Monday, July 4, 2016

Week of Strangeness, Upon Being Adrift and Nap time

Been a strange week. Had to process a lot. I survived a layoff at my place of employment, watched what I posted on a movie site turn into an ego thing (note to self, self stay away from movie sites...it is the new religion) and finished the piece below.


I am quite happy with the piece, I will have to spend the rest of the week doing cleanup to get it ready to be printable.  I also need to add a few finishing touches to it.

Finishing a piece is like leaving a relationship. Now I feel rather adrift. Deciding what I will commit to for the next couple of months is rather overwhelming in a sense. (it takes me a couple of months to finish a piece) I am sure the inspiration will come, when I try to force it though, it never works.

So in the meantime I have been attempting the social networking thing. I am now on twitter @ezekiel_crowe . I am not a pro at the # hashtag formula yet, in fact I don't know if it makes that much of a difference. I am still in the testing phase.

For those of you that like my work, it means a lot to me. Thank you.

Now I think I will feed the cats and take a long nap.



Sunday, May 29, 2016

Pen and Ink Doesn't Want To Fade Away...

I have had a love affair with pen and ink since I was a small lad. I think mostly due to the fact I grew up on the black and white comics of my youth such as Creepy and Eerie. They were published by Warren Comics and also included titles like Famous Monsters and Vampirella.  A note here, Vampirella was created by Frank Frazetta and became a guilty pleasure for many a hormone afflicted teen aged boy.

Uncle Creepy by Bernie Wrightson
On the right is Uncle Creepy drawn by Bernie Wrightson, whose work in those publications really inspired me. I believe the first story I read that Wrightson did the artwork was based on Edgar Allen Poe's The Black Cat. Other artists such as Reed Crandall really educated me on how to use line work. I have to confess much of my art instruction came from those magazines by trying to emulate their work.

Though back in those days drawing materials were not in ready supply and I practiced on typing paper with felt tips. I knew back then that the only thing I wanted to be in this world was a comic book artist.

Although it never happened, I don't regret a single minute I spent by myself drawing odd creatures and super heroes like the Shadow and the Batman until my eyes grew tired.
Cousin Eerie by Bernie Wrightson
As I grew older I watched as the artists that inspired me in my youth grew artistically. Wrightson's Frankenstein opened a new world for me in what pen and ink could do. In the introduction he mentioned Franklin Booth and that sent me on an odyssey to find out all I could about how to render in pen and ink.

Now I have always been a book shop hound and always had a small library of art books. Though I took art in High School, my instructors didn't know what to do with me so they usually sent me off into a corner and told me to do what I wanted. So most of my instruction came from those books. For me, the book Rendering In Pen and Ink became my bible. 

Rendering In Pen and Ink
The volume was filled with examples by early 20th Century illustrators including Booth. For me, pen and ink was sort of an alchemy, a mysterious use of line, shadow and form. I was awe of the mastery of many of the artists and set out on a quest to learn as much as I could. I moved from felt tips to crow quill and later to technical pens. I also played with ballpoints and loved them but was dismayed to find out that they are not light fast and will fade in direct sunlight whereas India ink will not.

Below is an example of my ballpoint work.



Memento Mori Ballpoint



Anymore I stick with Unipens and Microns, they are the best disposable replacement for technical pens and not nearly as expensive. They are also light fast and do not come with the hassle of cleaning that technical pens come with. They also come in very fine sizes, which I love because I am obsessed with detail.

Below is a piece done with Micron pen inspired by Franklin Booth.

Charon done in Micron Pen

I get the inspiration that Wrightson obtained from Booth, his work inspired me as well. The way he depicts forms with lines seem almost effortless, graceful. Below is a video of a compilation of his work. 



Pen and Ink is far from being a dead medium, though there are many that will tell you different. Facebook is riddled with them and I will highlight some of them here and there in this blog.

Pen and Ink will not fade away either in the sun or with time...it endures.



Monday, May 2, 2016

Call Your Mom...

May is here. One would think that Spring would bring renewal, and usually it does, unless you live in Oklahoma. Spring in Oklahoma is rather schizophrenic, one day she may be mild with a sunny smile and the next day she is raging with hail storms and tornadoes.

The past few years have been wondrously strange and also sadly tragic.  Last September I lost my Father to Stage 4 pancreatic cancer and I don't know how long my brother will be able to continue his fight against a form of blood cancer. It is wearing him down, I know. But I will say this, even though my brother and I seldom got along, he is putting up a good fight. No one would blame him if he cracked under the pressure. Chemo does strange things to the mind. I know.

I know this though, my Mother has been the epitome of Grace during all of this. She watched her husband of over sixty years die horribly of cancer. She watched, and continues to do so, both her children go through cancer. She herself has been through cancer at three times. It hasn't destroyed her, she is more like a crushed rose that gives off more of a fragrance the more it is pressed. Though she may give off the impression of being delicate or fragile, for what she has been through in her life and the harsh times she had as a child, she refuses to become bitter. Right now, I imagine she has made coffee, perched at the kitchen table, drinking a cup as she gazes out the picture window to see if she can catch site of a robin, a squirrel or the cotton tails that come to frolic in the back yard.

A still moment of Grace and Serenity.

She is always quick to laugh and eager to put one to work.

I was fortunate to have the Mother I have. Though I have always been too dark for her taste, I once told her that she had given birth to Stephen King. She scoffs at that. Though it did take her a few years to accept my taste and my predilection for black shirts. But when she did, she would horde all she could at garage sales and told me one day that if this is what I was going to do, that I might as well start wearing black jeans as well.

She also struggled with my tastes in art, film etc. When the struggle was over she was happy that I didn't turn out to be a serial killer. She just wanted me to be happy to be who I am.

When I struggled with chemical addiction in my younger years and went into the chemical dependency ward at Norman State Hospital back in the '80's, she visited me every weekend. It broke her heart to find out some of the things I have involved myself in, the kind of clubs I used to frequent and the type of people I hung around with.  But even so, she never gave up on me.

Since then I haven't had a drink in over twenty years. Not even when I was diagnosed with cancer and had a severe breakdown after chemotherapy. During those times she always believed in me.

When I was going through chemo there wasn't much she could do. I was living in an old crumbling house that was falling apart and wearing a the "pack" that pumped chemo into me for 48 hours every two weeks. I got down to 115 lbs. Yet being in her eighties she would come over on the weekend and do dishes, pick up laundry and bring me something to eat.  At times she would drive me to the infusion room and sit with me for four hours as a cock-tale of chemicals were pumped into me.

She tolerated my moods. She understood, she had been through it herself. She also understood that it was the hardest thing to do when I returned to work. She also understood when I broke down afterwards. It was her that told me people wouldn't understand, some may talk it about it, even gossip. But it was her that told me that my strength would return. She has a lot of faith in prayer.

When I was told that I was crazy that I felt like I was cursed because I returned to work, quit my job because I knew too much and was suddenly made aware that I was a liability because of the knowledge I discovered, I was afraid to tell her. I didn't want to fail her expectations. I didn't want her to know, which had been already riddled with so much pain and disappointment, because I thought it would shatter her.

It didn't. In fact she shared the sentiment, she admitted that she felt cursed after chemo because going out of such a dark valley you rise to a great high then crash severely. She also suggested I might find different people to confide in.

When my Father was diagnosed with cancer, he chose not to do surgery or chemo. It was too advanced and he was much too old to withstand the treatment.  I don't think you would find anyone more hardworking or tougher than my old man. His passing was not an easy one. He was on steroids that made him angry and then morphine that caused him hallucinations. It was during that time that I saw just how strong my Mother was.

She would go about picking up after him, when he began to hallucinate she would talk to him until he came back into reality. She stayed with him until the end. Slept at the hospice over night many times and when he finally passed, I thought she would fall apart.

She didn't.

So am I a Mother's boy?

Maybe so. but in the immortal words of Merle Haggard, "Mamma tried to raise me better but her pleading I denied, I have only myself to blame because Mamma tried..."

Judge me if you will...but yeah, I care about my Mom.

And she totally accepts her inky clothed son that draws dark pictures, though she would probably preferred me becoming an architect, minister etc. She is good with what I became.

Call your Mom's....Mother's Day is near.


Monday, April 11, 2016

Tempus Fugit, Going Down the Traditional Road...

I finished the piece below recently. I wrestled with it for sometime. It went through a lot of phases until the finished project. In the process I learned a lot, pushed the envelope on a few things and challenged myself a bit.

Tempus Fugit is Latin for Time Flies.  It was done with Unipens, 0.005-0.08 as well as some graphite.

Tempus Fugit

I have decided to return and stay with traditional art for a couple of reasons. One was due to a phone conversation I had with a professional photographer who shared with me that even though photography has gone digital, if you want permanence, film will last longer. He explained that digital has a life span of about twenty years, the prints done from digital on ink jet printers will fade with time whereas prints done with film stock are still around and over a century old.

He also explained that with film, you will always have the negative, with digital there are huge issues with storage, data loss and the life expectancy in what you store the data in. A hard drive has a life expectancy of about four to five years, which means data never stays in the same place for long and is always on the move.

In matters of doing artwork, which is my second reason, there is no original with digital. I am not anti-digital, just doesn't interest me anymore. Don't get me wrong, I love playing with digital but I know fully what I am creating is temporary and lacks the organic feel that appeals to me. Digital is also quicker, easier to correct mistakes and cleaner. I also use Photoshop to create borders (which I am drifting away from) or to adjust the curves for prints to bring out solid darks. So I am not being a Luddite out of some sort of traditional ethic, I simply find traditional more challenging. I dig that.

But it is an interesting debate, digital or traditional. Both have pluses and both have minuses. For now, traditional just seems to fit me and my style more. Besides it also has to fall into the category of the type of artwork you are doing. I am all too sure if I was a commercial artist, digital would be the way to go. It is quick and efficient. Me, I am a doodler with an attitude.

Also I have discovered, mainly from Facebook, that pen and ink is far from being declared dead. There are many heavily talented and skilled pen and ink artists showcasing their work on Facebook. In that sense, Facebook has become a haven for me. I get inspired and awed by much of the talent.

Which brings me to another problem that I am wrestling with, ballpoint. I absolutely love ballpoint but ballpoints are not light fast and will fade over time. So it looks like I will be wielding Unipens for sometime until ballpoints come out with light fast ink.

By the way, if you notice the winged clock in the piece is broken.

I guess crows aren't concerned with time.










Saturday, March 19, 2016

On Boyhood Heroes That Refuse to Fade and the World Needs More Pennyworth...

Ever since I picked up my first issue of the Batman I have been a fan and have to admit that I still am. I am what one would consider today, a fanboi. That has not faded over time.
As you can see, the evidence of my fanboiness is pretty damning.


For me, the Batman is the Clint Eastwood of the super hero world simply because he isn't one and he is self made. The gadgets, the martial arts skill, the intellectual detective psyche and being frankly mysterious enough to make a ninja look like a street mime.

Yet underneath it all resides a certain admiration for a character, one that actually I see as more of an obtainable role model than the Batman himself, because let's be honest, only Bruce Wayne can be Batman. The character I am referring to is Alfred Pennyworth.

He is loyal, his attitude is not self serving, he is a nurturer, self sufficient, resourceful and humble. He doesn't desire center stage,  he keeps the stage maintained.  He is not hung up on his masculinity to where he has to prove himself, instead he is quiet and subtle but definitely can take care of himself. He is well read, represents the finer things in life, yet is not afraid of getting dirty.  In other words he can change the oil in the Batmobile and then read Dickens to Master Dick.  (pun unintentional). He is the quintessential gentleman.  Alfred is not just a "stuffed shirt"...he is much more layered than that.

He will dust, do the laundry, adjust the crooked paintings in Wayne Manor, arrange any social gatherings for Master Wayne as well as run a DNA profile on the Batcomputer, run a background check on an unsub and call in all his MI 5 connections for information to assist in breaking a case.

He can send a burglar packing while quoting Tennyson.

And yes, he is just the butler, but Alfred would not be anything else but the butler. He is the moral compass that centers the Batman and a mentor that is as wise as any Greek Philosopher.

Yes I am excited about Batman versus Superman...not just because it is a Batman movie and it will get me to the movie theater, but because Jeremy Irons is playing Alfred.

I am a huge Jeremy Irons fan ever since I saw him play twins in David Cronenberg's Dead Ringers. When Mr. Irons plays a character that is a character that I have a hidden admiration for...well that is an odd kind of kismet for me. A combination that clicks in the cosmic gears perhaps once in a few decades.

So yeah, I am in...

The world needs more Pennyworth.

People that are not all about themselves..that are quiet, supporting characters that actually are often surprisingly more nuanced than the casual eye sees.

You know the paradox behind having admiration for a character like Alfred would mean to Alfred himself? He most likely be annoyed and uncomfortable with the thought. Alfred Pennyworth doesn't strike me as a character that seeks to be admired. Perhaps that is his saving Grace.

Thursday, March 17, 2016

Early Spring, Clockworks and Nightmare Batman Demands That You Draw...

I have already seen a robin so I know it is official, Spring is early. Which mean allergies, I have already got kicked in the head with a bout that put me in bed for a day, and lawn work.  I have already prepped Ulysses, my riding lawn mower, changed the oil and charged the battery.

I am already thinking a small pepper garden this year which means I have become pretty domesticated.

I am still wrestling with the piece below. I am also learning a lot of lessons. Firstly, planning out the entire drawing is really a better way to go, instead I ending up changing the design elements as I went. It has become a jigsaw puzzle as a result, but I am still determined to finish it.

Second, this is the last time I use a large amount of black for negative space.

Nightmare Batman demands you draw...

From this piece you can gather that I have an obsession with spring and gear driven time pieces. You would be correct in that assumption. I ordered this kit from Ukraine Gears on Amazon. I stained the frame before assembling. Though it looks nice, it really is only a 15 minute timer, not a clock. It is a nice conversation piece, but barely functional.  It was a fun kit and I don't regret the cash spent on it.



As of late, as Spring ambles in with all her colorful nuances...Poe seems to be spending more time with Hobbes.  I think they conspire...


Friday, February 19, 2016

Upon Changing Horses in the Middle of the Stream, Durer and I Can't Dance...

Friday  morning. The cats are fed, they are lounging about satisfied. Just finished filling out the disclosure agreements to have my medical records transferred to another medical institute. I am attempting to change Oncologists. I am also hoping that I am not changing horses in the middle of the stream. It is just at this stage, I want to make wiser choices. In a sense I am setting up a line of defense. Or to put it simply, I am taking care of myself.

Lately I haven't been sleeping well. I think the change has caused me to become a bit anxious. It wasn't an easy decision, one that I have been pondering for sometime. I am also beginning to cultivate a support group, I joined the Cancer Survivor's Network.  We will see where this leads me.

Creative impulses are returning again. I don't know where they will take me. That is part of the mystery. I am totally out of sync with the art world, if anything I do archaic art. I kind of like that term...archaic with a touch of esoteric mystery.

I blame Durer.

Melancholia by Durer

Sadly I don't think illustrators or comic book artists will ever be taken seriously by the established Art World. Personally I find that somewhat sad but also rather liberating. Besides the established art world is fickle, subjective and prone to fashion. Although anyone who makes in it, becomes recognized, has actually done a remarkable thing, it is simply a tight wire and the fall from its heights is devastating to many an aspiring artist.

Anymore art is more a healing factor for me. If other people enjoy my work, then I am pleased. But at heart I am a child with a pen drawing what pleases me. If anything my artwork is simply eccentric. I am not out to create political art, highly intellectual art or any form of great art. Just eccentric art.

Though I have won awards, been offered to do work for publications and was told by my instructor at Oklahoma University that I could go far in this field...I don't have the emotional makeup. I have accepted this about myself. I also understand how people can, with good intentions, set up people to fail. The art world is for those of strong fortitude. You have to wear many hats.

Me, I forget where I put my car keys sometimes, let alone my hat.

Though when the Big Sleep finally does arrive, I fully intend to share with him a chest full of writings and drawings.  I dubbed them Sacraments in Silence. Art from a somewhat childish and eccentric ego.

I started this Facebook page to showcase my artwork. Obviously I am not as prolific as I like to be. Sometimes it takes literally months for me to complete a piece. Between work, slacking off at the XBox or PC and dealing with health issues, I would consider myself at heart, lazy. It is not that I want to be, it is just the creative fire hits and misses and the consuming motivation is like a wave that tosses to and fro.

I am working to change this. Not that I believe I have anything great to say in my art or anything profound to share, the truth is drawing keeps me out of trouble and gives a bit more substance to my existence.

I don't consider myself mentally ill, unstable at times, yes, perhaps I am a functioning mental patient in a very structured world that has sharp edges. I also read a lot of psychology, a lot of spiritual material and philosophy. Most of my youth I considered myself on a journey, now I consider myself more in the role of an illuminator and scribe with a day job.

And if you think I consider myself anything special...this is my mantra below...



 


Sunday, February 14, 2016

On Yelping in the Woods, New Age Guilt and Valentine's Day for the UnLovelies....

Sometimes there are moments, days actually, that I feel like doing this. Walking out into some snow covered woods and letting out a "yelp" of thanks. Anyone that has walked through a disease that could kill you and walked out the other side might recognize such gratitude.



In my own retrospect, cancer not only teaches us how to live, but how to die. I may or may not make it to age 80 or so. In reality I could get hit by a bus, have a piano dropped on my head by the Laurel and Hardy Moving Company or I may not. Or cancer may come back.

But I will die. People like cancer survivors are more aware of their mortality I suppose. Their senses are tweaked a bit. You don't know how many times when the subject has come up with people that either had cancer or has had a friend or family member that went through cancer and treatment I have heard, "they just weren't the same afterwards."

My usual reply is, "it's damn hard to come back from cancer treatment." The treatment wants to trick cancer into believing your body is dying.  You literally, not metaphorically have walked through the Valley of the Shadow of Death.

Learning to take care of yourself after cancer treatment isn't easy, in fact it is damn hard but it also can be rewarding.  The emotional roller coaster that you experience after chemotherapy has had volumes written on it.  There is also survivor's guilt. Why did people like David Bowie or Alan Rickman with all their wealth and access to medical care die and the average Joe like me survive?

Cancer doesn't play fair, it is blind to all this. It doesn't care how rich you are, how successful you are, your reputation, your social status or if you have a 1000 followers on Facebook. Cancer is insidious like that. So any guilt one might feel or is directed towards himself/herself is in reality groundless.

Cancer is simply no respecter of persons. Some people cannot comprehend this. It is alright, I always thought cancer was something that happened to someone else.

I also did not know but there is a term by Physicians that they have labeled "New Age Guilt". Below is a video where a Physician, who is also a cancer survivor, discussing this attitude where a brother blames his brother for not "thinking right" or "wrong thinking" (ie being negative) for his brother's cancer returning after being in remission.



I could tell you things that were and continue to be said to me since my return from cancer but it would be pointless. Much of it is simply ignorance. You simply cannot expect others really to understand and in most cases it is fruitless to even try. You move on. You also learn to avoid manipulative and controlling people. Your life just simply isn't the same.

I think you learn a deeper sense of "reverence." In that reverence you realize everyone has to figure or understand things on their own terms. Although we are all unique, sometimes what we go through is not. But those who have not gone through the grinder of cancer, it is really not their ordeal nor should you even try to convey it to them. All you can do is simply pray they don't experience it.

You learn to be a bit more selfish. In other ways you learn to become more compassionate.  You learn to love the unlovely. Those that have been neglected and left behind by family and friends usually because their disease became too much for them to deal with. I don't say this to shame them, I know all too well that we are hard to deal with and not everyone has the fortitude to be a caregiver. Part of this is simply the society we have become. But you, you who are left behind should feel no shame either. Your path have simply become different.  You simply hope for the day that somehow your path will cross with the path of the living again. Until then it may seem that you are lost in the woods. Enjoy the woods you are in..."Yelp".


A suggestion, become a bit more selfish and self caring. If you are going through treatment you will not feel like that. To those that have to deal with going through treatment alone...I know what that is all about. I am not talking about friends coming over and seeing how you are doing, I am talking being alone late at night wrapped in the embrace of chemicals flushing out of your body. I know how that is. It is the "Dark Night of the Soul."

So to all you unlovelies, since it is Valentine's Day...this is for you. It was done on a Moleskine notebook with a .005 Unipen.



Happy Valentine's Day...to me you are beautiful...

Friday, February 12, 2016

Gene Wolfe and February May Have an Agenda...



We are into the second week of February and I suspect she has an agenda.

I promise more art soon. (I am supposing that is why you are here?) I know you are not here to read into my personal world.  After all I am just another smuck blogging on the interwebs.

Right now I am having a rather love/hate relationship with Gene Wolfe.  Reading The Sorcerer's House.  It began like a dark country road overhung with tree limbs frozen in an obscure semaphore illuminated by the moon.  Then out of the corner of your eye you see a lady in white funeral tresses with black eyes pointing an accusing finger at you. You almost want to stop and go back to see if she was really there but then decide it is better not knowing.

Then it escalated into fantasy. Sometimes I think my imagination is too finite for Wolfe. I loved the beginning and concept of The Shadow of the Torturer, but it lost me somewhere in the middle.


I am very happy to be reading again. There was a time when I actually couldn't digest a paragraph let alone a sentence. Everything you read about Chemo brain is real, even I didn't want to believe it at first. I wanted to say it was anxiety, perhaps a combination. Thankfully though, people like my Mother, who has been through chemo and others that went through it gave me hope that it would pass. Though my short term memory is still rather shot, it is getting much better as time passes. 
 
It is Friday before a three day weekend which means it is going to be a long one. It is also payday...and I know where an awesome book store is.







Wednesday, February 3, 2016

February Is A Blowhard and Time IS On Your Side ...Yes It Is...

February walked in, it didn't creep in, but walked in. She brought nice weather for a change, but she is a bit of a blow hard. The wind has been relentless.

I have been detaching more and more lately. Changing priorities.  Doing my artwork still remains high on the list. But other factors have become important as well. Health, family and personal goals...there is a reason why personal goals are called..."personal".

This March I will be cancer free for three years, I think I am calculating that right. If I recall correctly, my last chemo was March of 2013. It has been a hell of a ride, lots of lessons learned, lots of wisdom gained...much personal loss and sacrifice. But in the moment, I am right where I need to be.

Healing is a slow process and thankfully, time has been on my side.

When you cannot be what others want you to be...be who you are meant to be. It is really as simple as that. You have to face the harsh reality that people will leave...that they will not approve of the choices you make, that they will discuss you, judge you and dismiss you. But in the end, it is you that you have to face in the mirror, not them.

Sometimes there is no graceful way of doing it. But there is a time you have to take care of yourself.

It is those people that understand that are gold. Usually they are people that went through hard times themselves. Whether it is illness, family issues, divorce, financial wreckage, social rejection etc. at some level they hit ruin and through it all realized their worth and recognize the scars in others. They don't become bitter, they become something more human.

It is a metaphor for death and resurrection.

I personally don't believe in spiritual ladders that you can climb upon and look down at the rest of humanity. The whole concept speaks of a certain spiritual arrogance to me, like incense that is too sweet and hides an inner rot.

Sometimes you have to open wounds to let the festering infection out. Healing takes time.

And to those that are afflicted, time is on your side.












Saturday, January 30, 2016

The Final Pages of Chapter One of January...

It has been an emotionally draining week.

Poe has an incident that required two trips to the vet. Burned 12 hours of sick leave, costs ran over 200$ but in the end he is worth much more to me than that.


He is on the mend now, eating and peeing as intended.

I am taking things slow and easy these days. I am working on one piece, just finished another, though it really isn't a piece, it is something out of my Moleskine Sketchbook. It was done with pencil and Unipen .005.

This weekend I intended to work on a piece that I have been wrestling with for sometime, but with the emotional roller coaster of Vet visits and trying to make everything meet, I am literally wrung out. (note to self: don't forget the B12)

I have been reading Gene Wolf's The Sorcerer's House.  It reads like a David Lynch movie that actually has a plot. It also may have triggered some really disturbing dreams I have been having lately.

January turns the page tomorrow and February begins a new chapter on Monday. The first chapter of this year was an interesting one, the plot is slowly developing.  Cultivating a normal life is my primary concern this year.  The only major change I am planning on is finding a new Oncologist. 

I am taking this year slow. I am grateful for what I have and I want to maintain it. The simple life is not so boring as one may think.

The cats, Poe and Lenore just had breakfast. Poe is trying to hide the left overs under a plastic bag as if he thinks it will keep it safe from Lenore. 

The morning sun is streaming through the corners of the dark curtains on the windows. The weather is going to be nice today. I am on the final pages of Chapter One of January. Think I will read them slow and carefully. There maybe hints of what is to come.






Thursday, January 7, 2016

Year of the Crow...or how to live in a Fantasy World

It is the beginning of a new year. Though it is hard to predict whether the year will be one to remember for better or ill, I am starting the year with good intentions. But you know what the old proverbial saying is, "The road to hell is paved with good intentions...".

So in starting the new year with said intentions just maybe my undoing. The other is to take things as they come or do nothing.

My health is slowing returning. Vitamin supplements, fruit, green tea and plenty of sleep aided in my return to a semblance of normality.

Below are some sketches that I have whipped out the past year...my goal is to get back to drawing on a regular basis and try to manage distractions..ie TV, PC games etc.

As I mentioned, these are just simple sketches, not what I would even consider "pieces". I am slow, usually due to the amount of detail I work into a piece and also slow to how I build compositions.

These were done in my Moleskine sketch books I carry with me to work. Fortunately I have time between calls to crank something small out. But serious pieces take much more time and dedication which means working at home into the wee hours of the night.

But in the end it is worth it. So here is to a new year...which I dubbed "Year of the Crow"...actually on February 7th it will become the Year of the Horse according to the Chinese Zodiac. But I have often been accused of living in a Fantasy World and I am too old to change.






Time for breakfast tea then work...