Archive
Illustrator. Elizabeth Considine
Illustrator. George Doutsiopoulos
Illustrator. Deanna Staffo
Digital Art. David Fuhrer
Digital Art. Tugba Akguloglu
Digital Art. Lena Denisevich
Painting. Bob Doucette
Bob Doucette was raised in Maine surrounded by a very arty community. He started drawing and painting as a child and was encouraged by his parents with art lessons. He started painting classes at age eight but his mother decided he was too messy for oil paints and he switched to acrylics soon after. He has been using them ever since. Several amazing Maine artist taught and encouraged his development as an artist.
Bob’s second love after painting is sculpting and he started making dolls and puppets at age twelve. By junior high he started a puppet troupe called the Messypeace Theatre which regularly performed at the children’s room of the local public library and at the Maine Blueberry festival. Many news paper clippings and an interview on public radio rounded out Bob’s early puppetry career. Bob also enjoyed performing on stage in Junior High and High School musicals.
On route to college Bob took on a job at Camp Manitou in Oakland Maine. He worked in the theater where he met the theater director Marc Jacobs who became a mentor, teacher and friend. After ten summers of making costumes, painting sets and directing plays with children he finished his camp career having designed over fifty plays, painting hundreds of posters, directing several videos and writing a handful of plays with Jacobs. The team did so well together at camp that Bob has been employed several times through the years in various positons working for the director.
Below is a partial list:
Bell Canto Opera, New York City:
” Le Jongleur de Notre Dame” by Jules Massenet
costumes and sets
Euterpe Opera, Los Angeles:
“Les Pecheurs de Perles” by George Bizet
costumes and sets
Euterpe Opera, Los Angeles:
“Cosi Fan Tutti” by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
costumes and sets
Euterpe Opera, Los Angeles:
“ L’elisir d’amore” by Gaetano Donizetti
costumes and poster design
Sacramento Symphony:
“Seven Deadly Sins” by Kurt Weill
animated projections and costumes
Utah Opera:
“Seven Deadly Sins” by Kurt Weill
Tribute to Maurice Abrevnal (conductor for original production)
animated projections and costumes
Texas Opera:
“Romeo and Juliet” by Charles Gounod
mask designs
Pasadena Opera, CA:
“Mass” by Leonard Bernstein
costumes
Riverside Opera, CA:
“L’Armour a trois” by Gian Carlo Menotti
“La Serva Padrona” by Giovanni Battista Perglesi
“The Face on the Barroom Floor” by Henry Mollicone
animated projections
American Musical Theatre, San Jose, CA:
“Singing in the Rain”
animated projections
“How to make a Musical”
set design and costumes
At Rhode Island School of Design Doucette double majored in illustration and animation.
Bob’s thesis film “Bessie and Erna” was featured in several film festivals including, Lucca Animation Festival in Italy, Annecy International Animation festival in France,Toronto International Animation Festival, Ann Arbor Film Festival and upon graduation the film was bought by a rental company to be included in their film catalouge. The film was notable for appearing to be a moving painting without the tradtional outlines of classic animation.
After school Bob made another film “Jimmy’s Home Movie” while living in New York City. To finish the film he moved back to Rhode Island and got help from his former R.I.S.D. faculty. The generously let him use their cameras to film his movie.
At this time Bob joined the Puppet Workshop of Providence where he designed puppets and sets, wrote plays and performed in many of the main stage shows guided by the brilliant artistic director, Mark Kohler. The pinnacle of his second puppetry career was meeting Jim Henson and joing in a Muppet Workshop, learning how to make puppets with the wonderful people who made all the Sesame Street Muppets.
Bob moved to California to continue his education at CalArts and earned a master’s degree in animation. His CalArts thesis film “The Pink Triangle” was shown at The Museum of Modern Art in New York and was made part of the permant collection of the New York Public Library. It has been featured in several film festivals and was reviewed on In the Life on public TV. It was the first animated film to deal with the plight of the homosexuals under the Nazi regime and became a big presence in the gay film festival circuit around the world throughout the 1990’s.
Upon graduating, Bob moved to Los Angeles where he continued his design career and eventually went into animation. Although he has worked in animation for twenty years, he never gave up his own personal art work. Bob has continued to paint and sculpt while working at animation and has always desired the oppurtunity to break out as a gallery artist.
In 1989 Bob partnered with Tom Slotten, a professional costumer, to make over a hundred fine art dolls together. Slotten made the costumes while Bob sculpted,painted and accesorized the dolls. Their work has been collected and commisioned by many art collectors all over the world including, Demi Moore, who owns over a dozen of their pieces. Hillary Clinton commisioned them to make a doll for the White House Christmas tree in 1999 and their Ben Franklin doll is now in the permanant collection of the Smithsonian.
As an animation director Bob has produced many hours of cartoons for TV and DVD and is currently directing a movie for the famous Zhu Zhu Pets toy line.
HOME PAGE: http://bobdoucette.com/
Illustration. Tran Nguyen
Tran Nguyen is a Georgia-based artist. Born in Vietnam and raised in the States, she received a BFA from Savannah College of Art and Design in 2009. She is fascinated with creating visuals that can be used as a psycho-therapeutic support vehicle, treading the mind’s surreal dreamscape. Her paintings are created with a delicate quality using color pencil and thin glazes of acrylic on paper. Tran’s oeuvre has been exhibited with galleries in New York, Los Angeles, Miami, London, and Barcelona.
“ I find interest in illustrating the universal emotions we come across in everyday living — emo- tions that are tucked away, deep inside our psyches.”
HOME PAGE: http://www.richardsolomon.com/artists/tran-nguyen.htm
Illustration. Danny Quirk
“I’m an artist, recent graduate, specializing in photo realistic watercolors, painting what the camera can’t capture. My work is perceivably on the darker side, but the actually is, it’s about exploration.
My two current bodies of work are of military, and anatomical themes. The military pieces were derived from countless interviews with military personnel deployed overseas, in the attempts to illustrate what they went through, the war in their eyes.
My anatomical works combine classic poses, in dramatic chiaroscuro lighting, with a very contemporary twist… illustrating what’s underneath the skin, and the portrayed figure dissects a region of their body to show the structures that lay beneath”.(Danny Quirk)























































































