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Hybrid Objects

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In my illustrations I often combine characteristics of different objects into one hybrid image to create new metaphorical meaning. Above are some examples.

Hybrid Creatures

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New York Times Op-Ed/Letters Illustrations

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Over the last decade I have had the opportunity to create a number of images for the Op-Ed/Letters pages of The New York Times, working with art directors Peter Buchanan-Smith, Steven Guarnaccia, Brian Rea and Minh Uong. Shown above are some of my favorites.

A to Z Picture Book Prototype (selected single pages)

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Symbols for amfAR

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I designed this set of symbols for amfAR (The American Foundation for AIDS Research) for use in their drug development directories.

Miscellaneous

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Basel School Type/Image Experiments

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In 1983, my second year at the Kunstgewerbeschule Basel, I began a project in Wolfgang Weingart’s typography class experimenting with different ways of combining type and image. He is a master and pioneer in this field, so it seemed like a good idea, and I chose a small poster series as my testing ground—another WW inspiration. For typographic elements I used my address in Basel, Haltingerstrasse 14. For imagery I worked with anything in or occurring in my apartment, but that soon grew to include travel experiences and whatever I wanted, really. It was very exciting working in this collage-like way, drawing and cutting out letters and pictorial elements and moving them around under glass. This was before the days of Illustrator and Photoshop, but Weingart’s working method was very much a precursor to the layering capabilities those software programs would eventually offer. Layers of film (positive and negative) would be taped together, back lit, photographed in a copy camera and “merged” into one layer of film. Then the combining and manipulating with other pieces of film would start all over again. The possibilities were limitless. Of course, my project was limited to six “posters” produced over the course of a year. Shown above are the results as they appeared in Typographishe Monatsblätter at the end of that wonderful year. Thank you, Weingart.