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  • 22 May, 2008

    C’est Finis. And now: to work.

    posted by Pablo Defendini at 8:00 am permalink

    This is the final iteration of my Little Brother piece. I’ve re-worked the Camera-Head, and added some more detail to its blazer. In the end, as soon as I realized that I was designing a poster (for myself) as opposed to a mass market book cover (for the particular needs of the mass market), I decided to leave the idea of a textural background aside. For similar reasons, I’ve also replaced the Neil Gaiman blurb with the book’s tag-line, and integrated the arphid graphic from the spine of the cover design.

    I’m diggin’ it.

    Tomorrow, I’ll go get myself some ink and figure out the separations. I’ll get the seps printed on Friday morning, and hopefully will be in the print shop at Pratt by mid-afternoon. I’m itching to get back in there—it’s been way too long. . . . 

  • 16 May, 2008

    On the other track. . . .

    posted by Pablo Defendini at 9:41 am permalink

    Here’s an in-progress shot of the block for the relief print I’m working on based on Tobias S. Buckell’s most excellent new novel, Sly Mongoose. It’s changed substantially from the original sketch, mostly because I’ve decided to treat is as a comic-style splash page, and include some of the dialogue from the scene I’m depicting in the space above the figure.

  • 12 May, 2008

    Little Brother, in progress

    posted by Pablo Defendini at 2:13 pm permalink

    Here’s a progression of that Little Brother sketch I put up a few days ago. This is what happens when I have a weekend to myself. I’ve had lots of fun putting this together, particularly including little easter eggs (hints: run the binary through a translator; check out the ‘maker’s brand’ on the arphid on the spine, etc.). It’s not done—there’s still much work to be done on Mr. ‘Camera Head’, and I feel like it needs some textural elements, possibly in the background. Myabe a city-scape? Some DHS-type seals or other government type printed matter? Who knows, I’m still turning it over in my head.

    Most likely this will not be used for the actual cover, but in any case the feedback so far has been good, so I’ll definitely be making silkscreen prints of it at some point.

  • 9 May, 2008

    Tordotcom

    posted by Pablo Defendini at 10:17 am permalink

    My cover for The Good Fairies of New York was turned into a wallpaper, and is being given away for free (as in beer) on tor.com. Get over there and snag it, along with Eric Fortune’s beautiful cover art (one of my favourites, actually) for The Red Magician. Also, if you haven’t done so, sign up for tordotcom—still in the works, but so worth it once we go live in June (I think).

    EDIT: According to PNHtor.com‘s actual launch date is July 20. Lunar Landing Day. 

  • 8 May, 2008

    Augmented Reality. Yes.

    posted by Pablo Defendini at 2:23 pm permalink


    Wait till they put this in glasses, and combine it with cheap, wearable computing devices… Imagine walking down the street and getting real-time contextual info about the people, buildings, landmarks, shops, etc. you see. Fantastic.

  • 8 May, 2008

    Silly Sketches and Secret Science

    posted by Pablo Defendini at 7:29 am permalink

    Yesterday Liz and I cut out early from work (shhhhh.) to catch the Dave Eggers-curated exhibit at apexart, Lots of Things Like This. It was a short, fun little show featuring humorous combinations of words and pictures (or ‘cartoons and prints’, to the less pretentious among us) by people such as David Mamet, Shel Silverstein, Ralph Steadman, R. Crumb, and Art Speigelman, among others. It was a wonderfully funny, precious, and well-put-together show, precisely what one expects from Eggers and co.

    Lex caught up with us at the gallery, and we then made our way to Union Hall in Park Slope, where we finally caught one of their Secret Science Clubs. Up on stage was Dr. Wallace Broecker, Columbia professor and author of Fixing Climate: What Past Climate Changes Reveal About the Current Threat–and How to Counter It. Dr. Broecker spent some time talking about his research into climate change, and his opinions about what we could do about the situation, on a large, pan-national scale. No compact fluorescent light bulb initiatives here: the man proposes taking CO2 out of the atmosphere and ‘burying’ it in saline aquifers, or the deep sea, among other methods. Unfortunately, though, these solutions cost lots of money and equipment, money that governments are traditionally very reluctant to spend. Because then they couldn’t pay for, you know, their war machines and shit.

    Anyway, in all: a very stimulating and informing afternoon and early evening.

  • 5 May, 2008

    The Sakura Festival

    posted by Pablo Defendini at 7:24 am permalink

    I took a break from GTA IV (freakin’ awesome!!) to have a life, at least for Saturday. Liz, Mila, Mila’s friend Christie, Theresa, her boyfriend Jeff and I went to the Sakura (cherry blossom) Festival at the Brooklyn Botanic Gardens. We spent a few hours walking around, looking at the pretty flowers and negotiating a rather crowded Botanic Gardens, replete with shutterbugs, tourists, and, of course, people dressed in cosplay costumes (what, exactly, does Naruto have to do with Sakura, I’m not sure, but leave it to Japanophiles to find any excuse to play dress-up). For lots of pictures of pretty flowers, check out my Flickr set.

    After that, we went next door to the Brooklyn Museum, to catch the much-hyped Takashi Murakami exhibit. While pretty, and fun, and enjoyable (mostly), and full of great work, I’m not sure that Murakami belongs in a museum. His work is too commercial, if not always in its intention, certainly in its execution. In addition, I found the inclusion of a Louis Vuitton retail station right smack dab in the middle of the exhibit to be in very, very poor taste. While I can appreciate the draw that Murakami lends to the museum, I think the exhibit would have been more at home in a commercial gallery.

    While there, we also checked out the Utagawa Japanese woodblock prints exhibit, which was much more interesting, as there was historical context to the work, and a true sense of craft. There was a great sampling of work from the entire Utagawa school lineage, spanning a period of about 130 years. Good, good stuff.

    After that, I headed over to Habana Outpost, for their Season Opening block party. My friend Leo was running the sound system for them, and I got to hang out with him a little bit before Anhelo, Pedro and Lex showed up. Later, it was off to a friend’s house party with Lex, where much drink was drunk, and I was too. In all, a long and fun Saturday. 

  • 22 April, 2008

    Little Brother Instructables Feed

    posted by Pablo Defendini at 7:48 am permalink

    The folks over at Instructables have started an rss feed with instructables based on the contents of Cory Doctorow’s forthcoming new book, Little Brother. According to Cory, on his Craphound blog:

    ….[the instructables crew] were really inspired by all the ingenuity demonstrated by the book’s heroes, so they’ve made a series of HOWTOs in the voice of M1k3y, the techno-guerrilla who tells the story in Little Brother.

    Little Brother goes on sale in something like ten days. It has been generating a lot of buzz, particularly at Comic Con this past weekend. It is one of those wonderfully subversive books that inspires, educates, and informs, all while geared towards a YA audience. I read an advance copy a few months ago, enjoyed the hell out of it, and recommend it wholeheartedly to anyone who even halfway asks, especially to kids. 

    I’ll be following this feed closely. The first entry is, appropriately enough for me, the photo-emulsion screen printing process! Print geeks, unite!

  • 21 April, 2008

    New York Comic Con 2008

    posted by Pablo Defendini at 7:39 am permalink

    Comic Con this year was amazing. I had a blast, met so many people, saw so much kick-ass work, and learned so much! It was also a great opportunity to spend some time with the amazing people I work with, outside of the context of the day-to-day bustle of the work week. 

    As opposed to last year (when I only had a day Saturday pass), this year, by virtue of volunteering to staff the Tor booth on Sunday afternoon, I was given a full weekend pass. It made a huge difference: I got to walk the entire floor on Friday afternoon, before the fans were all let in, so I could sort of get an overview of the entire Con, and was then in a better position to go and look at the particular things I wanted to check out in detail later on; I also got to attend a bunch of panels, relevant to me both professionally (Manga-related stuff for our Tor/Seven Seas collaboration) and personally (I got to see Neil Gaiman read from The Graveyard Book, w00t!); I also got to create a continuous thread of day-to-day interaction with some of the professionals I met, which hopefully will help establish more permanent relationships with my colleagues. In all, a wonderful experience. 

    Highlights include:

    I went to a panel titled Working Digitally, moderated by Dan Goldman, and featuring Frazier Irving, Héctor Casanova, and Lincy Chan. All four discussed their process, and showed us slides (or should I say screen shots, really?) of their work in progress. It was fascinating to see how the pros put it all together—as a person who favours an all-digital process as well, I found the session highly informative. One of the main points that came across while listening to them talk, and something that I discussed afterwards with both Héctor and Dan, is the fact that as the artist finds s/he has more control over the process, and faster tools at his/her disposal, there is a deliberate rejection of the old ‘division-of-labour’ workflow (penciller, to inker, to colorist, to letterer) of Marvel and DC -style comics production. In the words of Héctor Casanova (accompanied by a look of abject dismay): “I couldn’t imagine having someone else ink over my work. I just couldn’t imagine it!”. The only one caveat I would add to this, is that I don’t necessarily agree with the elimination of the role of the letterer. Coming from a typographic perspective, I can attest that a lot of artists (there are exceptions) who insist on doing their own lettering are doing themselves a huge disservice. Typographic communication/expression is its own craft and mode of communication, requiring skills and an eye rather different from that of an illustrator. Sometimes the two skill sets are present in the same person, more often than not, they aren’t.

    On Friday night, my boss, Irene Gallo, was gracious enough to invite Theresa DeLucci and me to dinner with a bunch of illustrators, including Arkady Roytman, Steve Belledin, and Doug Cowan. The latter two being Pratt graduates (Doug and I actually graduated the same year, and were booth-neighbours at the Pratt Show), we had plenty to talk about. I had a particularly fascinating conversation with Steve about the state of art education at Pratt (and universally, to a certain extent), lamenting the fact that the curriculum is not set up to encourage the collaboration between Graphic Designers, Illustrators, and (to a lesser extent) Photographers. This then segue’d into yet another iteration of the e-books conversation, pieces of which can be found in the comments sections here and here. The clock is ticking—everyone’s thinking the same thing. It’s time to move on this before someone does it for me!

    In all, a wonderfully positive experience. A weekend full of comics (I’ve doubled my to-read pile, ohnoes!), fun people, great times. The one shame is the lack of good images from my camera. I really must get myself a real camera. The crappy phonecam on the iPhone really is a poor substitute for the real thing. In the meantime, check out some pics from Irene here, along with her own Comic Con write-up; and from ignorancehere’s photoset here.

  • 19 April, 2008

    NY Comic Con. w00t.

    posted by Pablo Defendini at 6:37 am permalink

    I’m attending NY Comic Con at the Javits Center this weekend, mostly going to manga-related panels (manga is huge this year), staffing the Tor booth on Sunday afternoon, and generally geeking out. A full write-up to come, but in the meantime, I’ll throw a few adjectives your way: fun, fascinating, exhausting, heady, big (I shudder to see San Diego!), informative, Neil Gaiman! Ok, Neil isn’t an adjective, but I got to see him read live last night, which was really really cool. More to come. That is all.