All posts by amt

Illustration Full-Time Faculty Ben Katchor’s New Opera!

slug bearers
TICKETS:
Purchase 30%+ discount seats online here:
https://www.ovationtix.com/trs/pr/28151/prm/BB40SB
or, phone box office (212-353-0303) and mention the code BB40SB
Ticket discount valid for performances thru 3/2/08 only.
Phone and online orders are subject to regular service charges.
This offer not valid on previously purchased tickets, is subject to availability and may be revoked at any time.

Quick Hit: Illustration Faculty Guy Billout in show at UWEC

billout planes
If you happen to be in the Eau Claire, Wisconsin area, make sure to drop by the Foster Gallery at the University of Wisconsion-Eau Claire to see “Meaning and Metaphor,” a show showcasing work by Illustration Adjunct Faculty Guy Billout. The official description reads:
A show demonstrating how four nationally renowned illustrators condense contemporary issues into single images. Featuring Anitz Kunz, Guy Billout, Jason Holley, Daniel Bejar.
This is a great opportunity to see the work of these illustrators in sharp focus.
Meaning and Metaphor
January 31st-February 21st
Foster Gallery
University of Wisconson-Eau Claire
Haas Fine Arts Center, 121 Water Street
Eau Claire, Wisconsion

Quick Hit: Illustration Alum in show at Cinders Gallery

Illustration alum Keren Richter (whose wonderful work has been recently featured in the Illustration Department display cases as part of the Jordin Isip-curated show “Expatriates”) is part of a group show at Cinders Gallery in Brooklyn, called “Brevity’s Rainbow.”  Here’s an excerpt from the curator’s note:

Nothing against Christo and Jean Claude, but art isn’t meant to be big grand flourishes of orange gates. And really, I love Olafur, and huge waterfalls under the great bridges of New York are really cool, but art is supposed to be an intimate affair.

Which is why I asked some of my favorite artists and some of my best friends to interpret the idea of the Lilliputian and the temporal, the specks of dust that make up the world, the fleeting moments of pleasure and pain. I wanted the artists to bend over their workbenches and canvases and get inside of their tiny artworks. I wanted to freeze a moment so you could all lean in, get our faces right up next to the artwork, as close as you can possibly get, and see a tiny beautiful thing.

I wanted to make a galaxy of tiny art, a prismatic assemblage of little moments: this is Brevity’s Rainbow.

If you’re in the New York area, make sure you check it out. Congrats to Keren on her work!

Brevity’s Rainbow
A Group Show of Tiny Works
February 8th – February 17th 2008
Opening Reception Friday Feb. 8th 2008
Curated by Maxwell Williams

Marshall Arisman Moderates Illustration–a panel discussion

illustration night

Marshall Arisman will moderate a panel on Illustration featuring Nathan Fox, Sam Weber, Eddie Guy, and Yuko Shimizu. The official write-up reads:

For over five decades illustrators have produced a single image to illuminate an author’s text. Illustration is changing. What are illustrators today saying through their work? Are illustrators making a contribution that other art forms do not? Is illustration relevant? Can illustration be a vehicle for personal vision? Join us for a stimulating evening of words and pictures that explore the possibilities of an illustrator becoming an author of their own work.

Personal Vision
Thursday, February 7th, 2008
Katie Murphy Amphitheater at FIT
27th Street and 7th Avenue, NYC
7-8:30 p.m.
Students with valid ID = $5

Ray Hooper is interviewed on Spraygraphic

ray hooper card

Our fine friends over at Spraygraphic Sprayblog caught up with Parsons Illustration Adjunct Faculty Ray Hooper, who has taught Type in the department for some time and who has branched into the world of greeting cards with his company, Ray Hooper Designs. Here’s an excerpt:

SG: Can you tell us a little about your business, Raymond Hooper Design, LLC.

RH: We design Greeting Cards, Appointment Books, Journals, etc. My company is a year old this month and after a year of building a staff and inventory we had our first sales last month. We are trying to appeal to people who are both sophisticated about art and design and don’t necessarily need someone else to write their sentiments. As a result many of our cards have very terse messages on the inside or none at all. A number of our cards are blank note cards with photographs, illustrations or just some kind of graphic on the front.

SG: Where has your work been seen?

RH: The books in book stores and museums across the country. The cards, so far, only at trade shows and in trade publications.

SG: Where will it be seen next?

RH: Trade shows in Atlanta, San Francisco and Seattle. Card stores in North Carolina, Texas, Washington state and upstate New York.

SG: What is your dream art assignment?

RH: No such thing. It’s a joy making my living designing.

SG: What is your favorite color?

RH: I like them all.

Make sure you read the rest of Ray’s interview here and check out his designs here.

Internship Fair at Parsons on January 31st

internship fair

Parsons Internship Fair!
January 31st, 2008
10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
T. Lang Center, 55 W. 13th, 2nd Floor

50 + businesses at Parsons’ largest internship fair ever! Employers include Target, Gucci, Cooper-Hewitt, BCBG Maxazria, Bloomingdale’s, Abercrombie & Fitch, Mad Magazine, Sesame Workshop, and many more.

Bring your resume!

Illustrator Jesse Joshua Watson visits Pat Cummings’ class

jesse joshua watson

Artist and Illustrator Jesse Joshua Watson will be visiting Pat Cummings’ Children’s Book Illustration class on Monday, February 4th, 2008. Jesse’s recent book, Chess Rumble, was an ALA Notable book for 2008. Don’t miss this exciting chance to hear Jesse speak about his artistic and professional experiences!

Jesse James Watson
February 4th, 2008
12:00 p.m.
2 W. 13th, Room 1202

Drawing Art & Politics: A panel discussion @ Museum of the City of New York

feiffer undergore!

Drawing Art and Politics:
Jules Feiffer, David Levine, Stan Mack, and Edward Sorel

Spend an evening with New York’s renowned graphic artists Jules Feiffer, David Levine, Stan Mack, and Edward Sorel, as they examine the ways in which complex social and political issues are depicted by artists in today’s media. Jules Feiffer will moderate a discussion that explores the roots of political art and social realism in the context of John Sloan’s early 20th-century illustrations of New Yorkers engaging in routine pastimes and pleasures.

Tuesday • February 5 • 6:30 PM
Museum of the City of New York
1220 Fifth Avenue, NY, NY
212.534.1672, ext. 3395

Reservations Required
$9 for General Admission
$5 for Museum members, Seniors, and Students

[image by Jules Feiffer]