Saturday, August 7, 2010

Christian Science Monitor: My Moment in the Spotlight


While I was working on the mural for International House of Blues Foundation in the alleyway leading to the House of Blues' restaurant and music venue, a reporter and photographer from the Christian Science Monitor stopped to ask me how I felt about New Orleans post-Katrina. I am thrilled that they chose to feature me in their photo essay.

To see more photos from the essay, click on http://www.csmonitor.com/CSM-Photo-Galleries/In-Pictures/New-Orleans/(photo)/2

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Going Round & Round!

I began work on refurbishing the Carousel at the Audubon Zoo back in May. Here are a few pics of the finished work.




















It is called the "Endangered Species" Carousel. It has both a white and green alligator (hardly endangered), lions, tigers, hippos and rhinos, gorillas, jaguars, giraffes, ostriches, flamingoes, six zebras and a few horses, to name a few!
My favorite things are the fantastical touches, such as the benches' combination lion/fish becomin winged creature attached to the tiger/griffin.

Sunday, May 23, 2010

I've Got Balls!


Or should I say... "The Fly" at Audubon Park has twelve new column capitals that happen to be 2' round baseball sculptures. Brent Barnidge did the sculpting, and I did the painting on them. We also collaborated on 8 baseball glove column capitals, and I'm not sure why I don't have their mug shots.
Sorry, I have a lot of catching up to do in the posting department. These photos date back to February.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Howdy, Y'all!


I recently painted some scenery for a cowboy-themed party. Kinda cute...

Just finished redoing the shelves in the Aquarium's main Gift Shop. They were made to look like stone but the rough surface kept tearing up the books the shelves were built to house. My assistant, Jim O'Donnell, and I spent hours sanding them down with belt-sanders, then palm-sanders, then applying a two-part epoxy-resin to the surface to level and smooth it out. I then repainted it to its faux-stone glory. Not the most glamorous of projects and certainly not the most photogenic, but I love working with power tools and discovering new materials. My recent experimentation with hard-coating carved styrofoam may be the start of a new foray into sculpting.

Friday, November 6, 2009

Mood-Setter!





Now the
"Dinosaur
Adventure"
entrance is
finally
complete
with a
prehistoric
scene to set
the mood.
That's a Europlesaphalus front and center, with my daughter's favorite dino, a Parasauralaphus guarding her nest as another late-Cretacious creature swoops in from above. It was fun but I always wish I had more time to make it "perfectement"!

Saturday, October 31, 2009

Day of Installation

Here is Gary, one of the Zoo's maintenance fellers, transporting our stone columns (with Brent holding them together) to the installation site.

We next had to cut open the hard-coated foam sculpture to fit the armature around the existing column structure. We reattached the end pieces with Great Stuff, hard-coated, spackled, hard-coated again, then primed in preparation for painting the seams to match the following day!

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Faux Stone Archway: Carving in Progress!

Boy, has it been along time since I've posted! The loss of my camera and a delay in acquiring a new one is largely responsible, but I'm back on track!
I have been working on a faux stone archway for the "Dinosaur Adventure" exhbit at teh Zoo. They decided to make it a permanent exhibit- atleast for a few years more- and wanted a proper entrance. I have been collaborating with local sculptor Brent Barnidge on the project. Here are some progress photos: