My acrylic and mixed-media on canvas painting, “The Song Came and Went,” was juried into the Images 2009 Central Pennsylvania Festival of the Arts show at State College.
This would be it.
I make stuff, and sometimes I write about it here.
After some soul-searching and cutting of losses, I’ve decided to ditch the marketing of my traditional illustration style in favor of 100% of my twisted illustration style. I still have the traditional portfolio up on my site in case there are any leftovers from past marketing campaigns who still want that style. But for the most part, I haven’t had many takers, and the twisted style seems to have gotten legs.
This is the kind of stuff I want to do most. I know I’ve now eliminated myself from a lot/many/most markets that want more traditional material, but if I’m to stand out of the crowd at all, I have to be true to myself.
This is me.
Hello world.
So last year about this time, we took a trip to Bar Harbor, Maine, to celebrate our fifth wedding anniversary (we were married there at the top of Cadillac Mountain at sunrise). The first time we were there, I had found a piece of slate that I thought was interesting near the beach, and I brought it home with me.
Last year while we were there, we took another trip to the Abbe Museum, and it was there I saw a piece that looked very familiar to the piece I had brought home five years earlier. It was a Native American gorget.
I’ve already contacted the folks at the Abbe Museum to hear their thoughts. I’ve also uploaded a few photos I took of the piece I found, and I’m interested in hearing what other people may think of its origins.
Here’s one of the latest things I’ve been working on. It’s a five-page graphic novel that follows a stumped graphic novelist as he is faced with a deadline “in five pages.” I used graphite (powdered and in pencil form) and Photoshop to get the effects I was looking for. The image posted here is page one.
For those interested in how I’m working it, I had separate postcards made of each page and I’m sending them out to art buyers once a month (for the next five months) with a super-secret invitation-only Web page address on the back of each one. On the site they can download the graphic novel page as a printable pdf.
So I taught Typography last fall, and for a semester-long project, I had the four-credit students work out a font on the FontShop site, www.fontstruct.com. (If you haven’t made it over there yet, it’s a great site where you can create your own working typefaces.) One of the student’s typefaces was even chosen as a “Featured Download.”
Here are links to a few of the final products. I’m very proud…
Kimothy by Kim Franczak
Bloc by Lara Heinz
Hot Mess by Jon Stefaniak
Brickyard by Corey Perkins
Leave them a comment, and let them know what you think!
Check out the blog for the Children’s Department of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh:
http://storypockets.blogspot.com/2008/09/
local-illustarator-nora-thompson.html
They’ve given a little “heads up” to our “Yikes! Wow! Yuck!” book.
Thanks, guys.
(Sorry in advance if I can’t get the punctuation working properly on this blog!)
Well, I finally got a CafePress storefront put together with lots of stuff to show off all these kid’s illos. Here it is:
www.cafepress.com/nora_thompson
Lots of clothes, of course, for big and traditionally-sized kids, a tote bag, teddy bear, pet accessories, journal, mouse pad, mugs, cards, stickers, magnets–whew! I culled the images from both my traditional and twisted styles, and tried especially hard to match up the images with the product I placed them on. Not an easy task!
My favorite? Hmmm. That would probably have to be the Jeeraffe journal (pictured above). I think he fits perfectly in the space.
Take a peek or a long look around, and don’t forget, holidays are just around the corner…
I was pretty startled to hear the news about the falling of Wall Arch at Arches National Park in Utah. Here’s the National Park Service article. We made a trip out there two years ago, and that particular arch was one I remember well because of its proximity to the hiking trail. A stone wall blocked one side and the Wall Arch spanned along the opposite wall with the trail sandwiched between. The structure seemed very delicate at the time, but I got that same impression with most of the arches we saw there. It was a humbling feeling knowing those stones could topple on our heads at any moment.
I’m glad we took so many pictures.
(Arches National Park: Wall Arch 14 June 2006)