Tuesday, September 9, 2014

So, why graphic design? Well, it seems like a good way to take the skills I already have and apply them to a real world career trajectory. When you enter the workforce without career training it is entirely possible to make a living, you just have little choice in what you do. You take a job with a company and work hard and learn how to move yourself up. You acquire skill sets based on the work you happen to be doing and the specific company you work for. This is different than a career path. When you work in this way, you may well earn a decent salary (I have), but you gain skills and leave them behind on a job to job basis. You become a generalist with a smattering of job skills here and there that don't add up to a career path. A "Jack of all trades". It makes it very hard to market yourself and move forward in any kind of meaningful way. You wind up beholden to whoever last hired you and incapable of taking those skills and finding work in another place at the same level, because that same level job at a new company may involve learning a new computer program or a new workflow system or whatever (all of which you're perfectly capable of learning), but in order to get the chance to prove that you can learn these things, a prospective employer wants certification. They want to see that you've completed professional training and are moving in a specific direction with a career path before they'll see you as that type of employee. So, you'll likely start at the bottom unless you turn yourself into a "professional".
So, why graphic design? As an artist, I have long used typography and graphic imagery in my work, so it seems to make sense. In art school (the first time round) I studied under one of the founding members of the "Chicago Imagist" movement, an artist named Karl Wirsum. I was fairly influenced by the imagists as well as Pop Art, Comic Book Art, American Regionalism, Surrealism, German Expressionism, Russian Constructivism, etc. The imagists, as well as pop artists, comic book artists, regionalists, and constructivists often straddled the worlds of art and design. I have too, as evidenced by the following pen and ink drawings. Most of these were done for an underground zine in the mid 90's called Fuel. Some are covers, some are other illustrations. Enjoy.













Sorry the photography isn't better, these were taken off the cuff with my iphone.

1 comment:

  1. These are very cool! Your square logo does feel in line with your illustration style.

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