic Con, Keith Tucker, Megan Goldman, Joanie Brosas, Ed Lloyd Gragg.

I went to Emerald Valley Comic con and met many cool artists! Keith Tucker worked on so many animated shows in the 90s, it almost blows your mind. He penciled  many of the coolest Disney comics covers. I asked him what was the most fun to work on, he said without a doubt Pinky and the Brain. he also really enjoyed Jem and the Holograms because there was so much freedom. I also asked him, ” did you still have time to draw for fun?” He said, I had a blast very day, I drew all day for over twenty years and I was always having fun!” 

His speciality was action scenes. He had a real say in the movement of characters and how they danced, walked, fought, and lived in their worlds within the screen. He was such a friendly and nice guy! You can see more of his art here.

 
  

  I used to have these comics! Wow, he could really compose a dynamic comic book cover!
   Don’t they just make you want to buy that comic and read what’s inside??

Melanie Golden was totally sweet when I awkwardly asked her, “may I draw you?”
 

 Follow her on Instagram here. I got these from her Facebook page, sorry I do not know who the photographers are.

   

 She has been a model, cosplayered as Lara Croft (Tomb Raider), and look here is a picture of her with Chris Evans!   
Ed Lloyd Gragg 
  

Ed makes incredible paintings inspired by film posters like those by Drew Struzan. He has also made illustrations for sports magazines and rock album covers. Look at his work here. Pictures of vampirella here.

He had a fantastic painting of Spock,

  
 many of Marilyn Monroe and other pinups!
  Isn’t this a cool painting? Ed told me it’s basically his bookshelf, with a small addition.
  Even Beaker,  Wonder Woman, and Jango Fett were there!
 

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