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Archive for May, 2009

Sunday Mailbag

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

Q: When drawing live caricatures (theme park) how do you decide whether to have a couple or just a single person be drawn in the 3/4 view or frontal? If it’s a couple do you draw the woman first, or does is not matter? Also, do you have or can you put up a video of you doing a live theme park caricature to show us how your technique is done?

Since it’s officially the theme park caricature season I thought these might be some good mailbag questions today.

When drawing live caricatures (theme park) how do you decide whether to have a couple or just a single person be drawn in the 3/4 view or frontal?

When working live I almost never draw a subject at a true frontal or a true 3/4 angle. The 100% frontal angle is boring and makes the nose very difficult to draw convincingly because it is protruding at the viewer and it lacks hard edges to define its form. A true 3/4 angle only works for a single person, or for one out of a couple. Both subjects in a two person drawing at the same 3/4 angle looks like a police line up. I cheat the face angle to a slight 3/4 one way or the other in most cases. The only time I draw a true frontal is with people who have very round faces (no cheekbones to define the face contours) and small features. That type of face demands a Dick Tracy “Littleface” treatment that is emphasized by the frontal angle. I will do a true 3/4 angle on some faces if they have the nose for it. Very interesting noses work great for 3/4 views, because the nose is very much the focus of a 3/4 drawing, given that the contours of the face are no longer as relevant.

If it’s a couple do you draw the woman first, or does is not matter?

It does not matter in terms of sex. I always draw left to right, so the subject on the left is always first. I just draw them as they are naturally seated, because in my opinion couples sit down in whatever order they are used to sitting, and it’s better to draw them in that order. However, it’s easier to draw the shorter of the two first because I always put that person in the foreground with the taller behind them. That would usually means drawing the woman first, but not always. Personally I think it’s more important to draw the natural way they have seated themselves as opposed to always drawing the woman (or shortest person as the case may be) on the left. It drives me crazy when a live caricaturist draws the person sitting on the right in front of them on the left of their paper… it certainly confuses the people watching until the drawing progresses far enough they realize the switch. Likewise it drives me crazy when an artist tells their models to switch places after they have seated themselves so he/she can have whoever they prefer on the left. The late, great Gary Fasen used to do that all the time. There’s nothing wrong with it, I guess, but it is just a pet peeve of mine.

Also, do you have or can you put up a video of you doing a live theme park caricature to show us how your technique is done?

Probably not, as that would necessitate setting up a camera at the theme park, getting the customers to agree to let me do it, and a lot of other hassles. Also, it would be tough to get it to show up properly on a video. I’d like to do it and many people have asked about it, so I will try to figure it out one of these days. Come to think of it, I have an older video showing me doing a number of celebrity sample caricatures we used to use as a sales tool at some of my indoor locations. That was done using some time-lapse fades so it’s not really a start to finish video, but maybe I can find it and transfer it to YouTube if people would be interested in seeing it.

Thanks to Anthony Pagano for the question. If you have a question you want answered for the mailbag about cartooning, illustration, MAD Magazine, caricature or similar, e-mail me and I’ll try and answer it here!

Freelancer Video Gold

Saturday, May 30th, 2009

I received this link courtousey of fellow caricature illustrator Patrick LaMontagne‘s blog. The funniest thing about this video, which depicts “real world” equivalents to some all too typical examples of client/creative freelancer interactions, is that it’s basically spot on with some of the things clients occasionally try to pull.

Fortunately for me I have a lot of terrific clients that treat me as professionally as I treat them. I’d be lying, however, if I said some of the things in this video do not remind me of a few past clients.

On the Drawing Board 5/29/09

Friday, May 29th, 2009

After the intensity that was the book job I had prior to Memorial Day, I actually don’t mind having a light board right now. I’ve got a small project for MAD #501 to finish up, and then no other jobs pending. Just in time for me to turn to my theme park operations and give them a little attention.

I just finished up this poster job for The Marlin Co., which they allow me to share on the blog right away. Due to some of the layers being merged and then saved I don’t have a copy of just the inks, but here is the pencil sketch and final:

weatherman_sketch

The client wanted me to lose the cue cards on the girl in the lower right, and make her more frantically pointing at the window to show the weatherman his mistake. Hmmm… the guy must work in Minnesota.

weatherman
Click for a closer look…

Pittsburgh ToonSeum Benefit & My Art Show

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

I think I have mentioned this before but as it’s not been officially announced quite yet it was probably only in passing, but the ToonSeum in Pittsburgh will be having a show of my artwork in August and September of this year. It should be formally announced sometime in June, but the show will feature about 25 to 30 of my MAD and other originals, plus work from some of the artists who have influenced me. I am busy pasting up text and graphics onto the original inks from MAD pages so they are readable, as that always adds to the art… it’s not as much fun staring at blank word balloons. There will be an opening reception and I will teach a “master class” on caricature as well on the openeing weekend. Hopefully the book I just got done doing (which I hope to get the go ahead to talk about and start promoting soon) will be out and I will be able to sign those. Right now the opening recpetion weekend is looking like Aug. 1st and 2nd.

I will have more info and details once the Toonseum does the official announcement.

Speaking of the Toonseum, here’s another reminder that they are having their annual fundraiser next Friday.

From Toonseum:

Friday June 5th:

KA-BLAM! A party to benefit the ToonSeum.

Join us Friday June 5th from 7pm-11pm, at Verno Studios on the Southside to support the ToonSeum, Pittsburgh’s Museum of Cartoon Art.

Featuring live music by the Whips, DJ Raw-Z, Dr. Sketchy’s Anti-Art School, live cartooning, the opportunity to bid on one of a kind cartoon art and unique experiences, free comics and much more!

Tickets are just 35 dollars online at brownpapertickets.com

KA-BLAM! by Ron Frenz and Tom Scioli

Entertainment and Activities

Live music by The Whips!

Performance by burlesque entertainer Paige Turner

Music and dancing with DJ Raw-Z

Live cartooning

Dr. Sketchy’s Anti-Art School Life Drawing sessions

Make your own superhero mask

Free comic books

and introducing- The Megaton Martini! Woo!

One of Kind Auction Items

Original art from Dan Piraro (Bizarro), Molly Crabapple, Mike Peters (MotherGoose and Grimm), Wayno, Rob Rogers and many others. Production art from popular shows including Sesame Street, Dragon Tales, and Yogi Bear.

Unique experiences including dinner for six at Gypsy Cafe with filmmaker and Pittsburgh icon Rick Sebak.

Your cartoon portrait drawn by MAD Magazine artist Tom Richmond.

Bad girls night out, tattoo, and a night at the roller derby.

Cartooning workshop for 10 people.

Comedy workshop and time on stage at a comedy club.

and lots more one of a kind opportunities and items.

Get your tickets now and support
the ToonSeum!

http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/63943


Can’t attend but you would still like to support the cartoon arts?
We welcome your donation:
The ToonSeum
10 Children’s Way
Pittsburgh, PA
15212

I donated a caricature drawn by me of the winning bidder (big deal!).  If you are in the Pittsburgh area stop in and bid on some of the original cartoon art and other great items to help support ToonSeum.

Sketch o’the Week

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

© 2009 Tom Richmond

This one’s a little different. A quick study of a jockey and race horse from a picture of the latest Kentucky Derby.

Reuben Report- Sunday

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

Sundays at the Reuben Weekend are always the most laid back and relaxed of the event. Any pressure of the shows, awards, speakers or other parts of the weekend are behind us and it’s time to just kick back and enjoy the company.

This year NCS luminary Cathy Guisewite generously opened her nearby home to the members for a backyard picnic dinner. She allowed everybody to tour her home, studio and guest house while the grounds were transformed into party area with catered Mexican food and cocktails. Needless to say, as one of the most successful cartoonists in the last several decades, her home was beautiful.

We had an opportunity to see her studio, which she had set up with a step by step of how she does her cartoons.

studio
Cathy’s doppleganger is frustrated with work today

studio2

Here’s where Cathy draws her dailies

Here’s Cathy’s steps to doing a daily cartoon:

step1

step2

step3

step4

step5

step6

step7

cathys_lightable
A close up of her light table

Sunday’s are also the day the sketchbooks come out and the cartoonists do drawings for other cartoonists, their spouses, kids, etc. The Lovely Anna has many scrapbook albums she has done over the years, and is not shy about accosting people to draw for her.

cedric

Minnesota illustrator Cedric Hohnstadt

mowder

Hallmark artist David Mowder

hambrock

“The Brilliant Mind of Edison Lee” creator John Hambrock

goldstein

Animator Gary Goldstein

looseparts

“Loose Parts” panel cartoonist Dave Blazek

chatfield

“Ginger Meggs” Aussie cartoonist Jason Chatfield

the_keanes

Jeff and Melinda Keane

Cathy took a page from Mell Lazarus‘s book and had a giant urn and a smaller scale toy piano for the cartoonists to doodle on.

drawing_on_the_urn

Me drawing on Cathy’s urn

I also got roped into doing the “blindfold” drawing that NCS photomaster David Folkman and company have been getting people to do for the last couple of years for the publication “Hogan’s Alley”. Patterned after a challenge some notable cartoonists did in the 40′s where they had to live up to their claim they could draw their characters “blindfolded”, and they were asked to do just that. They have artists do a drawing of their cartoon character blindfolded on the left side of a page, and then do the same thing without the blindfold on the right. Of course I don’t really have a “character”, so I drew Alfred E. Neuman. I really hate drawing Alfred cold because it’s very difficult to draw him right without looking at a picture of him… he’s got a bizarre asymmetry to his face that defies easy reproduction. I did it anyway… the blindfolded one turned out better.

blindfolded

Me doing a bad Alfred drawing

with_cathy

Us with our generous host, Cathy Guisewite

After a wonderful afternoon at Cathy’s we bussed back to the hotel and went up to a private event at a nightclub next door called “Level 3″, where we were treated to the sounds of Pulitzer prize winning cartoonist Michael Ramirez‘s band (who were fantastic) followed by the traditional karaoke.

ncs_boys

Steve Silver, me and Keelan Parham

ncs_ladies

Lovely NCS ladies Melinda Keane, Barbie Parham, Heidi Silver and Anna

houghton

Jay Kennedy Scholarship winner Chris Houghton and his girl friday Kassandra

karoke

Karaoke NCS style

Another fantastic Reubens weekend. Many thanks to the board and especially to the hard working Jeff Keane for doing so much to make it so enjoyable.

Monday Mailbag

Monday, May 25th, 2009

Q: What happens when you are headed back from a Reuben awards weekend trip, and have absolutely no time, between packing and checking out and getting to the airport and going through security and eventually getting all the way back to Minnesota, but you need to do a blog post? Do you shamelessly cop out by posting a meaningless answer to a completely made up question?

Yes.

Thanks to A.E. Neuman for the question. If you have a question you want answered for the mailbag about cartooning, illustration, MAD Magazine, caricature or similar, e-mail me and I’ll try and answer it here!

Pictures from Reuben Awards Evening

Sunday, May 24th, 2009

As promised here are a frew pictures from the awards dinner last night at the Renaissance Hollywood Hotel in Los Angeles:

Bill and Jerry
Bill Amend (Foxtrot) and Jerry Van Amerongen (Ballard Street)

Barbie and Keelan Parham
Good friends Barbie and Keelan Parham

The Richmonds and the Hungaskis
The Lovely Anna and I with new member James Hungaski and his wife Kelly

Steve and Heidi
More good friends Steve and Heidi Silver

Jeff Keane
NCS President Jeff Keane (The Family Circus)

Mell, Melinda and Bil
Mell Lazarus and Bil Keane (with Melinda Keane) accept their
NCS Hall of Fame “Gold Key” awards

Sam Viviano
Sam Viviano accepts his award for the Magazine Illustration division

Dave Coverly
Dave Coverly and his Reuben for “Outstanding Cartoonist of the Year”

Sam and Me
Sam Viviano and me

Reuben Report- Saturday

Sunday, May 24th, 2009

2009 Reuben Awards

The 2009 Reuben award dinner took place last night, preceeded by several seminars and tht traditional cocktail party. I’ll post some pictures a bit later today, but here is the list of winners:

TELEVISION ANIMATION

  • Sandra Equihua and Jorge Gutierrez – Creators – “El Tigre: The Adventures of Manny Rivera”

FEATURE ANIMATION

  • Nicolas Marlet – Character Designer – “Kung Fu Panda”

BOOK ILLUSTRATION

  • Mike Lester- Cool Daddy Rat

NEWSPAPER ILLUSTRATION

  • Mark Marturello

GAG CARTOONS

  • Mort Gerberg

GREETING CARDS

  • Jem Sullivan

NEWSPAPER COMIC STRIPS

  • Mark Tatulli – “Lio”

NEWSPAPER PANEL CARTOONS

  • Mark Parisi- “Off the Mark”

MAGAZINE FEATURE/MAGAZINE ILLUSTRATION

  • Sam Viviano

EDITORIAL CARTOONS

  • Michael Ramirez

ADVERTISING ILLUSTRATION

  • Craig McKay

COMIC BOOKS

  • Cyril Pedrosa- THREE SHADOWS

The Reuben award for “Outstanding Cartoonist of the Year” went to Dave Coverly (Speed Bump).

Live Reuben Twittering

Saturday, May 23rd, 2009

Just a reminder I will be twittering “live” as the NCS Reubens as the winners are announced. You can follow me on Twitter via the link on the right.

 

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