Showing posts with label Theo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Theo. Show all posts
Friday, November 12, 2010
More Theo Silliness at Cafe Press!
I was thinking this portrait of Theo would come out more conservative, but once I saw it in this hot pink all the memories of hot pink sweaters from the late Eighties came rushing back to me. Hideous, really, although somehow Theo seems to pull it off with aplomb. She manages to express a unique combination of sophistication, world-weariness and relaxed irritation. I'm glad that she does not haunt me anymore. I've even put away my high heels and no longer have any desire to dress up and express myself this way. But I have my memories and these pictures, although they are only sketches, which I can share with you.
Friday, November 5, 2010
Recolored Theo design at Cafe Press!
It's another colored Theo portrait available as a tee shirt from CafePress.com. My designs are eclectic, campy, unique and printed on a tee shirt makes the best holiday gift. Inspire others to be true to themselves or encourage your own party spirit.
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Tee Shirts available at CafePress.com!
All the more reason to remind the world that life can be better! The wonder of the Internet allows me to offer your favorite designs printed on tee shirts. See the selection of images at my web page: Tee Shirt Designs.
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
The Theo Portraits III
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| "Really Albert, you're so weird!" -Theo |
This portrait of Theo is definitely in a modern mode. We had a catalog of women's sweaters kicking around the house and a model in one photograph had such an imperious look that I needed to capture it. It took me longer to come up with the caption, but it seems appropriate for the image.
Friday, October 1, 2010
The Theo Portraits II
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"Really darling, the guests will run away if you don't come out and greet them." -Theo |
I am posting these portraits in fairly quick succession because I want to get to posting pages from my next sketchbook which begins in 1990. I'm including these under the sketchbook labels (below) because these images started out in sketchbooks and then took on a life of their own. I hope to post t-shirt versions of them, although I have no idea if anyone will wear these images.
This Theo portrait is directly from my imagination. I created it more consciously and the caption is something I said because of a real situation rather than just springing from my subconscious. But it received such a reception that I thought it deserved a Theo portrait.
At the time I drew it, Auntie Mame was a newly discovered "favorite" movie, so there is likely quite a bit of inspiration from that, although I have to admit my notions about the artificiality of the nineteen fifties and the odd costumes of Orry-Kelly for the movie inspired me less. The costume for this drawing was based on the unlikely pairing of satin and fur which is something that could have been used in the nineteen fifties. I liked that the wide edging of the coat works both at concealing and revealing the body underneath.
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
The Theo Portraits I
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| "Really Albert, you can't go through your whole life being a toad!"
- Theo
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After coming out as a gay man, I began to believe I was possessed by the spirit of a woman from the nineteen twenties. I didn't take it very seriously and it mostly came on when I was inebriated with marijuana and beer. But it persisted enough that I attempted to capture the notion in pictures and stories. In a way, it was a psychosis brought on by a desire for attention and related directly to finding my identity as an adult gay man.
My friend Kathy would laugh and make a big fuss about it when I'd say things out of the blue, like the above statement. She also encouraged me to dress up in drag, which I'd always skirted with my interest in theater but eschewed in my childhood because my mother always vetoed it as being "artificial" and "stereotypically effeminate". But in my mind as a newly out gay man, it was less about falsehood or transgressing-my-gender than it was a combination of finding myself suddenly freed from otherwise invisible shackles of sexual, emotional and social repression that I'd grown up wearing in my childhood.
Imagining myself possessed was my way of healing and reconciling my memories of pains I developed socially when my gender and sexuality was questioned at school by other boys. Possession was also a reflection of stories coming out of Hollywood, but it also gave me permission to be silly and effeminate in front of friends who encouraged me for the first time in my life; when growing up I'd always felt an outsider, even when I was praised for unique abilities. Because dressing up and playing at being sissified was an easy way to entertain, I could indulge again in the sort of play that previously I had controlled and commodified out of fear, a fear that I had no concrete idea what the consequences were outside of my own ongoing experience of isolation, separation and loneliness.
Both my parents had interests in theater and growing up I became involved and shared their interest. One of the first times I saw a public performance, my mother took me away from a cub scouting event to see a performance at a local theater of "The Fantasticks!". I was already familiar with the music, my mother loves to sing and taught me all sorts of tunes. But it was the very idea that this adult storytelling could take precedent over an otherwise boring social event, that I soon realized my desire for acceptance didn't need to come at the price of my own identity. Somehow I continue to persist, no matter how anyone else perceives me.
The above image (which I named "Theo" after my grandmother) directly references a photo-portrait of New York heiress, Peggy Guggenheim. I copied it from a magazine, perhaps Smithsonian magazine, but I really don't remember now. I loved her odd turban-like hat and the imperious manner of her stance. The cigarette holder became a signifier for Theo's character in a picture. Like many gay men, I have always been attracted to strong, powerful women, some of them lesbian, almost always distinctly feminine; but most often they are self-possessed and in control of their situation and life. It is something I see in my own mother although she remains heterosexually oriented.
The reference to "being a toad", besides the obvious and classic Grimms' fairytale of "The Frog Prince" , I think is related to the famous character in Kenneth Grahame's The Wind in the Willows, but here it is clearly directed at a male counterpart. In my mind, Albert is her brother, but I never did imagine what he looked like. Perhaps he looks something like a toad.
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Paul Poiret - 1910
Ah, yes...a coat by Paul Poiret. This sketch of a fashion photograph looks like it is from the height of Poiret's oriental-ism. I've always been a great fan of fashion design from the beginning of the previous century, especially the nineteen-twenties and nineteen-thirties. In College I collected Tom Tierney's books of paper dolls published by Dover for my own reference. Unfortunately his copies of the Erte collections are no longer available, nor are Dover's reprints of fashion catalogs containing Erte's designs. But Dover has continued to publish other designer's works and Poiret is a favorite.
The shape of the coat which is emphasized by the stylized pose of the mannequin is similar to how a robe or kimono might drape, only Poiret has used fairly modern western forms to achieve this with a wide embroidered lapels and a frog clasp. I suspect the fabric is silk velvet in either brown or avacado green. The sleeves seem to be gathered, as well as the back which seems to gather below the knees, just above the lower edge, creating a unique form that you only see in coats from this time period.
I did a short series of sketches featuring fashion models and clothing back in my college days, although I mostly shared them with close friends. I named the model in each sketch Theo, after my grandmother and sometimes gave them captions as if they were speaking to someone off page. In this sketch I was thinking of my boss at Waldenbooks at the time, so she looks somewhat different to the original model, who I think had a triangular face. Clearly I didn't want to lose the effect of her pose so I redrew the part that went off the page above her right arm. Her hat looks as if she's wearing a cleaning woman's scarf, but I assure you the original was worth my recording it here. Too bad pencil smudges.
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