Saturday, May 19, 2007

Mark Mothersbaugh's Postcard Diaries

"Bring 'em in Like This, Drive 'em Home Like this" 2007 Mark Mothersbaugh
Mark Mothersbaugh of Devo fame has been drawing on postcards forever. He has the originals -numbering probably 30,000- all filed away, but he sells limited edition prints of these and has a gallery tour going on. These little postcards are the humorous and inspiring traces of an obsessed and highly creative man. He gets the Little Hokum Rag Seal of Approval.
Check out his latest craziness here:

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

"Little Bit" from Memphis



Portrait by Amy Crehore 1993
Little Laura Dukes with Robert Burse, Dick Rowles, Louis Allen, Wilfred Bell and Will Batts 1930's
Little Laura Dukes 1960

I used to want to be like this little woman when I played with the Hokum Scorchers band. They called her "Little Bit". She played with Will Batt's band all over Memphis and in other parts of the south. She was an explosive singer, dancer and ukulele player. I made this portrait of her with a special frame. She's playing a banjo uke. Unfortunately, my scanner is too small to show the entire frame which has a carved-out sunburst at the top. Recordings of Little Laura Dukes are rare and brilliant. (Photos from "Memphis Blues and Jug Bands" by Bengt Olsson, Studio Vista Books, edited by Paul Oliver)
Here is more about Little Laura Dukes from the back of the album cover of "Memphis Sessions 1956-1961" (Wolf Records, Austria) on which she plays and sings with Gus Cannon and Will Shade -
"Born on June 10, 1907 in Memphis, TN, Laura made early encounters with the music scene in her hometown: her father played drums with WC Handy's Band and often took little Laura to the local theaters and taverns, where she later worked as a singer and dancer. In 1933 she met Robert Nighthawk in East St. Louis and took guitar lessons from him, and the two appeared as a duo in various local joints. Laura later switched to the ukulele. She followed Will Batt's South Memphis Jugband in 1938 and went on the road off and on until 1956. In 1954 she recorded for Flyright with Will Batts and for the Albatross label in Memphis in 1972 and appeared in the TV-documentation "THE DEVIL'S MUSIC- A HISTORY OF THE BLUES"(BBC-1 TV England 1976)."
She plays on 9 songs on this album: "Dirty Mother For Ya", Salty Water Blues", He's Knockin' on my Door", "He's Gone", "Shanghai Blues", "Nobody loves Me", I'm Goin' Down to Lucy Mae's", "Haunted House Blues", "Laura's Blues".

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Time for Krampus



More inspiration! Krampus postcards. Do you know any devils in real life? I do.
I'd rather draw them than know them. Might just have to do that.

Monday, May 14, 2007

Vintage Banks Are Cool





Check out these vintage mechanical banks and the graphics on the old trading cards. The drawings are beautiful as well as the worn-down look of the old toys. Inspiring!!
P.S. I was just thinking how much more beautiful these banks are in their worn-down state than any of the vinyl designer toys available today. None of the new toys are as innovative as these old babies. Designer toys are just about as articulated as toys-for-tots. The graphics and printing are far superior on the old advertising cards, too.

Saturday, May 12, 2007

Shoe Coffin

This is my favorite of the African Ga Coffins. "The Ga live around Accra, the capital of Ghana, and believe that you should be buried in a coffin that reflects how you earned your living." You can order your coffin at eShopAfrica. I guess mine would be shaped like a paintbrush. What would yours be?

Friday, May 11, 2007

Good Reviews

"Snake Tamer's Ditty" copyright 2007 Amy Crehore (click on image to enlarge)
My new painting (above) prompted some good reviews online:
"Amy Crehore’s paintings have a lovely innocence. The colours are warm and evoke island ambience (the heat, the breeze, the sound of waves crashing on the shore). But most entrancingly is the way she draws the naked women/girls. A nice, fluid style. Erotic in its own way. She has a blog with updates on her painting, plus images of inspiration." -
Also, reviews on Art NYC and Mardecortesbaja
(who described my blog as a "Naughty Wondershow Theatrical Circuit" )
And it got a mention on Daily Dreamtime , too.

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Haitian Voodoo Art


These Haitian art figures are made out of old oil drums. They have siren/mermaid motifs. I think they are amazing and remind me of African art, specifically the Mami Wata images.There is a lot of soul in these sculptures.
This website is cool: