
Let’s see, on the left we’ve got some sketches of Jericho Silvertree, a fellow that looks like a walking skeleton. He wears red sunglasses, a white cowboy hat, white suit and spats. In the middle, a little guy with a shaved head. He’s mad because he’s not really little, he’s just drawn that way. On the right we’ve got Moe dancin’. And at the bottom right we’ve got a fellow who is shocked, just shocked! by it all. Or maybe he has indigestion.
Category Archives: Uncategorized
Meanwhile, Back in Oz

Today’s sketch is an alien with no backstory. It might have had one when I drew it but I don’t know it now. It doesn’t belong to any of the major species of my mental universe. I like the design though so I’m sure I’ll figure our something for it someday.
—-
The covers for the Complete Annotated Oz Squad, Volumes 1 & 2 are finished. The first volume is now available at Lulu.com. The second should be ready for sale in the next couple of days. You can take a look at the covers in all their glory on my Oz Squad history page. I’ve also updated the Who’s Who page to include Betsy Bobbin and Dorothy Gale.
Interestingly, you can get a copy of The Wizard of Oz through Lulu. I didn’t check to see if it came with illustrations or not. There are at least a couple of other Oz items there – a movie script for Wicked and a sequel to the Wizard titled, excitingly enough, Return to Oz. I’m not recommending either one. The Wicked script can’t be official or authorized. The first chapter of Return seems to be plagarized from the first chapter of the Wicked novel. I’ve no problem with fan art and stories but I think it’s in bad taste (and not legally smart) to charge for them. Put up a website and give it away.
Moe and Lili

Here we have Moe and Lili as they looked when I was doing Bonecage Graffiti.
Moe made his first appearance in my sketchbooks back in 1988 or 89. At the time he was just an illustration of a drunk guy with dreadlocks and a trenchcoat. Shortly thereafter he acquired his buddy Detritus and I drew my first comic featuring the two of them on a kitchen wall in Cotati, California.
Lili first appeared in The Highly Unlikely Adventures of Moe and Detritus #8, not physically, just as a reference to Moe’s friend with all the weapons. I don’t remember how she became a seven foot tall Puerto Rican amazon. The name came first. Lili Veracruz. I had a friend who was a five foot tall Puerto Rican amazon. Maybe she inspired Lili. It seems obvious that she had but I’d never associated the two until another friend asked about it. My friend is just a much sweeter person than Lili has an interest in being.
Nails in the Face

Random sketchs from 1995. The mask with the nails in it seems to be favorite theme of mine. I first saw the nails-in-the-head motif on an African fetish in a museum. The idea was that you’d write a wish on a strip of cloth, wrap the cloth around a nail, then pound the nail into this wooden head sculpture and this would induce/request the spirits/gods to grant the wish. Clive Barker was apparently inspired by the same idea when he created Pinhead
BFP, Deadworld and Teeth, Always More Teeth

Random collection of characters – the woman with the glasses and the shaved head is the Jade Buddha from Bugfuck Palace; the thing with the four arms is a reworking of one of the demon servants of King Zombie from Deadworld and between the two of them is a animated rotting corpse. The thing up top is some sort of demon creature that I originally imagined sometime during my teenage years. It was attached to a story inspired by Stephen King’s The Mist. I don’t remember any details of the story – it was one of many, never written down, not remembered long.
My What Big Teeth You Have
That Trick Never Works!

Every time I run across this drawing I’m tempted to finish inking it. I considered finishing before scanning it. However, with all the projects I’m behind on, and all the things I manage to get distracted by on a regular basis, I promised myself when I began scanning my sketchbooks that I would just scan the art and post it. No fixing. No editing. No finishing. So this drawing will probaby remain unfinished forever.
Evening Dress
Naked People! Run! Cover Your Eyes! Won’t Someone Think of the Children?!?!

Naked figure studies from 1995 –
Most of artists by whom I have been influenced have the ability to portray wide varieties of people. I aspire to make each character I draw individual enough that they’d be recognizable stark naked with a shaved head. I’ve still got a way to go before I can do that. Practice, practice, practice.
Behold, A Paper Plate

More random sketches. Mostly. The three fingered hand belongs to a lizard. Probably to Aunt Hortense, the creature smoking the cigarette. What did you say? That she doesn’t look like a lizard? Does Mickey look like a mouse? Does Oswald look like a rabbit?
Aunt Hortense is the matron(? boss? guardian? keeper?) of the five lizards introduced back in 1988. By this sketchbook all the lizards had developed distinct personalities (at least to me) and distinct appearances (at least to me). Aunt Hortense was sort of inspired by the weird uncle/nephew relationships in Disney cartoons. We never know how exactly Donald and Mickey have nephews. Parents aren’t in evidence. The lizards seemed to need an authority figure so the authority figure became an aunt. I don’t know how she’s actually related to the other lizards. Some things just aren’t important.

