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Music taste
Blues, classic rock, classic country, and
Tex-Mex conjunto. |
Favorite drink
Strong, black coffee. |
Favorite quote
"I am still learning."
Michelangelo |
Recommended Books
The
Bible, A
Painted House by John Grisham, The
Business of Graphic Design by Ed Gold. |
Specialty?
Entertainment design, i.e. logos,
posters, and music packaging. |
Dream Project
Art Director for the House
of Blues. |
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| Interview |
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How did you
become a designer/artist?
I've been drawing for as long as I can remember.
Growing up, I was particularly interested in drawing
portraits, and I was pretty good at it. I also
have a love for music, especially playing drums.
As a young teen I started a garage band in the
late 1960s. Because I was an artist, the task
to create the band logo and publicity materials
always fell to me. In 1974, the band I was in
moved to England and was signed to Word/ABC Dunhill
Records. I co-designed the cover of our first
album with a professional graphic designer in
London. I think it was probably then that I realized
that it was actually possible to make a living
doing something I really loved. The band broke
up and returned to the United States in 1976.
I was 21, married, and had a newborn daughter
to take care of at the time. I knew from experience
that I wouldn't be able to make much of a living
playing music, so I looked to graphic art as a
possible career. I met with the art director for
a local newspaper and showed him the design work
I had done for my band, and he hired me on as
a graphic artist based on that. Where
are you from originally?
I was born in San Marcos, Texas, and raised on
a farm near the small farming community of Uhland,
Texas. Uhland is about 30 miles southwest of Austin.
There is a large population of German immigrant
descendants in the area. I am a third generation
Texan of German descent now living in the
wilds of Oregon. Growing up in central Texas,
I was exposed to a wide variety of cultures
German communities, Tex-Mex food and art, country
music, and rednecks. Who were
your main influences growing up?
Andrew
Wyeth and Edward
Hopper have had an influence on my fine art.
I have also done a lot of cartooning through the
years, and I would have to say that R.
Crumb was an influence.
Growing up in the 1960s, especially in the psychedelic
era of the late 1960s, had a big influence on
me graphically. There were some very talented
artists who were skilled in hand lettering whose
work showed up on music posters and record albums
of that era. I can remember spending hours trying
to perfect my own hand lettering and inking techniques.
Did you go to art school/college
for design or are you self-taught?
I'm self taught. As I mentioned earlier, the first
graphic job I was hired for was as a graphic artist
for a San Marcos, Texas, newspaper. It was great
experience really because in addition to designing
all of the ads for the publication, I also did
my own camera work and some of my own typesetting.
It was a down and dirty, graphic boot camp of
sorts. I worked there for about two years then
moved to Los Angeles, California, where I got
a job with an agency in West Hollywood.
After a two-year stay in California, my wife and
I moved our young family back to Texas where I
worked for several commercial printing companies
before striking out on my own in 1986. As a freelancer,
I worked for a variety of Austin, Texas, advertising
agencies and book and magazine publishers.
I started publishing my own magazine, Austin
Blues Monthly, in 1994. It was a newspaper
tabloid format and was distributed throughout
central Texas. In 1997, I started up another publication
called True Believer. It started as a local
tabloid and evolved into a glossy four-color magazine
that was distributed nationally. It was incredibly
hard, but at the same time it was a great time
of growth artistically for me. Any
advice or tips to novice designers?
I think you really have to immerse yourself in
as many different subjects and experiences as
possible, which will in turn give your design
real depth. My interests vary wildly, from fine
art to photography to music to science. I spend
a lot of time at bookstores pouring through books
and magazines on graphic design as well as devoting
reading time to my other hobbies and interests.
An artist may consider getting involved with a
graphic design forum. I have really benefited
as a member of the HOW
Magazine design forum. Getting to know other
designers (even if it is just virtually), asking
questions, and having artists around the world
you can interact with on a daily basis is valuable
to me. What has been the most
rewarding and challenging project you have worked
on?
I think publishing my own magazine was by far
the most challenging and rewarding thing I have
done to date. It was up to me each month to plan
out each issue, gather the articles, design the
issue, deliver it to the printer, and then see
that it got distributed properly. It was a great
experience, and I learned a lot. What
is your favorite design piece? Why?
A favorite of my own work? None. I always look
back on something I've done in the past and think
about how much better I could have done it. It's
the rare piece that I can actually sit back and
think, "Yeah, that's the way you do it".
What American artist inspires you most?
Gerard
Huerta is an incredible logo designer. Texas
illustrator Tom
Curry has been a favorite of mine for years.
I have also just recently rediscovered the artwork
of Jesus
Helguera, an artist born in 1910 in Mexico.
I remember, as a kid, seeing his calendar art
of Aztec kings and warriors hanging up in various
Hispanic business establishments in central Texas.
What unlocks your creativity?
That's the million dollar question, isn't it?
I think constantly exposing yourself to a variety
of interests will play a major role in the development
of your creativity. You never know what little
thing you filed away in your mind will come floating
to the surface at just the right time. |
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| All images have been
used with permission. All images are copyrighted
and strictly for educational and viewing purposes. |
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Lake
Austin Blues Festival
Logo |
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20-Twenty
Systems, Inc.
Logo |
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Nari Records
Logo |
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Blue Fingers
Acrylic Painting |
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Cityscape
Vacations
Logo |
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Roadhouse Revival Radio Show
Logo |
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Becca
CD Design |
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Red Fence Farms
Logo |
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