I just found out that my New York Times World Bank illustration was accepted into this year's SILA exhibition. More on this after I findout particulars on the exhibition dates. Add Comment Just before Halloween, 2011, the New York Times ran a cover story in the Sunday Business section about the relationship between luck and business success. I chose to build an image of a guy atop a huge pair of dice rising out of stormy clouds for the illustration concept. Here's a link to the article: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/30/business/luck-is-just-the-spark-for-business-giants.html?pagewanted=all Here's my recent illustration for the New York Times. Also, a direct link to the article online: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/03/business/global/03world.html I just finished an illustration for this Sunday's New York Times, July 3, 2011. Art Director Minh Uong brought me on to illustrate the cover article on the World Bank in the Business section. I'll post the illustration here on Monday for those who won't see it on Sunday. Have a great Fourth Of July, everyone!!! Diane and I just came back from a great trip to visit my long lost cousins and extended family outside of Wilmington, Delaware, celebrating my Aunt Barbara's birthday. What a terrific experience seeing how everyone was thriving and engaged in the world! When I realized we were only a few miles away from the Brandywine Museum, which houses choice selections of the Wyeth family artwork, we wrapped up the weekend with a visit to the museum and a tour of N.C.Wyeth's house and studio. I highly recommend this to fans of the Wyeths if you haven't had the opportunity. Standing inside the huge studio space, extended to accommodate N.C.'s mural work, I felt a rush of nostalgia for my grandfather's studio in Hillside, NJ, which I remembered from my early years before he died. Frank E. Phares was an illustrator and painter of that same period, the Golden Years of illustration, and his studio had large paintings of indians by rivers, hunting and fishing paintings for Remington and Field and Stream, and personal landscape work in a similar American Impressionist style to that of N.C.'s. On N.C.'s easel was an unfinished painting that was the last work he did before dying tragically along with his grandson on a rural train crossing in 1945. Most of the studio has stayed intact, left just as it was that year. You could really feel the energy of the decades of groundbreaking work that touched so many millions of reader's lives back in the early 20th century. The museum has another tour to the Kuerner's farm, and there is talk of adding a third tour to Andrew Wyeth's studio in 2012. http://www.brandywinemuseum.org White Hat I just finished a fun project for my good friend and colleague Jim Novotny, who is rapidly building a reputation as an intelligence gatherer/sleuth for top pharma companies. As he explained to me, there are " Dark Hat ", " Gray Hat " and " White Hat " data sleuths in the business, with the white hatters being the good guys, i.e. non-law breakers who gather industry intelligence without stepping over the line. He came up with concept of combining an illustration of a white hat, similar to Humphrey Bogart's, along with a " 007 " barcode and the text " Pharmshadow " which I haven't seen yet. I added a backround molecule that is a hybrid of nicotine and caffeine, just to stay in keeping with the pharma/film noir/espionage flavor. | AuthorMarc Phares ArchivesJanuary 2012 Categories |


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