Monday, August 19, 2013

TOONS! East River Jellyfish Swallows Williamsburg Bridge


I had a lot of fun drawing out this concert poster for the band, TOONS. I got to draw the Williamsburg Bridge getting swallowed by a giant mutated East River jelly fish monster. The Williamsburg Bridge is the lovely connection between Brooklyn and the Lower East Side in Manhattan. It is my favorite bridge in NYC because the J train goes over it and takes me home! I love walking or riding my bike over it enjoying the gorgeous view of the city. I plan on making a larger scale version of this idea and selling them as prints.

If you'd like to see more process shots behind this wacky jelly monster poster check out my website alexarizaart.com

The TOONS logo was originally hand drawn. I went through many variations until I ended up with this little gem.


One shot deal, all the letters came out legible enough, the spacing was decent, and the style was fun. Not to toot my own horn or anything, but I thought the text had a strong energy it. You can tell it was done quickly. It captured the "boldness" and "confidence" of the band's sound. Anyway, I thought it was suitable, the band loved it, and that's what counts.

After scanning it, I took it into Adobe Illustrator and used the live trace tool to create a vector image. From there I was able to make any modifications I thought were necessary.

Using Adobe Photoshop I removed the notebook lines to make it easier for Adobe Illustrator to live trace the image.
Vector version of the logo.
The vector version of the logo is super helpful when I need to design things in all different sizes. You wouldn't be able to have that much freedom if you were stuck with just a normal bitmap or rasterized imaged.

I've been doing hand drawn logos for a while now. I really enjoy having that extra bit of control in graphic design instead of having to slave away on a computer messing with paths and all that other nonsense. It feels more natural to me, and of course, in my experience, my work flow is far more efficient for getting ideas out.

For a more in depth look at the Live Trace tool on Adobe Illustrator check out the Adobe website

Friday, May 3, 2013

Baboon Jungle

Painting of a Baboon with a Naked Woman by Alex Ariza
Baboon Jungle Acrylic on 12 x 16 in. canvas panel 2013

Baboons, I find, are some of the strangest and most frightening creatures on this planet. Funny enough, I think human beings, specifically men, are pretty damn frightening as well. Since we are animals ourselves we have innate tendencies to react to stimuli in a rather uncivilized way. I myself have felt urges, pure primitive ones, at the sight of women. The painting of the baboon is how I imagine my inner voice to look like. It is wild and fierce. Its eyes directionless and aimless because it cannot focus on just one.

I was inspired heavily by Henri Rousseau's jungle paintings. His nude women, and the wild creatures around her. I am also inspired by Walton Ford and his amazing watercolors of wildlife having human like characteristics/motivations.

Thursday, January 3, 2013

New York City Subway Train Drawings | Breaking in a new sketchbook.

Here are a some subway drawings I did over the last few weeks. Most of these were done on the ride to and from work on the E train. That's a whole two hours of drawing each day! I go to work five days a week, that makes it ten hours of drawing time a week (not including my time spent in the studio), so by the end of this month I would have drawn for forty hours. Pretty valuable practice time! Let's see if there are any results over a long period of time.

Drawing of an Indian man riding the NYC Subway Train by Alex Ariza
Drawing of an Ecuadorian Woman reading on the NYC Subway train by Alex Ariza

Subway Drawing Panorama of People riding the NYC Subway Train by Alex Ariza
Head Drawings of NYC Subway Train Passengers | Linear Graphite Drawing | Alex Ariza 2013

Drawing Panorama of People's Legs and Shoes Riding a NYC Subway train by Alex Ariza

Drawing of a Black Woman Sleeping on the NYC Subway Train by Alex Ariza

Drawing of and Asian Woman Sleep on the NYC Subway Train by Alex Ariza

Drawing of a Young Polish Woman riding the NYC Subway Train by Alex Ariza

Drawing of an Old Woman Reading on the NYC Subway Train by Alex Ariza



Friday, November 30, 2012

Bacon

Web Comic about Bacon and Dogs Drawn by Alex Ariza
Bacon


The robot looks like he got a tan...not crazy about his new color. I'm trying out these new gray scale markers. I think it's safe to say that they suck.

Sticking with Prisma Markers. Bitch.


Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Return to the Museum of Natural History

I went back to draw more bones. I drew a whole lot more this time around, but I think I might've burnt myself out. I don't know how anatomical/medical illustrators do it, bones are a real son of a bitch to draw. After hours of drawing, my eyes began to bug out, and my brain cried for me to stop. A lot of visual information was translated on to paper today. I can't wait until the day where I can go on without any breaks at all. Maybe I'll go crazy, and step over into an enlightened state of creativity. I don't know.

I'm still having a hard time composing properly, fitting everything in. Composition is tough to think about when you're so preoccupied in being accurate. The day composition comes naturally to me will be such a glorious happy day.