Rodger Stevens gets interviewed!

downpour

“Downpour”

Adjunct Faculty member Rodger Stevens sat down with the great people over at the Spraygraphic Sprayblog and held forth on his art, work ethic, and inspirations. Here’s a taste:

SG: What mediums do you work with?

RS: I work almost exclusively with wire but I wouldn’t kick wood, cardboard or string out of my studio.

SG: Describe your working process when creating a new work.

RS: I think about the thing before falling asleep; draw all about it on the subway; then the work becomes visible in my mind and I try to make it.

SG: What kind of things do you do when you get blocked or find it hard to create something?

RS: There are many things that bridle my ability to work: the demands of being a father for example, but being creatively blocked has so far not been one of them.

SG: Where are you currently finding your inspiration?

RS: Everywhere really. I think just about everything I look at, everything, plays a role in what comes out.

SG: How did you become a freelance artist/designer for companies such as MTV, Tiffanys & Co, Federal Reserve Bank, etc….

RS: Constant hustling; a determination not to be intimidated; a willingness to try anything; and an acceptance of rejection, of which there was/is plenty.

Catch the rest of Rodger’s interview here!

Rodolphe Töpffer and the Word/Image Problem

topffer

[click for full-size version]

Rodolphe Töpffer & the Word/Image Problem

A celebration of the first English-language translation of Töpffer’s complete picture-story work by David Kunzle and a symposium on the word/image problem with Peter Blegvad, Anne-Marie Bouché, Noah Isenberg, Ben Katchor, David Kunzle, Victor H. Mair, Jim Miller, Patricia Mainardi, Aimée Brown Price and others.

Presented by the Illustration Department, Parsons The New School for Design and Liberal Studies, The New School for Social Research.

PARSONS, THE NEW SCHOOL FOR DESIGN
Theresa Lang Student Center
55 West 13th Street, 2nd floor, NYC
Saturday, March 8, 2008 3 – 8 pm, free and open to the public
No reservations needed; seating is first come, first serve.

Depuy & Berberian visit the Illustration Department

depuy & berberian

Phillipe Depuy and Charles Berberian are “France’s Superstar Cartooning Team” who have worked together for twenty years. Their most successful character is Monsieur Jean, and to date the series has sold over 120,000 copies in France alone. In recent years, their work has been gaining wider recognition on this side of the Atlantic, with regular contributions to the New Yorker and translated comics appearing in Drawn & Quarterly and Dark Horse Presents.

Depuy and Berberian will be visiting the Illustration Department on Wednesday, March 5th at noon in room 1101, 2 W. 13th. All are welcome to join us for this special event.

Also, later in the day, Matt Madden will moderate a discussion called:

The French Graphic Novel
Straight out of Angoulême: Dupuy & Berberian
Housing Works Bookstore Cafe
126 Crosby Street, Soho
7:00PM

There will be a reception and signing afterwards.

Andy and Ben Kehoe show at Green Lantern Gallery

kehoe brothers

Chicago’s Green Lantern Gallery is hosting an exhibition of works by Parsons Illustration Alum Andy Kehoe and his brother Ben. The official press release reads:

Though the days are shorter, it is still a bitter cold outside. It is impossible to recall the heat of summer and sweaty green things. The body seems to have lost its memory. The mind conjures only phantoms of light and comfort. Yet there is also the anguish of spring and in spring there is a rebirth. Life takes on new shapes, adapting to the apprehension of growth. There is anticipation in life.

We are born in violence. The passage is both catastrophic and forgettable. In this show, violence is depicted through ornate designs of medieval horror, friendship, monsters and the sometimes contemporary wink. There is a new splash of color that takes up the page as we enter the worlds of Andy and Benjamin Kehoe—a compelling place with rich metaphors and soft jokes. It is better in this world. In this world the fantasy offers some respite from the otherwise urban gray of winter decreptitude. They prepare us for the summer, refurbishing the idea of color.

Andy has posted a preview of the show here. If you’re in the Chicago area, make sure to check it out!

The Safest Place in the World
Andy and Ben Kehoe
February 29th-March 29th, 2008
Green Lantern Gallery
1511 N. Milwaukee Ave., 2nd Floor
Chicago, IL

Sergio Ruzzier on Sprayblog

Uccelli

The fine folks over at Spraygraphic’s Sprayblog just posted an interview with Parsons Illustration Adjunct Faculty Sergio Ruzzier. Here’s a taste:

SG: Describe your working process when creating a new work.

SR: I usually do very few sketches, one or two are often enough. I am lazy. Once I have a clear idea of the composition, I do a detailed preparatory pencil drawing on plain paper. If I’m not happy with some elements (proportions, size, placement…) I sometimes scan that drawing and change stuff with Photoshop. Then, I trace that drawing onto the watercolor paper, ink it, erase the pencil, and finally color it.

SG: What kind of things do you do when you get blocked or find it hard to create something?

SR: Well, I usually get depressed, or restless… I don’t have any particular trick to overcome that. I just waste a lot of time thinking. If there is a deadline, then for some reason I always find the solution at the last minute.

SG: Where are you currently finding your inspiration?

SR: The inspiration can come from everywhere: a sentence I read in a book, or something I see while taking a walk, or a detail in a painting. But often it’s the same old ideas that I keep elaborating in different ways.

SG: Can you tell us a little about your children’s book career. When did you start that kind of work?

SR: When I came to NY I already knew that I wanted to do picture books. So I took my drawings and ideas to children’s book editors and art directors, but initially I was always rejected: they would say my work was too “adult”, “sophisticated”, and “European” (never understood what that means!). Even “disturbing”. There was probably some truth to that. Anyway, I kind of gave up for a while, focusing instead on my editorial work. Later, I met a few editors who believed in my work, and gave me a chance. That’s how I started. Now this is what I mainly do, writing and illustrating children’s books, and I really like it.

SG: In what ways has your books’ art and subject material changed over the years? Do you experiment with different art styles depending on the subject or characters?

SR: I don’t think the nature of my work has changed much over the years. Of course you have to adapt a little to your audience, some themes are very delicate… For example, I would love to do a picture book about death, but you have to find the right way to handle such a subject matter (in order to convince editor, publisher, salespeople, reviewers, booksellers, librarians…)
My art style is always the same, I think. I’m not very good at experimenting. And besides, I feel that if you have a personal style, one that has naturally evolved through the years, well, that’s your way of doing things, and you cannot really force it. It’s like your handwriting. Of course this is how I feel about my own work, but there are some artists (not many) who can handle beautifully different styles and techniques. One great example is Saul Steinberg.

Catch the rest of Sergio’s interview & see more images of his work here.

Early Notice: ICON5

adam mccauley

ICON5 will be held in New York City at the historic Roosevelt Hotel in midtown Manhattan. The theme of this year’s conference, The Big Picture, is more than a slogan, it is the perspective through which we see our future – a future of limitless possibilities for illustrators as thinkers, story tellers and providers of creative content. The conference promises to examine and discuss the current creative and economic forces that every illustrator and our industry face today.

Parsons Adjunct Faculty members Jordin Isip and Tara McPherson will speak on the following panel:

Gallery 101
Saturday, July 5, 2:00pm – 3:00pm

Martha Rich with
Tara McPherson, Jordin Isip and Jonathan Levine

The increasing popularity and success of the small gallery has created a need for new, affordable and original art. Exhibiting in a gallery is a great way for illustrators to expand beyond traditional forms of illustration and generate additional income. How do you take that next step into the exhibiting world and get your work out of the studio and on the gallery wall? Illustrator Martha Rich questions gallery curator Jonathan Levine and illustrators Jordin Isip and Tara McPherson about the challenges and successes connected to their gallery experiences. Curious about showing your work in galleries, curating your own shows or developing a new line of revenue and expanding your creativity? This session is for you.

Other ICON5 speakers are: Marshall Arisman, Steven Bliss, Enrico Casarosa, Allan Comport, Andrew Coningsby, Tad Crawford, Ronnie del Carmen, Chrystal Falcioni, Mark Gallagher, Von Glitschka, Rudy Gutierrez, Mirko Ilíc, Jordin Isip (Parsons Illustration Adjunct Faculty), Barry Jackson, James Jean, Jerelle Kraus, David Lanham, Jonathan LeVine, Luba Lukova, Ross MacDonald, Gedeon Maheux, Leonard S. Marcus, Tara McPherson (Parsons Illustration Adjunct Faculty), Stephan Martiniere, Tim Mendola, Mitch Nash, Gary Panter, Daniel Pelavin, Louisa Saint Pierre, Ina Salz, Keri Smith, Mark T. Smith, Greg Spalenka, James Sturm, June Walker, and Robert Zimmerman.

icon5
July 2-5, 2008
New York City

Registration info can be found here.

 

[image by Parsons Illustration Alum Adam McCauley]

Edward del Rosario in show at Stonefox Artspace

stonefox artspace

STONEFOX ARTSPACE PRESENTS:

THE DOG CAME OUT OF THE WOODS…

George Boorujy
Jon Haddock
Avish Khebrehzadeh
Reuben Negron
Edward del Rosario (Illustration Adjunct Faculty)
Charmaine Wheatley

Curated by Kelly Lindner

Exhibition Dates: February 19 – April 15, 2008
Gallery hours: Monday – Friday, 12 – 6 pm
Location: 611 Broadway at Houston, Suite 405, New York, NY 10012

Tara McPherson solo show at Jonathan Levine

tara mcpherson

Parsons Illustration Adjunct Faculty Tara McPherson is currently showing new works at her first solo show for the Jonathan Levine Gallery, here in New York. Here’s the official press release:

For the artist’s first solo show at the gallery, Lost Constellations features a new series of oil paintings and resin-cast sculptures, incorporated into a site-specific installation. The sculptures are a new experience for the artist, who has never before worked in this medium, three-dimensionally in full-scale proportions.

The painted portraits in Lost Constellations depict adventurous super-heroines from an alternate universe, crossing dimensional planes of time and space. McPherson considers the idea of parallel existence through the use of multiple views or angles on a subject, inspired by the Einstein cross (a phenomenon caused by gravitational lensing) while her series of bodily transfigurations convey principles on the physical manifestation of thought. A reoccurring cast of female characters appear in various states of action-fighting battles and growing toward self-discovery. Using her signature bold and graphic style, Tara’s imagery explores love, loss and loneliness through variations on strength, vulnerability and female empowerment. Concepts of non-verbal communication and the evolution of spoken language are explored as well, along with an interpretation on the circle of life- represented through transitional properties of water particles: gas, liquid and solid.

One of the first women to gain recognition in a genre (and greater Art world) dominated by Male artists, Tara McPherson is a role model for younger female artists in the movement. A multi-faceted artist, she has successful careers in both Fine Art and Illustration. Her process remains the same in commissioned illustrations as in her personal work. Tara only does what she enjoys, never compromising her talent or individual sense of creative expression. Fine Art allows McPherson to develop a deeper, more intimate narrative for her subjects. Through layers of paint and symbolism, ideas that take pages of storyboard to convey in illustration projects can be condensed into a singular panel for one of her original pieces of artwork.

tara @ levine 2

Lost Constellations: Tara McPherson
Jonathan Levine Gallery
Feb 23 thru Mar 22, 2008
529 West 20th Street, 9E New York, NY 10011 ph:212-243-3822

Congratulations, Tara!

Parsons Sustainable Design Review Competition

sustainable design

Parsons Sustainable Design Review is a competition centered on the theme of sustainability that is open to students of The New School. This year the theme revolves around responsibility in the retail environment from design to production, distribution to selling, consumption to waste control.

Kiehl’s: Since 1851 is the proud sponsor of the 2007/2008 Sustainable Design Review competition.

Five semi-finalists will receive $500 and support to develop models for submission to the final round of judging.

The competitions finalist will receive $2,500 and may have the opportunity to implement their ideas in Kiehl’s stores.

To submit, students send their final projects to sdr@newschool.edu by March 17th, 2008.

Please contact Tracy Chow at chowt464@newschool.edu with any questions.

Careers with A Conscience on 02.27.08

Careers with a Conscience is a job and internship fair that brings socially and environmentally responsible companies and organizations to the New School. Students are invited to meet with representatives and learn about corporate responsibility and sustainable business practices as well as current and future internship and employment opportunities. Students and alumni from all New School divisions are invited and we hope you can join us as well!

Wednesday, February 27, 2008
1:00 PM – 4:00 PM
55 West 13th Street, Lang Student Center, 2 Floor


Companies attending include
:
Apple
Champion Learning Center
City Parks Foundation
Commission on Voluntary Service Action
Douglas Gould and Co.
Eileen Fisher
Global Information Network
Green Map System
Greenmarket/Council on the Environment
High Five Tickets to the Arts
Images.com
J. Ottman Consulting
John Patrick Organic
Kenneth Cole
Loomstate
Loyale
New York City Center for Charter School Excellence
Peace Corps
PETA
Pratt Area Community Council
Susan G. Komen Foundation for the Cure
The Doe Fund
The Foundation Center
The Four Hundred Showroom/Bahar Shahpar
The Synergos Institute
Urban Samaritan
YAI- National Institute for People with Disabilities

This event is coordinated by Krysta Vollbrecht and Nicole Lenzen of Parsons Career Services in collaboration with the Career Development offices from all New School divisions. Please contact them at Parsonscareers@newschool.edu with any questions.