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Insanity and Instagram!
Ahoy all!
How are you amazing people doing?!?! I am back with another post here on the DutzWorks blog site!
Wowee! Things have been pretty awesome crazy here lately between the home schedule adjusting because the kids are out of school and the art I am ramping up to work on during the summer. So, here I am to catch yo all up on the different projects, my new Instagram account and to drop a ton of sketches and art to entertain your ole’ eyeballs! Lol!
Alrighty, here we go!!!
Ok, to start I want to begin with the big stuff and work down from there and end with a big art drop.
My children’s book and the new tag, #MondayMythos
My children’s book has been increasing in momentum over the last few months. My brilliant wife helped me a ton with devising a new name because the original was causing concern with how similar it was to other popular properties. I won’t release the new name until we are closer to completion but until then you can search on Facebook and Instagram for the tag #MondayMythos and find some work as I update! I will also place some of the recent work below this section of the post so you can check it out.
What made a HUGE difference in my progress was finally nailing down a weekly schedule to track myself on. I figured that Mondays are a great time to begin the week with art updates and that gives me the weekend to work on the art if needed. I began to post a panel a week and have mostly stuck to getting them out on Monday. That had also allowed me to create a clever hashtag that is easy to remember and still relates to the Greek mythology origins of the story, hence “MondayMythos.”
I am right about three quarters of the way through coloring the panels and I am actually kind of freaked out about that actually, haha! I am finally seeing the light at the end of the tunnel and after having a dry period of almost two years, seeing progress is exciting me. When I first started the book it was based on a project for a class I was auditing from a branch of the school I graduated from. We were assigned a children’s book and I pulled this tale from my little idea vault. I knocked out the line work really fast, pencil art is one of my strengths, and then when it came time to start colors….I froze.
I was staring down the barrel of almost 40 illustrations and my weakness with color shut me down….for probably two years. I may have started six or seven of the illustrations and finished one or two but I still psyched myself out and that had me working at a snail’s pace. Eventually my wife got tired of me “talking” about the book and not actually working on it and when I combined that honesty with the void I felt I faced my true conviction in the project; I was handling the book like a chihuahua, all bark and no bite. For anyone who knows me they know how dear my wife and my art are to me. When she became tired of me talking about the book I had to face the reality of the fact that I was hiding behind my conversations about it to avoid working on it. The way she and the kids look at me and my projects mean a great deal to me and I had to prove that to them.
That was enough (took me long enough, lol) to push me over the edge and I knew I needed to be a pit bull and not a chihuahua in my approach to the work ethic. I am excited to say that I am making progress about being more of a professional and it is bearing fruit from the effort. We will be thrilled when we can share this project with the world!
Here is some of the art from the story now!
INSTAGRAAAAAAAAAAAAAM!!!!!
WOWEEE ZOWEE! Instagram is awesome!
Thanks to the suggestions of a coworker and fellow designer, I started an Instagram account for my art and it has been a great experience. I have been sharing art there for a few months now, actually I just hit my 100th post and I am already a short jump away from 200 followers! That is cool!
This is my first experience with this social media platform and there are so many great fans and artists on there and I have had so many kind people comment on the art I post. I am very appreciative of their willingness to share their time and attention with my work, just as I am thankful for you dear reader 🙂
I have even been making some pieces that I only share with Instagram just so there is something different for that audience from what I may share on my Facebook page. You can find me on either platform by searching for “DutzWorks.” I usually tell about the piece on each post and thanks to the way that Facebook handles images, you can find the higher resolution versions of some of my art there!
As a fun note, Instagram has also enabled me to follow art related to one of my new favorite fandoms; the game called “Overwatch!” I generally don’t have time to play online games but the art and stories for the characters and settings are AMAZING! The company who created the game, Blizzard Entertainment, also created the “World of Warcraft” property which is about to have a movie come out! I am a big fan of Blizzard art and one of my more recent pieces was my version of a Orc from that series. You can find the story and art about my “Orc of Draenor” piece by clicking here! 🙂
So, this means that a good deal of my recent pieces have been gaming art related and leaning toward more Overwatch so keep your eyes open for those as I post on my social pages!
The character Tracer from Overwatch:
Digitally painting Tracer on an iPad 4 with the app, Procreate!
Art Drop!!!!
Here we go! Your gift for getting through this huge update is a ton of new fun art! Thank you so much for your time and attention! Please enjoy and have a great day!!
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| A piece I did for trendy art thing called “Art vs Artist!” |
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| My version of Jason Momoa as Aquaman |
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| My new DutzWorks bookmarks! I made them for this year’s Career Day at my kiddos’ school. |
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| A fanart of my version of a Pirate Minion! |
The Orc of Draenor – Process Art!!
Ahoy all!!
I hope you all are doing great! Thank you for stopping by to see what is going on here at DutzWorks!
Well, things have been pretty good here, catching up on work with the The Oatley Academy of Visual Storytelling where I staff part time and once I am more caught up I will be jumping back on my first children’s book.
Until then I work on little fun sketches a few times a week and that is what brings us to this post! It is Saturday night as I write this and on Thursday I started a sketch when I had a few minutes and it grew into a really neat piece. I have been inspired lately but some art friends lately (I will post links to them below) and also with the visuals I have seen in the new trailers for the new movie, “Warcraft.” Here is the trailer for your enjoyment too!
It is based on an online game that was first introduced in 1994 by Blizzard Entertainment. Newer versions/expansions of the game are now called “World of Warcraft.” It has grown to be one of the world’s largest online multiplayer games and is rich with creative characters, races and locations. A ton of amazing creativity and art has been poured into this world and is shows in both the work that is produced for it and by the dedication of it’s players.
Well, thanks to all of this inspiration, I ended up pumping out a creature sketch for the characters called “Orcs” and after making the drawing I thought it would be a great opportunity to practice my digital painting and to make a value study in greyscale of the piece. As I drew it, in my head I kept picturing the character backlit with a strong, hazy light and atmosphere blowing past him. I also corrected the name of the piece to “The Orc of Draenor” because I found out during research that the Orcs were actually from a world with that namesake so I wanted to be more accurate. Additionally, I found out that they got to the world of Azeroth through a dimensional gateway called “The Dark Portal” so this painting of mine actually kind of works well under that context!
Alrighty! Click here and lets check out the rest of the story about this piece and see the process art, final piece and process animation!!
Additionally I recently began my first classes at The Oatley Academy and they are part of a series called “The Magic Box.” The entirety of the course will be teaching me a full spectrum of creating art in Photoshop. One of the big things that Chris Oatley, the director of the school and instructor of the course, concentrates on is the creation of atmosphere in our art. I am still in the beginnings of the classes but just what I have watched on how he breaks down the building blocks of this method of painting has made a big impression on me. I wanted badly to try it out in this piece and to push it to the extreme as a way of building the intensity of the mood in the art. I really like the way it turned out and I cannot tell Chris and my other muses just how much their inspiration means to me.
Those inspirational artists are listed here so you all can go see more of what they are making and be inspired too!
Chris Oatley – The Oatley Academy of Visual Storytelling
AJ Nazzaro – The Art of AJ Nazzaro
Fred Lang –
Zijian Yan – Zijian’s website
Legendary Werewolf Shaolin Monk art!
Ahoy all!!
This is just a quick post to share the process art for a recent piece!
There is a group/page on Facebook that I have been a big fan of for a long time. It is called “Character Design Challenge.” The idea is that they post a theme and a short story for a monthly character design prompt and they offer the page up for artists to post their solutions to the challenge.
It is a great exercise and it is awesome to see what you can create when you are within the limitations of strictly the character design.
For the month December, 2015 the prompt was to design a character according to this short story from their Facebook page for the event:
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CTNx 2015 Wrap Up and News!
Ok, to start off the article I want to share some “thank you’s.” First, I want to thank God that I made it there and back safely and that I was able to spend time with other creative minded people while I was there. I also want to thank Him for the blessing of the talent I was given. I love making art and I love creating things that I can share and entertain others with and I am very thankful that I have the ability and the opportunity.
Next I want to thank my wife and children. I was gone for a five days and my family worked it like champs even when my wife had a toothache. I would have had so much more stress and anxiety with out her help on everything from planning to packing to loving on me before and while i was gone. All of this just so I could go do something fun for myself; be around and talk art with other creatives! She is amazing and I am a blessed guy to have someone like her in my life. I am thankful that though our kids didn’t drive her *too* crazy and though they wanted to be there with me, they were excited for what I was doing and handled it with grace. One of my new goals for the next few years of the show is to work it to a point that I can include my family in a leg of the trip before or after the show! I cannot tell you how much you and the kids have done for me, thank you sweetheart!
Next I want to thank Chris Oatley for everything he has done for me in the last few years leading up to and including everything he did for me at the show. Chris is the director of The Oatley Academy of Visual Storytelling and has become a dear friend to me. I became a fan of his content years ago from his podcast, Chris Oatley’s ArtCast and then another podcast he cohosts with Lora Innes and Justin Copeland called The Paper Wings Show. They have taught me so much about the creation of great content and how to be a stronger, more thoughtful and inspired artists and those are lessons that I still carry with me today.
Chris left a career at Disney to start his own art school in 2012 and at the end of 2014 asked me to join on the support staff for the Academy. Though I am not able to put in the hours I want to with the academy due to full-time work, family, home and DutzWorks responsibilities, he still brought me further into the school and gave me even greater opportunities to help he, the teams and the students. Chris has chosen some of the most amazing artists I have ever met to work with him and if he has brought me into those ranks, then he sees something special in me and one of my goals is to ensure I live up to that potential. Thank you Chris!
I also want to thank my coworker Gary, my brother Korey and so many others for help with the flight and so many other aspects of the trip! Thank you all for being so amazing! You all have helped make this trip possible for me!
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Wow!!!
It is hard to put into words all that the trip was and what I experienced. It was fun, educational, inspirational and encouraging. I have so many things I will be working on this coming year. I will be finishing my book with new project goals after that and will be connecting to other artists in more intentional ways in years to come!
I am so excited! I have lots of pictures from the show so I will try to be brief on the rest of the article and let the photos do some talking too. I also have links below that will take you to many of the awesome things I mention in the post! Also, click here to see the new Illustration Portfolio I took with me to share are as I met others during the events!
The show is called CTNx which stands for the Creative Talent Network Expo and it is a trade show geared toward creative professionals in the entertainment industry. It has a heavy lean toward animation and the different talents that make it possible such as character designers and visual development artists but the show also has room for illustrators of books and games. It is a great place to meet other artists and professionals alongside also being in the right place to be part of educational sessions and product reviews. The show ran Friday to Sunday, November 19th-22nd.
The Oatley Academy of Visual Storytelling team, podcasters and I spent the Wednesday before the show at Disneyland….yes, Dutz at Disneyland! I warned them that I was going to be the biggest kid they they saw out there and I sure lived up to that! I giggled, skipped around and stared in wonder at this place drempt up by artists and built by craftsmen that all began 60 years ago! We had so much fun and I collapsed into the bed and remember almost nothing in the blink between going to sleep and waking the next day.
Thursday was OA (Oatley Academy) Family Day and the staff and I met with OA students who traveled in for the show. We all met at The Getty Museum and after a few hours of gazing at the work of master artists, we went to Stephen Silver’s studio in Burbank for OA Family Time and pizza! There Chris talked to the students and staff, shared news about the growing school and shared his love for the teams and students. He loves what his work and who he does if for and it shows in so many things he does!
Friday through Saturday was the show. We were busy at the Oatley Academy booth each day practically from the time the doors opened to when the staff of the expo kicked us out. It was invigorating and tiring all at the same time and I am so very thankful I could be a part of it!
I was able meet artists in person whom I have admired for a long time only online. So many amazingly talented and inspiring people like Mel Milton (one of my favorite artists and people) to the amazing Nic Gregory and I freaked out when i looked over when behind our booth to see Jake Parker booth-ing right next to us! Jake is a wonderfully talented artist and a very active force of encouragement in trying to connect artists with their fan bases and the public at large.
He created the art event Inktober ( ink drawing event in October) and Art Drop Day and my participation in those events has encouraged a great amount of growth in my art over the last two years. I was geeking out to work at a booth next to him and the print I bought from him is one of my prized items from the show. At the bottom of this article you will find photos of the items I picked up and links to the creative folks who made them so you can check out more of their work too!
The expo showed me just how connected this industry can really be and just how many amazing varieties of talent feed into it. I will try to tell you more about the details of the show and how it affected me as I work through projects throughout the year. Until then, please enjoy these photos and pictures of the art from the trip!
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( That is the awesome Drew Blom photobombing in the back, like a boss! )
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Here is some art I made during the trip too!!
The Warrior Process Post!
Hello to all! Thank you so much for stopping here to check out this new process post! I have been kind of going crazy with inspiration lately so this is another piece that has jumped from the page to the tablet and then on to your screen!
I was at an event with the family one evening recently when I pulled out the sketchpad to doodle. I wanted to try to work on a few head sketches because I feel that I need to add variety to the shapes and proportions of the faces I draw. As usual, a simple sketch turns into narrative-like doodles and I ended up drawing two faces that vastly contrasted each other. I thought it would be fun to give them two character types and then use them to practice more on my digital painting. I wanted to call the duo “The Wizard & The Warrior.”
In the case of the Warrior, I started with a cool pallet with deep blues and purples and want to exercise a warm pallet of red, gold and oranges as a contrast on the Wizard piece when I paint it later.
I admit, I really got carried away with excitement on this piece and kept trying to push it as practice. Then, when I thought I was comfortable with a stopping point, my oh so awesome and bold wife pointed out an area that was lacking and I really had to face it honestly. It was with the skull-shaped face painting. My wife said that the first version I had (when I was just trying to hint at the skull) was too faint and vague. I had to take a step back and admit to myself that she was right and then I went back into it and pumped up the color and shape of the skull and the whole piece is better for it! Thanks sweetie!
So, I am going to hold off on painting “The Wizard”, the complimentary piece to this painting, until I have a few more panels of my book, “The Tiniest Titan,” finished. I really need to get control of the distractibility I am having on that project. I keep getting inspired to do all of these other practice pieces, which are great ways of giving myself breathing room on learning to paint better, but they are also beginning to become a tool of avoidance and I need to maintain myself. This is one of the biggest hurdles we creative-type people face with personal projects; maintaining momentum and drive on a singular piece or project over time.
I have been a professional graphic designer for 7 years now and working on my own small projects on the side for years too and I really want to make a serious move to turn my intellectual properties into products. For me to be successful with that, I have to maintain my professionalism with my books even though they are personal projects. I want The Tiniest Titan to be the first of many successful books and the beginning of a grander creative future for my family and I and that requires that I take myself and my schedule seriously. That can be hard at times, but well worth it.
Now that I am all booked to go to the Creative Talent Network Expo ( CTNx ) in Burbank November of this year, I really want to be able to showcase the finished Titan book along with a strong portfolio. There are people that I am sure I am destined to meet and connect to creatively and my book and portfolio will be GREAT tools in those conversations! I will tell you all more about that as the show gets closer! But…enough with my talkativeness, lol!
I will continue to keep you all in the loop on the new things going on here at DutzWorks! Until then, my very best to all of you!
BoneMask Art Process!
Hello to all! Thank you so much for stopping here to check out this new process post! I am really excited about showing you the breakdown of this piece because it was so much fun to make!
I worked on this piece and the Podcasts Monster painting very close together in time to get the inspiration out of my system while I had it. Now that these are out for you all to enjoy, I am going to push myself to dive back into my children’s book, The Tiniest Titan, so I can get it completed by September of this year!
My goal is to have it ready for a charity Kickstarter to enable me to to share the story with a wider audience based on the campaign goals. I will be narrowing down all of the details as I get closer to completing the project and will then share them with you all!
Alrighty! Onward to the details of this piece of art, BoneMask!
This piece is one that started as a sketch I dreamed up when was literally staring at shapes on a wall! Let me explain, I have recently been re-watching a comic movie from years ago that I enjoyed about Marvel’s character, The Punisher.
I have always liked the use of the flat white, splattered skull in the character’s design. Everything else is utilitarian about his costume and constantly changes in accordance to the task at hand. Yet, in general, the skull is a consistent character mark and to me it is a reminder of the character’s resolve. Punisher is a rough, determined character and the symbol of death he carries emphasizes that ferocity.
To me, it is a great approach to design. So, staring at the wall one day I put together series of shapes and fueled by the skull inspiration, this mask illustration took shape. I sketched the line work down and thought it presented a great opportunity to exercise my digital painting to get more practice in!
I was then helped by two amazing artists I have the honor of working with from the team of The Oatley Academy, Fred Lang and AJ Nazzaro! I will link to their sites below! They helped to take the piece from cool to amazing with their suggestions of additional texture, color variation and composition. It really made a huge difference and I am immensely grateful to them for it!
Here are the links to find their great work and follow them online too!
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| And here is the animated version of the images! |
That was cool!
Thank you all so very much for checking in with the new work that I am able to put up when I have time! I am planning on turning a few of my recent pieces ( this BoneMask piece is one ) into prints you all can purchase! I will be sure to notify you when they are available!
I will also make a new post next month, ( June of 2015 ) with some of the finished images from my Titan children’s book! This will help me to share some of the work and will also help to encourage me to keep a good pace on the production of the art.
Until then, my very best to all of you!






































































































































































