Mexico City
10.11.13 | No Comments

shop010
shop011
shop017
shop036
shop037
shop038
shop039
shop041
shop044
shop045
shop046
shop050  shop053
shop054

Iskon Temple Paintings
03.20.13 | No Comments

 

‘Hello Mr. Stella’ by Anthony Burrill
01.23.12 | No Comments

Lyricalinear 2008
06.19.09 | No Comments

I added a few images from 2008 to my site www.seze.net


Seze Devres, sz08-0506b from Lyricalinear 2008, Digial C Print, 16×20


Seze Devres, sz08-0506d from Lyricalinear 2008, Digial C Print, 16×20


Seze Devres, sz08-0506e from Lyricalinear 2008, Digial C Print, 16×20

Géraldine Georges
05.27.09 | No Comments
Category: design |drawing

portfolio site

Matt Doyle’s Drawings
05.25.09 | No Comments
Category: drawing |friends

www.dominantfiction.com

James Jean
05.24.09 | No Comments

James Jean’s portfolio site: www.jamesjean.com

James Jean’s blog: www.processrecess.com

Alice
05.23.09 | No Comments

Alice in Wonderland image pool on Flickr




Alice in Wonderland, Illustrations by Marjorie Torrey

My Kiss & Tell Nerd Portraits
04.28.09 | No Comments



view gallery

Coraline in true 3D was gorgeous
03.04.09 | No Comments

I had a chance to view Coraline in true 3D at the most lovely movie theater in New York The Ziegfeld. Coraline is far better and darker than most children’s films.  The visuals were completely inspiring and I can’t wait to see it again and again.


from the original book by Neil Gaiman


Coraline and her kitty venture down the rabbit hole.


The mouse circus performance was my favorite part.

Géraldine Georges
12.18.08 | No Comments
Category: drawing |Photography

source

Dame Darcy’s Gasoline
11.19.08 | No Comments

My dearest friend and fellow good witch Dame Darcy had her art opening today at Sloan Fine art.  Tonight, I arrived right on time at her opening and I waited (with her best friend) for her to arrive.  We looked at her amazing illustrations and talked about how much we love Darcy.  I have adored her work since high school and since then we have become close friends.  After 40 minutes I went home and with a fresh copy of Gasoline in my arms.  I can’t wait to cuddle with her drawings and her story tonight.  I am so proud of her for finally publishing her book and I hope that she will have a brighter and better future once she moves out west.

Darcy, I know you are leaving New York with a broken heart but my heart will always be with you….

Gasoline original illustrations
Nov. 19th – Dec. 20th 2008
Sloan Fine Art
Gasoline art exhibition of original
illustrations from graphic novel and Gasoline painting series by Dame Darcy
128 Rivington st.
press release

Leo Villareal
11.05.08 | No Comments

Leo Villareal at the National Gallery of Art, Washington


Leo Villareal
Artist’s rendering of the Connecting Link
National Gallery of Art, Washington

Rosemarie Fiore
10.29.08 | No Comments
This is the most beautiful thing I have seen today:
“Firework Drawing #14” 2005
lit firework residue, collage on paper 41 3/4 in x 29 1/2 in
Fear(s) of the Dark
10.29.08 | No Comments

I can’t wait to see this movie (watch the trailer).


© 2007 Prima Linea Productions / Pierre Di Sciullo 


© 2007 Prima Linea Productions / Charles Burns


© 2007 Prima Linea Productions / Richard McGuire 

Amy Myers at Mike Weiss Gallery, NYC
10.15.08 | No Comments
Category: abstraction |drawing


Amy Myers, Operetta Inside Atom, 2008, graphite, conte, gouache and pastel on paper, 132 x 150 inches Mike Weiss Gallery

Michael Dinges Engraved Dead Mac Laptops
09.18.08 | No Comments

Michael Dinges, Untitled, Dead Laptop Series, 2007
Engraved Plastic, Acrylic Paint
9.25 x 11.25 x 9.75 in
Packer Schopf Gallery, Chicago

Robert Longo’s gorgeous charcoal drawings
07.09.08 | No Comments
Category: drawing


Untitled (Diana), 2007


Untitled (Cassandra), 2008

Untitled (Last Moon), 2007

Tree
06.27.08 | No Comments


source

The Princess and the Pea
06.19.08 | 1 Comment

My dreamlife is so rich and full of amazing imagery, it is often very hard for me to wake back into this world.

The Real Princess, Edmund Dulac

The Princess on the Pea
By Hans Christian Andersen
Translation by Jean Hersholt

Once there was a Prince who wanted to marry a Princess. Only a real one would do. So he traveled through all the world to find her, and everywhere things went wrong. There were Princesses aplenty, but how was he to know whether they were real Princesses? There was something not quite right about them all. So he came home again and was unhappy, because he did so want to have a real Princess.One evening a terrible storm blew up. It lightened and thundered and rained. It was really frightful! In the midst of it all came a knocking at the town gate. The old King went to open it.

Who should be standing outside but a Princess, and what a sight she was in all that rain and wind. Water streamed from her hair down her clothes into her shoes, and ran out at the heels. Yet she claimed to be a real Princess.

“We’ll soon find that out,” the old Queen thought to herself. Without saying a word about it she went to the bedchamber, stripped back the bedclothes, and put just one pea in the bottom of the bed. Then she took twenty mattresses and piled them on the pea. Then she took twenty eiderdown feather beds and piled them on the mattresses. Up on top of all these the Princess was to spend the night.

In the morning they asked her, “Did you sleep well?”

” Oh!” said the Princess. “No. I scarcely slept at all. Heaven knows what’s in that bed. I lay on something so hard that I’m black and blue all over. It was simply terrible.”

They could see she was a real Princess and no question about it, now that she had felt one pea all the way through twenty mattresses and twenty more feather beds. Nobody but a Princess could be so delicate. So the Prince made haste to marry her, because he knew he had found a real Princess.

As for the pea, they put it in the museum. There it’s still to be seen, unless somebody has taken it.

There, that’s a true story.