Va'u: new animation style

Lately, I and fellow illustrator Jim Swanson have been developing various ways of doing “live drawing” animations that progressively appear on the screen. This is the first one of mine that I'm willing to show. It was created with the help of Chipp Walter's fantastic (and FREE) "Scribe Assist" script. So, you ask, what's with the pyramids in a Polynesian themed drawing? (shrug) I guess they just seemed to fit the composition. Anyway, it's a fun technique and I’m looking forward to doing lots more of them.

The soundtrack is "Va'u" from the album "Percussions Polynesiennes: South Pacific Drums".

Sketches from Occupy Chicago - Part 1

"And we shall organize them for the victory! We shall bear down the opposition, we shall sweep it before us-and Chicago will be ours! Chicago will be ours! CHICAGO WILL BE OURS!"- Upton Sinclair, "The Jungle"

The following are a few on-the-spot sketches (one of which suffered some water damage from wet pavement) of Occupy Chicago gatherings. Some minimal color and tone was added in Photoshop.

Occupiers01

Occupiers01

Ground zero for the occupiers is at the corner of La Salle and Jackson near the Chicago Board of Trade, where they gather every day at around 1:30 PM. A couple of the sketches are from a rally co-sponsored by Occupy Chicago and various senior citizen's rights groups which was held at the Federal Plaza on Nov. 7th to protest proposed cuts to Medicare and Social Security. The gathering, which featured brief appearances by Sen. Dick Durbin and other local politicians (notably absent was other state senator Mark Kirk), was followed by a march and sit-in which blocked traffic at the intersection of Clark and Jackson until police peacefully arrested some of the protesters in what amounted to a staged act of civil disobedience.

From an artist's perspective, the gatherings provide a great opportunity for spontaneous, lively sketches, since the participants tend to be fired up and in constant motion. And despite some efforts to paint the protest movement with a broad brush, it's members seem to come from a wide spectrum of backgrounds and each has their own story to tell.

As with a previous post of "Faces on a Train", I hope to make this the first installment of a series.

Rally02

Rally02

Occupiers02

Occupiers02

StreetScene01

StreetScene01

StreetScene02

StreetScene02

Thanks for looking. Comments welcome!

The scariest movie EVER!

When I was a kid growing up in Chicago, local TV station WGN aired scary movies late Saturday nights as part of their "Creature Feature" series.

Right from the unforgettable opening montage with the whispered voiceover and twangy guitar riff, you knew some good scares were to follow. For the most part, the films were spinoffs of the "big four" of monsterdom: Frankenstein, the Mummy, the Wolfman, and Dracula. They generally followed a formula that was comforting and predictable and in the end, were more amusing than scary. On one fateful Saturday night, however, after the WGN vaults had been mined for every standard monster movie and their sequels, they aired a little known film called "The Beast With Five Fingers". I rolled my eyes at the title, expecting a cheesy burlap covered sci-fi creature or poorly made up B-list actor, but instead what followed was the most terrifying adventure ever hurled from the screen. What? Don't believe me? I’ll let the trailer captions speak for themselves:

I wasn't easily frightened and until that moment, wasn't prone to sleeplessness or fear of monsters, but for whatever reason, this flick scared the hell out of me. So what was it about the film that caused me to lie awake that night? The plot of the movie was pretty simple: A classical pianist living in a big gothic mansion falls/is pushed downstairs and dies. His hotly disputed will threatens to cut his musicologist/secretary (Peter Lorre) out of any entitlements. After a houseguest is choked to death, it's discovered that one of the dead pianist's hands has been severed and can't be found.

The dismembered hand is subsequently the top suspect in a series of strangulation murders. What made the movie so disturbing to me at the time was the fact that the "monster" in this case was something so familiar and yet possessed of a mind of it's own: truly a "phantom limb". Add to that the creepy performance by Peter Lorre, who is at his snivelly and sinister best.

As it turns out, "The Beast with Five Fingers", made in 1946, was just the first of the infamous "crawling hand" movies. There's even a blog post featuring the "Top 10 severed hand movies", which includes 1963's "The Crawling Hand" and 1981's "The Hand" starring Michael Caine and directed by Oliver Stone. "Thing" from The Addams Family TV show and films was also clearly inspired by "The Beast With Five Fingers". Sadly, this horror semi-classic is rarely seen on TV these days, even in the cable TV Halloween listings. I can only assume that it's considered too traumatizing for broadcast standards, though I think it may be available on Netflix.

Happy Halloween and BEWARE THE HORRIBLE HAND!

Riding the Chicago Skyway

"As I was walking a ribbon of highway I saw above me an endless skyway"

- Woody Guthrie "This Land is Your Land"

This year, with both my kids attending Indiana Universities, I've had the opportunity to make repeated trips along the stretch of tollway known as the Chicago Skyway. The nearly eight mile road was built in 1958, near the end of the Eisenhower administration, which was responsible for building the interstate highway system as we know it today. Before then, the only option for long distance road travel was a patchwork of county roads and smaller highways, the most famous, of course, being Route 66, which ran from Chicago to LA.

So it's fitting, given the era in which it was built, that the Skyway gives off a vibe that reflects that optimistic, Disney Tomorrowland outlook of that period, from the extruded Art Deco block lettering over the entrance to the steel truss bridge spanning the Calumet River.

My first trip on the Skyway was likely at the start of a family vacation, when we made the trip out east for the epic 1964 New York World's Fair. I was too young to remember much about the trip, though I have a vague memory of barfing somewhere along the windy roads of Pennsylvania.

Today, the Skyway entrance looks a bit dingy and dated and the bridge doesn't look quite as majestic as it must have when it was first built. The tollway system, which was supposed to be converted to a freeway system once the roads were paid for, is still around and of course, costlier than ever. The automated i-Pass system, which is supposed to work in tandem with Indiana's i-Zoom system to operate the automated gate with the wave of the magic transponder, frequently has problems, and I'm required to yell the I-Pass number into the tinny 2-way speakers on average once or twice every trip.

I usually make the nine hour roundtrip between Bloomington, IN and Chicago in one day, so by the time I hit the Skyway heading home, it's dark and I'm on my 4th or 5th caffeinated drink. It's just at this point that the tollway splits off into two single lanes flanked by 5-foot-high, shoulderless concrete barriers which weave back and forth. The effect is similar to Luke Skywalker navigating the Death Star trench at the end of Star Wars, and it's always an eye opener no matter what time of day or night. Presumably this is due to some temporary construction rerouting, but it's been this way for years with no sign of a fix.

In the next several years, I expect to make about a dozen or so more trips each way across the Skyway. Maybe a some point during that time, it will be part of that proposed massive infrastructure overhaul that will keep it standing for another millennium or so. Or at least until we finally get those flying cars.

a Pee-wee Herman timeline

PeeWee15

PeeWee15

Sometime during the early 80's, I first saw Pee-wee Herman on the David Letterman show, where he was a recurring guest. At the time, I really didn't know what to make of the character, an invention of improv comic Paul Reubens. But with every appearance, his brand of humor grew on me. The release of "Pee-wee's Big Adventure" made me a fan for life and "Pee-wee's Playhouse" was must viewing for my wife and I and later, for our kids.His recent "renaissance", with a wildly successful broadway show and plans for a new film, was welcome news to me and I'm sure to his many other fans. There were rumors of Johnny Depp taking over the role of Pee-wee in a movie sequel (only SLIGHTLY less ill-conceived than having James Brolin play the part) and there seems to be a grassroots internet movement to draft Jim Parsons ("the Big Bang Theory) as a replacement Pee-wee should that time arrive. As I see it, Reubens is, and will remain, the one and only Pee-wee Herman.