Archive for the ‘desertmanhattan’ Category

August 30, 2009

“marfa one”


[You­Tube video home­page here…]
[N.B. Yes, I’m plan­ning on selling this one even­tually. Please feel free to e-mail me if you’re inte­res­ted, Thanks!]
PHASE ONE OF THREE: THE UNDERCOAT. Sun­day, August 30th.
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[“Marfa One”, which I star­ted this wee­kend.. Click on image to enlarge etc.]
A blank can­vas (see above) that I finished doing the white acry­lic under­coat for, ear­lier today. Four-foot-by-four foot. Tit­led “Marfa One”, it’s will be the first of The Marfa Series.
Now to get crac­king on the pencil…

[UPDATE: Mon­day, 31st August, 24 hours later:]
PHASE TWO OF THREE: THE PENCIL.
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[Click on ima­ges to enlarge etc.]
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[Close-up. Pen­cil lines etc.]
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[Close-up. Taken from the side etc.]
Yes­ter­day (Sun­day) I cran­ked out the pen­cil. Took fore­ver, but it was worth it. Besi­des some very small touch-ups at the end, I did it all in one ses­sion. No mes­sing around.
I got myself in a mind-set that, although it’s large and on can­vas, it didn’t inti­mi­date me. I just trea­ted that four-by-four-foot, two-dimensional sur­face like any other dra­wing, like any other page in my sketch­book. I didn’t treat it like “ART!!!!”. I just did my thing and got on with it; not a lot of fuss.
I think that’s how I’ll approach all my big pie­ces from now on…
PHASE THREE OF THREE: THE INK.
[Update: 24 hours later, Tues­day, Sep­tem­ber 1st, 2009.]
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[Click on image to enlarge etc.]
Made a good start yes­ter­day on the inking. Hope to finish it by tonight etc.
This is always the har­dest part of making a big dra­wing. The temp­ta­tion to “rush it” gets more and more overwhel­ming, the clo­ser you get to the finish line. But last-minute rushing can easily ruin it. Oh well, I’ve been here many times before, nothing I can’t handle etc.
[Update: 24 hours later, Wed­nes­day, Sep­tem­ber 2nd, 2009.]
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[Click on ima­ges to enlarge etc.]
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Got up this mor­ning at 4am and put the finishing touches on Marfa One.
It’s done…

[Backs­tory: About Hugh. Twit­ter. News­let­ter. Book. Inter­view One. Inter­view Two. EVIL PLANS. Limi­ted Edi­tion Prints. Pri­vate Com­mis­sions. Cube Gre­na­des.]

“big cartoons”

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[Close-up of desert­manhat­tan, in its early “pen­cil” phase, Autumn, 2008.]
I was thin­king ear­lier today how I had made my repu­ta­tion dra­wing very, very small car­toons [i.e. “drawn on the back of busi­ness cards”], and now here I am, with The Marfa Series, going in the oppo­site direc­tion i.e. very, very big car­toons. Two sides of the same coin, perhaps…
Yes, I’m still calling them “Car­toons”, even if the rest of the world will want to call them something else– “Pain­tings” or wha­te­ver. No mat­ter where life takes me these days, I still con­si­der myself first and fore­most a car­too­nist. Like I said over at Late­ral Action, “I never liked calling myself an ‘Artist’. I think His­tory deci­des if you’re an artist or not, not your­self.”
With the tra­di­tio­nal cartoonist’s busi­ness model loo­king inc­rea­singly unte­na­ble (And it was in trou­ble LONG before the Inter­net came along , believe me), I think it’s a good time to ask the ques­tion, well, what is a car­toon, any­way?
Does the car­toon HAVE to be what it’s always been? Or can it evolve into something else more inte­res­ting? Does the car­toon have to be figu­ra­tive, or is abs­tract per­fectly valid, as well? Does the car­too­nist HAVE to have an edi­to­rial or humo­rous slant, or are there OTHER sphe­res of human exis­tence worth explo­ring?
It’s good to push the edges…

[Backs­tory: About Hugh. Twit­ter. News­let­ter. Book. Inter­view One. Inter­view Two. EVIL PLANS. Limi­ted Edi­tion Prints. Pri­vate Com­mis­sions. Cube Gre­na­des.]

August 27, 2009

the marfa series

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[Click on image to enlarge etc.]
Gree­tings from Alpine, Texas. I left here two days ago, and flew to New York City from El Paso [a 220 mile drive to the air­port], in order to sign the the Ignore Every­body prints.
Yes, it was actually chea­per and easier to fly up there and sign them, than to ship them down here. Go figure.
After a few hours sig­ning them at the printer’s, I rushed off the Island of Manhat­tan yes­ter­day after­noon, to catch a flight back to El Paso via DFW.
I was in my bed at the hotel in El Paso by mid­night. Slept like a log. This mor­ning I went to buy some art sup­plies in down­town El Paso, had a bit of lunch at Rudy’s, then drove 220 miles back home to Alpine.
A quick visit, to say the least. “Wel­come To The Over-Extended Class” etc.
Among my purcha­ses this mor­ning was a big roll of can­vas. The plan is to make a series of large, 48“x48” [4 foot-by-4 foot] can­va­ses, i.e. exactly the same height, and one-half the width of desert­manhat­tan. The wee sketch above should give you an idea what I’m tal­king about.
I’m thin­king of calling these “The Marfa Series”, named after Marfa, the next town over from Alpine, 26 miles away. I drive there and back about three or four times a week; it’s one of my favo­rite dri­ves in the world. The drive ins­pi­red the idea for the the series in a SERIOUSLY big way.
Some will be cran­ked out in a cou­ple of days. Some will take a lot lon­ger, even a cou­ple of months. I have no idea where this is taking me, other than I think I’ll end up somewhere pretty inte­res­ting. Look for them for sale over on the gallery over the next few months or so, or feel free to e-mail me if you’re loo­king to com­mis­sion one. Thanks.
[Backs­tory: About Hugh. Twit­ter. News­let­ter. Book. Inter­view One. Inter­view Two. EVIL PLANS. Limi­ted Edi­tion Prints. Pri­vate Com­mis­sions. Cube Gre­na­des.]

July 24, 2009

heeding the call

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[A sketch from 2008.…]
There you are, min­ding your own busi­ness, then sud­denly you feel “The Call”.
The call to do something totally insane and futile.
But you know you have to do it. You know that if you don’t, a little part of you will be dead fore­ver.
I’ve been fee­ling a wee bit like that recently. I’ve been fee­ling another “Desert­Manhat­tan” [large pain­ting] calling my name.
“You must create me, Hugh. You simply must. I have to exist, end of story. You have no choice in the mat­ter”.
Aaaargh.…
[Backs­tory: About Hugh. Twit­ter. News­let­ter. Book. Inter­view One. Inter­view Two. Limi­ted Edi­tion Prints. Pri­vate Com­mis­sions. Cube Gre­na­des.“EVIL PLANS”.]

April 23, 2009

“fred 44″, revisited

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[“Fred 44″. Click on image to enlarge etc.]
Last year I wor­ked on a large, 18“x24” pen­cil & ink dra­wing called, “Fred 44″.
It was a study for what went on to become my lar­gest pain­ting to date, “Desert­Manhat­tan”.
My friend, Laura owns a really nice camera, so we deci­ded to take another pic­ture of it.
Voila! Hope you like…

April 15, 2009

the studio

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That’s “Desert­Manhat­tan” there in the back­ground, with a new, much sma­ller pain­ting I’ve just star­ted…
Far West Texas is well-suited to a stu­dio made of can­vas walls. The light is mag­ni­fi­cent…
I don’t spend a lot of time in the stu­dio– too busy with other pro­jects– but when I am there, I feel both crea­tive and serene. A hard combo to achieve, for most of us…

March 23, 2009

desertmanhattan is finished

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[Click on ima­ges to enlarge etc.]

[You­Tube video page is here.]
I star­ted on Desert­Ma­naht­tan last Sep­tem­ber. I finally finished it ear­lier this eve­ning, around mid­night.
Yeah, it took a a long time to finish. Well, I was a busy fellow, after all, doing lots of other stuff.
I could have wor­ked on it fore­ver, howe­ver like the old art school adage goes, pain­tings are never finished; they are ended. It was time.
Thanks to every­body who follo­wed me along on this pro­ject, encou­ra­ging me all the way. It’s been quite a jour­ney. Rock on.
[Sign up to gapingvoid’s “Crazy, Deran­ged Fools” Newsletter…]

March 21, 2009

painting update

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[Tablet PC sketch of what I have in mind. Click on image to enlarge etc.]
[UPDATE: 12.10am, 23rd March. “Desert­Manhat­tan” is finished. Hurrah!]
Desert­Manhat­tan is nearly finished. Four x Eight foot worth of insa­nity. Months of work. Will be pos­ting pic­tu­res soon.
My next pain­ting will be half that size– 48″ x 48″ square… the sketch above should give you an idea. Again, the theme comes from a fami­liar place. Like I said when I first star­ted on Desert­Manhat­tan:

I think being out here in Alpine, Texas, cove­red under a blan­ket of desert air and “Big Sky” brought about a wee change in me, at least in what I find inte­res­ting artis­ti­cally. The “car­toons on the back of busi­ness cards” for­mat came about in New York City, when living con­di­tions, shall we say, were far more intense, crow­ded and cram­ped. Not to men­tion, I was ten years youn­ger. Things change.

There’s a cer­tain inten­sity to being out here in the desert. There was a cer­tain inten­sity to living in New York. I’m trying to create objects that somehow cap­ture both. Hence its name.
Yeah, I know, it’s a silly, stu­pid, insane way to try to make a living, to try to spend a life. I’ve spent the last twenty years lear­ning this the hard way. The damage is already done. Alea iacta est. Rock on.
[Sign up to gapingvoid’s “Crazy, Deran­ged Fools” Newsletter…]

January 23, 2009

desertmanhattan update

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[Close-up of “Desert­Manhat­tan”. Click on image to enlarge etc.]
1. I star­ted Desert­Manhat­tan in Sep­tem­ber [See ini­tial post here]. I thought it would take me a cou­ple of weeks. Now I’m thin­king, if I get it done within six months, that’ll be pretty good going.
2. I don’t work on it that much. Maybe twice a week for a cou­ple of hours. Usually I enter the stu­dio when I’m fee­ling a bit overwhel­med by other stuff. It ser­ves as some sort of refuge for me, when I don’t want the other stuff to mat­ter, at least for a while.
3. I’m in no hurry to get it finished. Maybe I’ll work on it for a cou­ple of years. Maybe I’ll never finish it, but just keep on wor­king on it fore­ver– like a blog, a work in pro­gress, a never-ending story. Just an idea.
4. Desert­Ma­nahat­tan is not a work of art. It’s a car­toon. I’m not an artist. I’m a car­too­nist. To me, the dis­tinc­tion is impor­tant.
5. I might sell Desert­Ma­nahat­tan. I pro­bably won’t. At least, not yet.
6. I like the Build-it-slowly-but-obsessively approach. It’s not the only way I like to work, but it cer­tainly has its place.
7. Yes.

January 4, 2009

desertmanhattan update


[You­Tube video…]
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[“Desert­Ma­nahat­tan”. 4 x 8″. Ink, Acry­lic and Pen­cil on Can­vas etc…]
Pro­gress on “Desert­Manhat­tan” has been slow these last few weeks– I’ve been busy with other pro­jects, mostly the prints.
That being said, I’ve still able to occa­sio­nally sneak into the stu­dio and work on it some more– usually late at night, when I’ve been having trou­ble slee­ping.
It’s loo­king good. If I can get it done by March, I’ll be happy. Rock on.

December 1, 2008

“purpose-ideas are articulated via social objects, not messages”

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[Close-up of Desert­Ma­nahat­tan. India Ink on Can­vas… gor­geous. Click on image to enlarge etc.]
Let me say it one more time: “Purpose-Ideas are arti­cu­la­ted via Social Objects, not Mes­sa­ges.”

Click on the links in the above sen­tence to see what I’m tal­king about [espe­cially Link Num­ber Three].
Mark Earls says the future of adver­ti­sing is not in mes­sa­ges. Which means if you’re currently in adver­ti­sing, you’ll be asking your­self, what IS the post-message future? At the moment, you get paid to craft mes­sa­ges. So what will you craft in their place?
Short ans­wer: Social Ges­tu­res.
As I’m fond of repea­ting, Social Ges­tu­res beget Social Objects.
Exactly.

November 29, 2008

desertmanhattan update


[40-second video, no audio.]
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[“Desert­Manhat­tan”. India ink, pen­cil and acry­lic on can­vas. 4x8 ft. Click on image to enlarge etc.]
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[Close-up view. Click on image to enlarge etc.]
The final ink layer is about half done, which by my rec­ko­ning makes the whole thing about 75% com­ple­ted. Quite plea­sed with it, so far. Quite exci­ted to have it finally finished, one of these days…
The last 25% of a large dra­wing is always the har­dest. You’re so anxious to get it over and done with, the temp­ta­tion to take “short­cuts” gets har­der and har­der to resist. Star­ting a big pain­ting is easy. Finishing one is a nightmare.

October 13, 2008

“desertmanhattan”: progress report

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[Click on ima­ges to enlarge. Click to watch the video here.]
I star­ted adding the acry­lic last week. If you click on the top pic­ture, you’ll see I’ve just start appl­ying the India Ink, towards the top. That was yes­ter­day. If you click on the link above, I made a little 2-minute pho­ne­cam video explai­ning everything in grea­ter detail.
This thing is going to take fore­ver to finish. I’m not worried, there’s no rush etc.

October 5, 2008

debora smail

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[Appl­ying the pen­cil to Desert­Manhat­tan. Pho­tos cour­tesy of Debora Smail, who was in town last week. Click on ima­ges to enlarge etc.]
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Last week the pho­to­grapher, Debora Smail was in town, wor­king on a tra­vel assign­ment for a maga­zine. We hung out a bit; first we crac­ked open a few beers at Harry’s Tinaja, then I took her her over to my stu­dio and sho­wed her Desert­Manhat­tan. Besi­des it being a lovely after­noon, full of inte­res­ting con­ver­sa­tion, she took a lot of pic­tu­res. Here are some of them. Hope you like etc. Thanks, Debora!

September 29, 2008

desertmanhattan update

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[A rough idea of how I’m hoping “Desert­manhat­tan” will turn out, can­ni­ba­li­zed from “Fred 44″. 4x8 feet, pen­cil, acry­lic and ink on can­vas. Click on image to enlarge etc.]
Over the last week, I’ve been divi­ding my time bet­ween finishing the book manusc­ript and get­ting star­ted on Desert­manhat­tan.
My head is all over the place at the moment; I thought I should write down some of my thoughts, just to gain some cla­rity for myself:
1. I’ll be damn glad to have the book out of the way. It’s been a long, four-year road. I feel a com­bi­na­tion of glo­riously happy and ela­ted, and utterly bur­ned out from the whole thing.
2. While I was wor­king on Desert­manhat­tan, the fee­ling that “This is what I ought to be doing; this what I was born to be doing,” kept swe­lling up inside me. And you know what? This totally terri­fied me. What if I gave up everything to do this, and sud­denly nobody cared? Sud­denly nobody wan­ted to buy my work, and I ended up pen­ni­less and rui­ned?
3. Pain­tings don’t scale. Even if I could sell the pain­tings for huge amounts of money [It seems a dis­tinct pos­si­bi­lity, after some of the back-channel con­ver­sa­tions I’ve had with poten­tial patrons of the enter­prise], it would still mean wor­king my butt off and making no more than an ave­rage, second-tier attor­ney. It doesn’t always seem to add up.
4. The artist doesn’t deter­mine the price of the work. The re-sale value of a price deter­mi­nes the price of the work. If the per­cep­tion exists that the work will be sig­ni­fi­cantly more valua­ble in five or ten years, pain­tings are easy to sell. Without this per­cep­tion, it’s dam­ned hard to sell a pain­ting, even if the poten­tial cus­to­mer falls in love with it.
5. An artist is about as good exam­ple of a “Glo­bal Mic­ro­brand” as you can get. I have a few artist friends out here in West Texas. On one hand, they totally get the idea. On the other hand, it’s an idea that seems to totally terrify them. It always struck me as funny how peo­ple want to be artists, yet they don’t want to be mar­ke­ters. To me that’s like wan­ting to be a pro foot­ball pla­yer, yet not wan­ting to keep in shape. Nice work if you can get it.
6. “I don’t need a gallery; I have a blog.” I’ve been approached by a few gallery owners over the last cou­ple of months about doing a show. So far the con­ver­sa­tions have gone nowhere. So far I’ve yet to meet a gallery who can sell a pain­ting bet­ter than my blog can. Galle­rists talk a lot; they’re not quite so fond of put­ting down finan­cial gua­ran­tees in wri­ting.
7. The artist I admire the most, in terms of taking the internet-enabled “glo­bal mic­ro­brand” idea and run­ning with it, is my good friend, John T. Unger. Four years of blog­ging later, and he can’t make his “Great Bowls of Fire” fast enough. Though a lot of the ideas he uses he first got from rea­ding my blog, unlike me, he actually applied them and took them to the fric­kin’ sky. Well done, John.
We’ve been tal­king a lot over the last cou­ple of months about this new art phase of mine. His advice has been inva­lua­ble.
8. Just as I was thin­king about all this selling-art-online stuff, one of my Twit­ter follo­wers, @corkymc turns me onto the blog of a very talen­ted, young Aus­tra­lian artist, Hazel Doo­ney. Though she was already con­si­de­red very suc­cess­ful for an artist under the age of 30, two years ago she deci­ded to pack in the gallery sys­tem and just do her “dia­lo­gue” with her audience directly online. She’s got some strong views on the sub­ject, which I approve of:

Ine­vi­tably, this leads to another ques­tion, also always the same: what’s the role of the gallery in this envi­ron­ment? And, as always, I argue that it doesn’t have one. Or as I put it in Art Is Moving: “It deser­ves to die. It’s an anach­ro­nism that’s out­li­ved it’s use­ful­ness. I think there is still a role for indi­vi­dual cura­tors or even ‘show pro­du­cers’ but they need to work in a more indi­vi­dua­li­sed, spe­cia­list way within a net­wor­ked ‘vir­tual’ para­digm …”
To be more pre­cise, I still see value in public exhi­bi­tions and ins­ta­lla­tions but not pro­du­ced, pro­mo­ted or mana­ged in the way they are today – the same way they have been for a hun­dred and fifty years – by dithe­ring, tech­no­lo­gi­cally inept, socially aspi­ra­tio­nal and unad­ven­tu­rous com­mer­cial ‘bricks and mor­tar’ gallerists.

I’ll be watching what she has to say in the future with great inte­rest, to be sure.
9. It took me a few years of blog­ging my car­toons, before I finally accep­ted the idea that my audience would always come mainly from rea­ding my blog, and not from being published in the news­pa­pers, maga­zi­nes, books etc. Even though I have a book coming out in June, I still believe this is the case– just because I’m now an “author”, doesn’t mean the day-to-day rea­lity has chan­ged very much.
10. And now I’m rea­li­zing that if I want to sell pain­tings, I don’t need a gallery, I can just do it all online. Nor do I need cri­ti­cal appro­val from the art esta­blish­ment– the media, the cura­tors and the cri­tics. I can just do it all myself, if that’s what I indeed do want. It’s a great fee­ling, sure, but it’s a new one. Taking its time to really sink in.
11. My pater­nal grand­father was a Scot­tish High­land “crof­ter”. He lived on a “croft” i.e. a very small hol­ding of land, where he rai­sed sheep and grew pota­toes. I used to spend my sum­mers there as a boy. We were very close.
Crof­ting is a good life, but not a very finan­cially rewar­ding one. It’s very self-sufficient, though. The inte­res­ting thing for me loo­king back, is that crof­ters never did “just one thing”. Every day they had something else going on. One day it might be sheep. The next it might be a job wor­king on the roads for the local coun­cil. I knew one crof­ter who drove the mail van. Another who ran the local post office. They would do their jobs, but after work they’d still have their sheep, cows and pota­toes to attend to.
As my dad is fond of remin­ding me, I seem to have inhe­ri­ted the crof­ting men­ta­lity. I DON’T like waking up in the mor­ning and doing the same thing every day. I LIKE having all these dif­fe­rent balls in the air– car­too­ning, pain­ting, con­sul­ting, wri­ting, mar­ke­ting, blog­ging etc. Sure, part of me would like nothing bet­ter than just “reti­ring to the desert and making pain­tings”, but another part of me likes all the run­ning around in dif­fe­rent direc­tions. And all this run­ning around DOES get tiring, I can tell you that. Some­ti­mes I LOVE the fee­ling of being cons­tantly overwhel­med. Other times I utterly des­pise it.
12. Something in me is chan­ging. I came out to live in the West Texas desert for a rea­son. I’m just begin­ning to find out what that rea­son may be. Some­ti­mes I can clearly see what the rea­son is; other times it pro­ves more elu­sive.
13. It’s a good life. It really is.

September 27, 2008

studio update: desertmanhattan

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[Click on image to enlarge etc.]
For the last cou­ple of months, I’ve been tal­king about a return to large-format pain­tings.
Ori­gi­nally I was plan­ning 6-by-6-foot can­va­ses; I deci­ded ins­tead to opt for 4’x8’.
I finally have my stu­dio set up, as pic­tu­red above. It’s an out­door stu­dio, with cement floor, tin roof, and as shown here, can­vas walls to keep the rain and dust out.
That’s a 4x8’ woo­den board you see there, with two-by-fours fra­ming it on the back­side. I’m going to cover it with can­vas and get pain­ting on it, hope­fully in the next cou­ple of days, before I take off out of town on busi­ness at the end of the week.
In the fore­ground you see my acry­lic pain­ting mate­rials– plus a ten-foot roll of can­vas in the orange plas­tic bag.
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[A rough idea of how I’m hoping it’ll turn out, can­ni­ba­li­zed from a photo of “Fred 44″. Click on image to enlarge etc.]
It’s going to be called “Desert­manhat­tan”. “Fred 44″ was a ink-on-paper study for it, so go here if you want to get an idea of what the final work will end up loo­king like.
It’s called “Desert­manhat­tan”, simply because I’m trying to create a piece that cap­tu­res the vibe I get from both living out in the middle of nowhere, here in the West Texas desert, and the big-city vibe I get when I’m on my busi­ness tra­vels. The desert is an extreme place; so is Manhat­tan; they both inform the work I’m doing now. My dra­wing style was for­ma­li­zed whilst I was living in Manhat­tan, so the title makes com­pete sense to me.
Yes, I intend to sell it when it’s done. Yes, it’ll be really expen­sive [I’m put­ting out fee­lers to poten­tial buyers. If you’re pos­sibly thin­king about beco­ming one of them, please feel free to drop me an email at desertmanhattan@gmail.com, and we’ll start a con­ver­sa­tion, Thanks.] .
If it goes well, I’m not going to sud­denly quit everything else and start cran­king out Desertmanhattan’s like an assembly line. I don’t fore­see ever doing more than 4 – 6 of these pie­ces a year. I don’t fore­see spen­ding more than one week per month on them, either. I’ve got plenty other pro­jects kee­ping me busy; plus it looks like the amount of tra­ve­ling I’ll be doing in the next year is going to inc­rease quite a bit.
As for the mar­ke­ting, well, of course I’ll be using this blog and my Twit­ter feed to do the heavy lif­ting. Though my tar­get mar­ket is not set in stone, I have a fee­ling the buyers for the large pie­ces will come out the pros­pe­rous end of the tech/VC/Silicon Valley/Web 2.0 com­mu­nity. They know me, they know my work, they know my value. Besi­des, the New York finan­cial guys [a favo­rite tar­get of the tra­di­tio­nal art galle­ries] all seem to be losing their jobs at the moment.
And of course, “The Tao of Under­supply” will be seriously infor­ming the mar­ke­ting:

The big­gest pro­blem in the Wes­tern world is over­supply.
For every mid-level mana­ging job ope­ning up, there’s sco­res of peo­ple willing and able. For every com­pany nee­ding to hire an ad agency or design firm, there’s dozens out there, willing and able. For every per­son wan­ting to buy a new car, there’s tons of car makers and dea­lers out there. I could go on and on.
I could also go on about how many good peo­ple I know are caught in over­sup­plied mar­kets, and how every day they wake up, fee­ling chi­lled to the bone with dread and unease. Adver­ti­sing and media folk are clas­sic exam­ples.
So maybe the thing is to is get into “The Tao of Under­supply”.
If only 100 peo­ple want to buy your wid­gets, then just make 90 wid­gets. If only 1000, make 900. If only 10 million, make 9 million. It isn’t roc­ket science, but it takes dis­ci­pline.
It also requi­res you to stop making the same stuff as other peo­ple. Doing that requi­res ori­gi­na­lity and inven­tion.
Like it said in “How To Be Crea­tive”, don’t try to stand out from the crowd, avoid crowds alto­gether. Again, it isn’t roc­ket science.

In other words, it’s bet­ter to under-supply the mar­ket, than to over-supply it.
“Desert” repre­sents one side of me. “Manhat­tan” repre­sents the other. We’ll see where this goes. Rock on.
[UPDATE] 24 hours later:

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[Me appl­ying to under­coat onto the stretched can­vas. Click on image to enlarge etc.]
[UPDATE] 36 hours later:

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[Four under­coats of gesso and acry­lic applied, then I get busy with the pen­cil on the can­vas. Easy. Click on image to enlarge etc.]

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[Close-up. Note how the pen­cil shows up the tex­ture of the can­vas. Click on image to enlarge etc.]