Illustration Program
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About the Episode
In this episode of Illustration Isolation, we draw stills from the film Mad Max: Fury Road. We were joined by illustrators and painters, Cassandra Loomis Kim, Raymond Bonilla, and John English. In addition, Terry Brown, the former Director of the New York Society of Illustrators dropped in for a quick chat about art history, our favorite painters, films, and career advice. Thumbnail art by Doug Bell.
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Automated Transcript from the Episode:
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Tim Trabon: Okay.
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Tim Trabon: room is open.
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John English: Where we live.
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Tim Trabon: yep we’re live.
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John English: Right just.
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Tim Trabon: We were just talking about.
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Tim Trabon: it’s me container john we’re just talking about 16th century fashion fashion trends.
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John English: But we’re just talking about what we were the time so.
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Tim Trabon: yeah yeah.
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Tim Trabon: where’s your ruffled color josh.
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John English: I left I left it.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: Getting it starts to me.
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Tim Trabon: I while we left the room Philip I actually I have a question is there, like any type of painting from I don’t know past couple hundred years that you would like not one in your House just because of the materials you think.
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Tim Trabon: Like.
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Tim Trabon: It just seems like there’s just so many crazy chemicals have been used ever I don’t know I feel like there’d be like a 1960s.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: I was gonna say there’s probably like.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: installment sculptures that are made this and shading materials that I wouldn’t feel comfortable with.
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John English: yeah something Julian novels done that type of things.
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Tim Trabon: yeah.
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John English: Well part part of his thing was you know, the deterioration those plates, you know, on the walls, if you don’t know who he is to me he’s.
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John English: he’s he direct he directed basket and did all the other.
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John English: Okay he’s directed all he directed and did all the paintings for the movie.
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Tim Trabon: Well hey everybody.
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Tim Trabon: we’re here yeah we’re here yo.
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Tim Trabon: Please find the chat the chat seems very quiet i’m surprised nobody’s using the chat.
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Tim Trabon: shoot us a message I was like the chat broke.
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All right, good okay.
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John English: participants.
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Tim Trabon: coming in, oh got some first timers here, let us know if you’re a first timer.
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Tim Trabon: start off by be sure when use the chat don’t only send it to host and panelists send it to everyone, and unless it’s a complaint.
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Tim Trabon: All right.
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Tim Trabon: we’re gonna you’re here early enough to catch the intro.
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Tim Trabon: awesome great well if you if you just joined you’re in the right place, thanks, a lot of time.
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John English: Alright hi everybody, this is john i’m here with Cassandra loomis Kim timmy trayvon we have a few more coming in, I believe, Bill is going to be late.
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Tim Trabon: People will be trickling in yeah.
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John English: A couple of things welcome if you’re if you’re new to us we’re going to do three poses tonight we used to do, for we decided to switch up the links we’re going to do 220 minute poses in one works out to be about a 35 or 40 minute post at the end.
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John English: I think it’s, just like the format better gives us an opportunity to finish one drawing a little bit further tonight.
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John English: We are drawing fury road reference comes from mad Max fury road Tom hardy.
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John English: Nicholas hoult.
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John English: Surely staring can actually share least twice, you have the option of either one on the end.
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Tim Trabon: I like that the last two have been like duplicate this is that time that’s right.
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John English: I think it’s fun.
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John English: And then.
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John English: If you are new to new to us after your drawings after the post post your work to think I have it in here, right here that illustration isolation hashtag illustration isolation on instagram.
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staring.
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John English: And then we will come in and.
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John English: we’ll go through it at the end of the night we spend about 10 minutes going through all the work and just looking at and kind of oohing and aahing it’s like watching fireworks fun.
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John English: So.
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John English: With That said, I think we’re ready to go.
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Tim Trabon: I think we are.
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Tim Trabon: I mean terry’s in the crowd, so I will be.
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John English: I heard a voice in there as soon as.
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John English: he’s wandering around the room.
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Tim Trabon: i’m gonna i’m gonna add the link to the chat.
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Tim Trabon: That photo reference and we’re all set.
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John English: All right.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: super fun reference, by the way.
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John English: Very fun.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: And timmy you missed all the compliments for the met Gala the last week.
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Tim Trabon: No kidding really.
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Tim Trabon: that’s great yeah oh my God, well, we were early on, we were really.
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Tim Trabon: On point with that because.
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Tim Trabon: Like like within within the hour of us doing that lived on zach’s released this new album.
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Tim Trabon: which I just thought wow we are marketing geniuses.
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Tim Trabon: I i’ve really been enjoying following that.
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John English: I immediately went out and bought the album so.
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Tim Trabon: yeah I know I know you did.
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John English: I bought it in vinyl.
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Tim Trabon: yeah john doesn’t stream anymore I yeah i’m gonna turn off my video.
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Here you go.
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Tim Trabon: You see how.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: You john that just makes you even more of a hipster if you’re buying it on vinyl.
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Tim Trabon: yeah I was just going to tell you john yeah that’s like pretty on point.
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yeah.
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John English: yeah.
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John English: I was born at night, but not last night guys.
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John English: I was aware of that.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: And someone asked any specific materials we need whatever you want to work with like use it, I had a week early on, when I would use crayons and it was really fun so whatever you got use it.
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Tim Trabon: Somebody said, this is only or she started john john get started early we we come in this room at like 545 and the second john joints he starts drawing so you haven’t missed anything he’s been working a little bit longer.
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got a warm up.
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Tim Trabon: I so we also we’ve got Terry brown on the panel.
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John English: hey Terry.
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Tim Trabon: how’s it going.
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Terry Brown: it’s going it’s going very, very well, I came in through the back door, because, for some reason the invite.
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Terry Brown: came in that way, so i’m here doesn’t matter.
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Tim Trabon: that’s great.
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John English: In other words, timmy he figured it out.
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Terry Brown: Things that geezers learned learned to do.
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Tim Trabon: yeah terrier important part of the team.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: hey how you doing.
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Terry Brown: i’m doing pretty darn well harvesting my last tomatoes enjoying the sun going down too early, but it’s okay good good time of year.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: Who around my gosh I love fall and so ready for this yeah.
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Terry Brown: been following some interesting threads on on on Facebook, one that came up today was a copyright issue with the with marvel comics and spider man or Dave spurlock put out, and of course I can put a snide response to it but, but those of you who are listening in.
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Terry Brown: The see in the circle is your is your lifeblood you got to know about it and, unfortunately, at this time of the illustration world, they do not have a.
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Terry Brown: Strong a political action committee should we say that can respond to industry issues so we’ll see how this one’s going to turn out with the originator of the marvel character spider man.
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John English: So Cassandra.
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John English: yeah let me ask you.
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John English: I know it might be similar as weeks before, but do you mind kind of walking.
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John English: audience through what you’re doing.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: Oh sure um yeah so i’ve got cardboard because it’s what I have flying around all the time, and I feel it with gap 100 so that makes means that the paint will just sit nicely on the surface.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: And then now i’m working in acrylic and i’m just painting the Silhouette first mid mid tone and then i’ll start to work into it.
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John English: Okay.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: So um.
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John English: We were kind of just talking briefly about archival issues.
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John English: People artwork that’s been on.
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John English: substrates that maybe aren’t the most sustainable.
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Tim Trabon: yeah I had yeah to make it just to go full circle I kind of asked Cassandra like what responsibility with your work, do you feel free to you know not change once completed right.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: mm hmm.
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Tim Trabon: Because there’s a lot that goes into ricky, including the frame.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: yeah so I I tried to make it as archival as possible when i’m doing my find out for for these nights like.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: I I just have been and i’m not worried about it, so I have sealed the front of this and yeah I use gap 100 it’s that’s like an acrylic primer that you can put on.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: Lots of surfaces to seal it so that nothing comes up and like what you paint on sits sits on the top.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: And, but like the sides in the back aren’t in any way prepared so that’s what me why it won’t be archival if I.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: If I prepared the edges and the back and then after my opinion, I like sealed it with the varnish, then it would become archival.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: I saw this amazing cardboard artists and healing cures the cardboard in latex, and so it lasts but.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: I believe, like you know as i’ve learned my earlier stuff is not as archival is now my stuff is but the more I learned the harder I work.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: To make it as archival because I feel like people are investing in like my piece enough to buy it I I want it to be the best possible piece in many ways for them.
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Tim Trabon: Paul asks I would using matt me and perform as well.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: Well that’s a really good question um I think I think matt medium would work really well i’m not sure about how well it feels.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: To like being permeable like if there’s anything in the cardboard or like I don’t know later if that will come through, but I know it gives a good base to work on top of.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: john do you know.
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John English: That meeting has been used for the last 50 years to into everything with artists.
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John English: I I don’t know.
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John English: What its long term effect would be, I know that things that i’ve seen people do by using matt medium and using it as a sealant.
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John English: And in tuning.
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John English: Their work with it.
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John English: has worked really, really well.
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John English: Firm things things that I own of other artists that are 50 and 60 years old, that.
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John English: That have used it.
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John English: The.
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John English: You know thing that I probably mentioned most about especially this crowd.
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John English: illustrators generally have not been that concerned with the archival quality of their work, because most most illustrators see their finished piece as.
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John English: The printed piece and that’s you know and again digital plays right into that.
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John English: But, for you know, during especially.
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John English: The second half of last century.
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John English: I don’t think illustrators took as much care of their work as maybe they should have.
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John English: One in the family, I wish would have paid more attention to certain things.
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John English: Actually, he became very aware of it.
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John English: In his world of painting.
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John English: And it was more important for that, because, again, that he was as an illustrator he was selling a piece that was going, the purpose of it was to go to print.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: and
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John English: You so outcome makes a big difference of how you treat that.
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Terry Brown: The reality is, it had no tangible value beyond its use as a cover of a magazine as a cover of a book, it was not until after the bicentennial in them so little focus on.
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Terry Brown: Other American artists beyond the ones that are so well known and the illustrators gotten into that mix and some galleries came forward.
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Terry Brown: That said, wow look at this guy Howard pyle he could paint who’s this nc wyeth guy is that that the Andes Dag he wasn’t half bag there it actually had some tangible value and.
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Terry Brown: Yes, we should try to keep those originals in good shape john you’re working in pastels, how do you cure your pastels for.
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John English: Accurate has passed over really stable.
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John English: They don’t change they fall off, you have to mostly the with pastel is framing them properly.
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John English: But you go back and look at.
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John English: The pastel work of the Impressionist the stuff is the color is just fantastic.
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John English: Now, the problem is, you know I went to a merry cassette show and.
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John English: The pieces, whereas you know, pastels on the ground and.
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John English: And it’s just that’s part that’s the nature of the material, but you know the things I do and passed out I do just mostly for.
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John English: doing here I don’t have.
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John English: I don’t do many finishes and pass down.
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Terry Brown: So if you were a portrait artist.
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Terry Brown: Working in pastels your work it’s meant to be home all over the fireplace at the shabbat next house for the next thousand years, it needs to be framed properly.
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Terry Brown: Right, so that it’s not coming off by gravity and it’s not coming off by air conditioning yeah.
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John English: People rubbing against it.
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Terry Brown: What about what What if you work in water color is there anything you need to take into account.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: The race.
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John English: yeah put it behind UV glass.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: don’t have it in the direct light of a window.
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Tim Trabon: john when I think of your pastels I always Terry I think this is the year you were at the Academy rockers but.
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Tim Trabon: My wife girlfriend at the time we had just like kind of started dating and she drove to meet at the Academy, and she pulled up and john had a stack of figure drawings that.
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Tim Trabon: That were laying on the on the sidewalk where we were parking to go right up to the back and gentlemen, just drove right.
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Tim Trabon: There is this perfect tire tread.
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Tim Trabon: Right after.
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Tim Trabon: His fast Elton john’s like oh no, you know, and she felt really bad and then later that night she goes.
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Tim Trabon: Why did he have on the ground.
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John English: Now i’ll point out that she did park on the sidewalk.
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Tim Trabon: yeah right right behind your dad.
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John English: might be helping me yeah.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: gosh yeah.
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John English: But again it’s like.
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John English: Most of this stuff that the stuff that was done in life during class and their 20 minute poses the ones I really like a cake out, and I take good care of them.
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John English: But that’s few and far between.
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Tim Trabon: yeah I have a stack of figure drains from you know when you’re down in the West bottoms john when you moved.
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Tim Trabon: They were.
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Tim Trabon: They were you know leftover work from students and I could not take myself that their own away because I just was like if there’s something worth keeping me in here i’m the guy i’m the guy throws away the valuable art.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: teacher Thomas blackwell.
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Tim Trabon: yeah you know, and so I I got it and I put it in there’s like a one we have one of those chests that like a grandpa brought over.
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Tim Trabon: yeah, and so I I threw it in the chest, and I just was like i’m never gonna think about these again.
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Tim Trabon: You know it’ll probably be like at my estates.
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Terry Brown: haven’t gone, you could have a garage sale that’s really going to be extraordinary.
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Tim Trabon: Maybe you know.
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John English: i’ve accumulated some.
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John English: Some good drawings from.
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Tim Trabon: yeah john you you curated the good stuff though I just got a grab bag of.
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Tim Trabon: What was left behind you know, like the circus Left and I just.
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Tim Trabon: yeah.
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John English: My opening line is Gary you really don’t want to drive back with all this stuff in your car, you know.
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Terry Brown: Well john over the years I collected some nice pieces that.
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Terry Brown: folks they’ve given me and thanks, or I picked up at some of the society of illustrators auctions and such.
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Terry Brown: Those who are new to the group I was the director of the society of illustrators in New York for a couple hundred years, and again by I did buy a nice little sketch and thats hanging and in special place in our House for a reason it’s a watercolor.
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Terry Brown: If any of you ever heard the artist Milton glaser very designer and an artist, he did a poster for a broadway show called the angels in America it’s a it’s a man with.
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Terry Brown: Human figure with wings it’s bending over and he did, as he said, usually 250 sketches of that simple figure with the wings and he donated half a dozen of them to society’s auction and over the years, we did quite well by them and I actually actually pick one up.
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We had.
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Terry Brown: Their own sandwich just gorgeous so we had, I guess, maybe we have 20 paintings in the House and my two sons had a had a draft one time they were up here and they decided which they would take if the wife and I were in some fiery bus crash and.
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Terry Brown: The portrait and he went first.
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Terry Brown: And Milton glaser went second so I felt very proud They beat out glaser.
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Terry Brown: And so, but, but it is a watercolor so we have to be careful, where we where we hang it in the House.
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Right.
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John English: take good care of it.
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Mr.
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Tim Trabon: john I know I told you, the story and i’m trying to remember.
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Tim Trabon: there’s an illustrator that your dad and my dad were friends with.
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Tim Trabon: would have been.
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Tim Trabon: It wouldn’t mind.
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John English: boggling this I know the story go ahead.
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Tim Trabon: They were going.
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Tim Trabon: it’s not really much of a story was just after my dad died you’re kind of you know.
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Tim Trabon: archiving and going through this you know trophy room of collection or just things that have people given him to them over the past, you know 50 years.
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Tim Trabon: And there was this figure drawing by bottom line bell and at the bottom of it, there is just a note that said don’t let your dog eat this one.
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Tim Trabon: And it was just you knew exactly what happened, which was Bob I doubt definitely had trayvon printing.
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Tim Trabon: They were going to print make prints for Bob and my dad star probably ate it.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: wow yeah that’s that’s awkward.
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Tim Trabon: There was an artist that he was doing prints for that was very, very protective that you know they always have overs.
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Tim Trabon: You know so maybe they asked for 500 prints and if you print 600 they want you to destroy the additional hundred, and he was extremely serious about this, which is fine and he showed up and.
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Tim Trabon: wanting to see them destroy the additional prints, and so they did that my dad.
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Tim Trabon: loaded the prints up once they were done to deliver them.
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Tim Trabon: And he forgot to close.
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Tim Trabon: The back on his truck.
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Tim Trabon: Like hundreds of these friends flew out he had to go, he was he said he is running down the highway.
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Collecting.
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Tim Trabon: liking this artist Prince.
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Tim Trabon: Harry was thinking this this guy didn’t even want extra prints existing now they’re just floating around 435.
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Terry Brown: We got your wife out there to drive over there.
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Tim Trabon: she’s good now exactly I think there’s.
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Tim Trabon: Plenty damage done, that was a long time ago, but.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: Oh, my gosh that’s hilarious I can picture it he’s like oh it’s like a a benny hill skit or Mr.
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Tim Trabon: It was.
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Tim Trabon: He was he said he was running trying to gather all of him because he was he was paranoid.
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Tim Trabon: But you know this artist would be dry word that you.
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Tim Trabon: See one of his prints.
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John English: destroy them all, but these 300 that we distributed across the highway.
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John English: Exactly dropping.
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Terry Brown: Did you watch the process of the printing being done by your dad’s room.
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Tim Trabon: I I work this summer, where I was a print assistant, but I I would be I I wouldn’t be honest, if I said that I really understood it, especially today.
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Tim Trabon: But I worked at the shop multiple summers and would assist the pressman press people.
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Terry Brown: it’s quite an amazing Cassandra do you ever go to a printer and see your work being we produced.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: Now I mean right now i’m just getting reproduced and stickers and card, so I haven’t seen any of the fancy stuff, but I would love to.
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Tim Trabon: yeah and Terry to to kind of tell you these these were pretty big presses that you would never let up.
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Tim Trabon: You require a very skilled technician there was no way I was touching them and it’s one of those things, where I was, I was actually scared of them.
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Tim Trabon: They those the rollers and everything they’re intimidating intimidating machine.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: carry on.
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Terry Brown: I have not, but my wife.
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Terry Brown: has worked for the Museum of modern art for many years overseeing the production of their Christmas cards their hearts and their.
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Terry Brown: Retail prints their appointment calendar so yeah she’s been on press in China, often Spain Verona Italy.
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Terry Brown: it’s it’s quite a exacting science and to take someone with a great idea look at.
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Terry Brown: A proof coming through and say that red needs to be 8% more I wouldn’t know that but she’s gotten so good at saying I know what the original looks like and that story.
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Terry Brown: Sorry night a star yet and we’re not paying whatever it is, and the press when i’m sure tim’s dad had press will network very exacting.
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Tim Trabon: And my dad.
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Tim Trabon: My dad was like that Terry my dad could read color exceptionally well.
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Tim Trabon: Like to a crazy degree his understanding his understanding of color was really advanced.
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Tim Trabon: And then you know he could also.
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Tim Trabon: Like.
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Tim Trabon: call it a party trick he can read he could read backwards and backward and mirrored.
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Tim Trabon: yeah and.
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Tim Trabon: that’s how you would set.
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type.
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Terry Brown: Was.
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Tim Trabon: He could read like yeah he is it like if he would go into someone’s office if they had like a letter on their desk facing them he could read it like no problem.
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Tim Trabon: He did read upside down yeah I don’t know yeah it was weird it’s weird because I i’m dyslexic so i’m like.
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Tim Trabon: I went the other way.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: I think I was more like your dad I near wrote and all the way through like third grade.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: And like I was a sign artist and because i’m left handed it off to do all the chalkboard backwards, like right him from right to left so that I wouldn’t match them, so I hear you that on that one oh.
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that’s interesting.
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Terry Brown: There was a photograph online today of the above peak who illustration would be on Mount rushmore and he was signing autographs and he was signing him with his left hand he would say he was a southpaw.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: However, hey.
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Terry Brown: Look at that matters.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: You know we’re always happy to have more in our club.
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Tim Trabon: yeah.
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Tim Trabon: I have a you know this is kind of cool, though, when I moved into the House and i’m in now, which is the House my dad grew up in and where he ran his business he ran his business in the basement until the city kicked him out.
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Tim Trabon: But when I moved in here, there was all the press equipment, a lot of the press equipment was still here and.
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Tim Trabon: I thought this is so funny there was a single sheet manual to is Heidelberg press was one single it was like a postcard size instruction.
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Tim Trabon: on how to operate wordpress.
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Tim Trabon: And it was it wasn’t creased it wasn’t even if you knew how my dad took care of things, it was baffling it was in perfect condition.
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Tim Trabon: And I posted a photo of it in Heidelberg their instagram account shared it because they were baffled by.
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Tim Trabon: hey we’ve got a very surprise guest today.
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Terry Brown: wow who’s coming through that celebrity track door.
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Raymond Bonilla: yeah.
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Raymond Bonilla: They said you.
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Raymond Bonilla: Have it folks.
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Tim Trabon: The returner even binya.
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Terry Brown: wow laws.
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Tim Trabon: The prodigal the magical.
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Tim Trabon: The product I don’t know how to say prodigal son.
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Raymond Bonilla: yeah.
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Raymond Bonilla: The protocol isolationist.
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returns.
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Raymond Bonilla: what’s up everyone how are you.
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John English: Hello Ray how are you man.
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Raymond Bonilla: Good good about yourself.
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Raymond Bonilla: i’m okay let’s see guys i’ve missed you guys.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: yeah i’m here today.
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John English: yeah.
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Raymond Bonilla: I usually start teaching I am teaching right around like round six I got about like an hour drive so.
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Raymond Bonilla: I just just got home, so I.
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Raymond Bonilla: I needed to jump on to some some drawing.
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John English: I am really glad you showed up right.
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Raymond Bonilla: Well, thanks john I didn’t expect that I thought I was gonna get a.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: chance to come.
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yeah yeah yeah.
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John English: you’re consistently we’ve.
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Raymond Bonilla: discussed this.
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John English: On the first night.
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John English: Start stepping it up.
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Raymond Bonilla: And I was I cautiously right timidly pit click on the OK button to.
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launch.
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Raymond Bonilla: could actually do that.
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Terry Brown: Anyway, are you teaching.
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Raymond Bonilla: I teach at suny fredonia which is like west of.
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Raymond Bonilla: Of buffalo so I teach two days a week there.
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Raymond Bonilla: yeah teach life drawing and.
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Raymond Bonilla: painting like intermediate painting.
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Terry Brown: Excellent.
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Raymond Bonilla: yeah good to see you Terry man it’s been it’s it’s been a minute, as they.
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Raymond Bonilla: As the kids say I don’t even know if the kids say that anymore, they probably more middle aged people now say that but.
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John English: Now that you did probably not yeah.
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John English: i’ve always know if you’re gonna have that works yeah.
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Tim Trabon: yeah.
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Terry Brown: already announced myself to be a geezer so I might my time frame is.
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Terry Brown: That all of you.
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Tim Trabon: remind your kid is like eight now right.
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Raymond Bonilla: yeah yeah yeah.
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Raymond Bonilla: The kiddos you know we’re really looking at college applications and perhaps.
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Raymond Bonilla: yeah.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: that’s your.
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Raymond Bonilla: baby’s doing really well thanks for asking she’s going to be seven months.
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Raymond Bonilla: In on Saturday.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: Oh gosh that’s everything just gets so much more exciting I didn’t realize it could but that’s when they start becoming so much more aware.
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Raymond Bonilla: yeah yeah i’m already starting to see it, you know, like.
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Raymond Bonilla: She knows when we’re you know we leave the room and stuff and.
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Raymond Bonilla: yeah so you know so it’s great it’s great it’s definitely life changing so.
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Tim Trabon: My my nephew is three months now.
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Raymond Bonilla: Oh, my goodness, so has it been three months already.
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Tim Trabon: I think it’s been like three and a half.
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Tim Trabon: Already he’s just gotten, to the point where holding him it doesn’t feel like holding like a pork tender line.
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Tim Trabon: You know.
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Raymond Bonilla: Like literally insides yeah yeah.
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Tim Trabon: yeah like he can hold his head up you know.
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Raymond Bonilla: yeah yeah yeah seriously yeah.
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Tim Trabon: hey we’re getting some like clipping on your audio I don’t know what.
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Raymond Bonilla: Okay, is that better.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: No, no.
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No.
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Tim Trabon: it’s like papi.
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John English: It raise lost all his technical facilitation.
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Tim Trabon: And the only reason I say is because I know how important your IQ is.
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seriously.
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yeah.
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Tim Trabon: I know the first the first guy had no idea baby could know this head up on its own it’s a lot of work, the head.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: yeah yeah.
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John English: Those are the kind of things you say, if you don’t want anybody to ask you to babysit.
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Tim Trabon: so well, no.
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Tim Trabon: No, I was telling.
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Tim Trabon: I was telling my mom this I was like dickie no baby can’t drink water and she was, like you, are not fit for.
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Raymond Bonilla: Is that better.
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Tim Trabon: I.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: talk a little more yeah testing 1212.
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Tim Trabon: what’s going on.
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Tim Trabon: Right yeah I didn’t know babies didn’t drink water.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: You know what you figure it out so quick my husband has never changed a diaper ever and then we had twins and within like 12 hours, he was a pro because he changed like 20.
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Terry Brown: wins.
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Tim Trabon: I feel like that’s a very like you get two kids right out the gate.
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Tim Trabon: that’s yeah yeah you say that’s that’s like a that’s a bundle deal.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: yeah yeah it’s down chaos yeah.
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Terry Brown: yeah to watch.
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Terry Brown: to watch a woman nurse twins is to see real real motherhood inaction.
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Terry Brown: You got to balance them you got to control them.
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Terry Brown: You got to have one’s eating the other ones, you get the picture it’s a it’s a challenge, like sister in law had twins their late 20s now very successful kids, but that was a very exciting to see and Ray you said, your daughter is seven months.
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Terry Brown: And sorry the people aware yeah yeah yeah.
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Raymond Bonilla: For sure yeah is that my audio better.
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Tim Trabon: I don’t know, maybe, if you just switch to your machine.
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Tim Trabon: Because.
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Tim Trabon: The machine yeah just like your built in MIC.
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Tim Trabon: Maybe it’s I don’t know what your situation is but.
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OK.
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00:34:02.370 –> 00:34:05.850
Tim Trabon: Sorry re now that’s okay so it’s clipping right.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: Well it’s not.
382
00:34:07.560 –> 00:34:11.340
Tim Trabon: Now it’s not it’s just very quiet, so I think it may be just bumped it up, if you can.
383
00:34:13.260 –> 00:34:17.400
John English: You know, this is all a ploy this is Ray coming in saying how can I sabotage.
384
00:34:19.470 –> 00:34:21.270
John English: yeah this other product, we have.
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Right.
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: yeah.
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Tim Trabon: To quiet re.
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Tim Trabon: Better it’s very quiet okay i’m gonna boost and you’re like you’re like 30% of what we are oh yeah.
389
00:34:42.720 –> 00:34:45.480
Tim Trabon: I haven’t had to provide tech support for a while.
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00:34:46.530 –> 00:34:47.040
John English: Ray.
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John English: I know well, people.
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00:34:53.970 –> 00:34:55.650
John English: Can you still paint really well right.
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So, yes.
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00:34:59.940 –> 00:35:01.410
Cassandra Loomis Kim: hey that looks really good.
395
00:35:01.470 –> 00:35:04.170
John English: So I saw landscape you posted the other day look terrific.
396
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Raymond Bonilla: it’s beautiful Thank you.
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00:35:06.930 –> 00:35:09.690
Cassandra Loomis Kim: And now you sound good all right, I sound better now.
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00:35:10.470 –> 00:35:18.000
Tim Trabon: Quiet very quiet very quiet yeah Okay, I would recommend like a 50% best.
399
00:35:19.020 –> 00:35:21.360
John English: They can you read the end of the first post.
400
00:35:21.510 –> 00:35:23.040
Tim Trabon: Okay, great so.
401
00:35:23.070 –> 00:35:24.030
John English: Sandra brush.
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John English: keep going.
403
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: i’ll go into the next one, this is, I just love the light on this.
404
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John English: yeah it’s fun.
405
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Cassandra Loomis Kim: super fun.
406
00:35:37.290 –> 00:35:39.270
John English: hey timmy can I do my little spiel now.
407
00:35:39.510 –> 00:35:40.650
Tim Trabon: yeah i’m.
408
00:35:41.520 –> 00:35:43.320
John English: A visual arts passage steel.
409
00:35:45.450 –> 00:35:47.100
John English: We are enrolling.
410
00:35:48.360 –> 00:36:02.790
John English: Our enrollment closes October 2 our next semester starts October 9, I just wanted to real quickly say hey we have two programs, we have an illustration program and we have a concept art Program.
411
00:36:04.470 –> 00:36:12.510
John English: Some of the best working artists in the industry to teach these classes and these classes are all very specific the things that.
412
00:36:13.800 –> 00:36:26.130
John English: Oh, myself and a group of artists that were at the Academy for years decided was the most important information to develop a portfolio to prepare yourself to work in the industry.
413
00:36:26.760 –> 00:36:35.430
John English: And the concept per program kind of follows the the same steps I I look at this that our process going crabgrass is a.
414
00:36:37.170 –> 00:36:41.070
John English: it’s a very physical the physical aspect of making a picture.
415
00:36:42.240 –> 00:36:58.500
John English: it’s also the pipeline of the industry, all the skill sets that relate to it’s all about putting a picture designing and putting a picture together second classes, an ideation class it’s about identifying the problem and solving it so really great.
416
00:36:59.640 –> 00:37:04.830
John English: way to get from text to visual and then in the portfolio class we make our students or.
417
00:37:06.450 –> 00:37:15.960
John English: fill out a portfolio brief before they can make an image they identify their audience, what are the art directors, they want to work for what part of the industry and really make them think about function.
418
00:37:16.770 –> 00:37:28.320
John English: And the career class we’re actually putting them that students are putting it into action they’re calling on our directors there redesigning their websites aligning their social media building.
419
00:37:30.720 –> 00:37:43.500
John English: Putting newsletters together reaching out introducing themselves to art director sending direct mail pieces it’s it’s it’s the practical application of starting of what an emerging artist should be doing.
420
00:37:43.890 –> 00:37:52.950
Tim Trabon: yeah and considering there’s so many new people joining us tonight, just to be clear, this is a this is, this is what visual arts passage is outside of illustration, isolation, this is.
421
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Tim Trabon: We offer really immersive mentorship courses that, as you can see our top by working pros and.
422
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Tim Trabon: Those classes, you know john if you were to go back to the classes that were talking about if you’re if you’re really enjoying tonight.
423
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Tim Trabon: You know, you would start with process skill and craft or ideation and then you work up and during your enrollment you build a portfolio and you study under these working pros that are going to kind of help act as your compass.
424
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John English: And it’s it’s a.
425
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John English: we’ve been doing this very, very much the same well Cassandra you went through the illustration academy lot of a lot of the same material it’s gotten even more focused and more direct.
426
00:38:40.830 –> 00:38:55.890
John English: Our our instructors on the illustration site or audrey been jamison and word can sell a deal Stefan us, myself and sterling only these four guys are all academy students can dummy products.
427
00:38:57.570 –> 00:39:07.470
John English: And audrey is kind of the product of a couple of academy instructors at ringling and I don’t I can’t even explain I agree she’s just like a freak of nature for.
428
00:39:07.530 –> 00:39:10.410
John English: me or a freak show of talent, the other.
429
00:39:12.660 –> 00:39:30.210
John English: She is absolutely amazing our guests, we always have the 10 week program a 10 week semester we always have three guests artists focused in that in any either program so there’s three concepts guests artists there’s three illustration guest stars.
430
00:39:31.350 –> 00:39:43.470
John English: These are the desert is for this coming semester i’m really excited though chica was the very first student to ever sign up for the illustration academy 27 years ago.
431
00:39:44.520 –> 00:39:49.170
John English: Miriam oh Martin sick just finished our program like.
432
00:39:51.060 –> 00:40:07.920
John English: Maybe four months ago, two semesters ago she’s already won a gold medal at the society of illustrators she had multiple image three three additional images accepted she done work for Susan facility she’s working for you know top art directors it’s just amazing the success she’s having.
433
00:40:08.040 –> 00:40:12.720
Tim Trabon: So do we have that built into that program where, then you come back as a guest speaker.
434
00:40:13.530 –> 00:40:16.170
John English: Well, a lot of luck i’m telling you a lot of our students.
435
00:40:16.320 –> 00:40:19.230
John English: it’s great to be able to go back to your past students.
436
00:40:19.260 –> 00:40:20.880
John English: that have developed great careers.
437
00:40:20.940 –> 00:40:28.380
John English: I mean that’s Our objective is to help people develop in the industry, and then on the concept side it’s very much the same way.
438
00:40:30.210 –> 00:40:32.880
John English: The whole idea is getting the basic design elements.
439
00:40:33.990 –> 00:40:47.190
John English: character creature environment in the first class developing assets in the second class and starting to world to the world building you’re doing the same thing the illustration students are doing you you’re identifying who you want to go to work for.
440
00:40:48.810 –> 00:41:00.990
John English: Art directors run our industry, they rule our industry for on the on that pirate side for artists you got to know who they are you got to build make work that’s appropriate whether it’s in a studio or on a freelance.
441
00:41:02.010 –> 00:41:03.660
John English: trajectory so.
442
00:41:04.950 –> 00:41:10.800
John English: very similar approach the whole idea is to make a functioning portfolio to get you started.
443
00:41:11.850 –> 00:41:14.970
John English: Our our our concept artists instructors are.
444
00:41:15.990 –> 00:41:16.800
John English: All phenomenal.
445
00:41:18.300 –> 00:41:22.920
John English: Vivian and john I Meister we’re both past students at the illustration Academy.
446
00:41:23.640 –> 00:41:41.280
John English: Like both Vivian and john and Vivian just took a new job and she’s actually taking the Semester off so Taylor Fisher and narges Jafari are from wild blue students are taking teaching our second level class the advanced concept john I Meister at.
447
00:41:42.390 –> 00:41:51.870
John English: High rez studios he’s a senior concept hers and IRA studios is teaching our intro class and then laker wits who is.
448
00:41:53.400 –> 00:42:03.390
John English: He directs works for wizards of the coast and and then works for freelancers, for a lot of people he’s a phenomenally good artists and great concept artists.
449
00:42:05.790 –> 00:42:08.970
John English: And their guest speakers are.
450
00:42:10.230 –> 00:42:14.040
John English: grace new miles wadsworth and Mitchell why.
451
00:42:15.420 –> 00:42:27.870
John English: Are we’ve had it set up that we didn’t always do this now, we do that in the in both concept and illustration programs can share the guest speakers.
452
00:42:28.740 –> 00:42:35.700
John English: You get to see all six, and so you get six visiting artists coming into the program on top of your mentorship classes.
453
00:42:36.060 –> 00:42:42.480
John English: And the classes were that you know, the way it lays out is, we have a three hour live class on Saturday, for your homeroom.
454
00:42:43.350 –> 00:42:51.180
John English: We have a meetup in the middle of the week called study hall it’s three hours live we’re a group of our classes come together there’s multiple instructors there.
455
00:42:51.720 –> 00:43:02.100
John English: And then we use the we use slack as a product to communicate to connect our students with our instructors on a daily basis, our goal is that you know somebody can.
456
00:43:02.700 –> 00:43:08.340
John English: wants to put six hours into a class for 40 hours and do a class we’re always going to be able to answer there.
457
00:43:08.760 –> 00:43:18.720
John English: And I think i’m really proud of the product, I think we’ve done a really good job with it and I love the people involved with it there’s some of the best talent in the industry so.
458
00:43:21.000 –> 00:43:28.800
John English: We enrollment closes October 2 if you have any interest reach out to us check out the website and we’d love to have you in the Program.
459
00:43:29.490 –> 00:43:30.570
Tim Trabon: And don’t sleep on it.
460
00:43:31.320 –> 00:43:33.480
John English: All right, I got through it okay to me.
461
00:43:33.870 –> 00:43:37.020
Tim Trabon: yeah you did I shared links to both programs.
462
00:43:37.080 –> 00:43:38.970
Tim Trabon: You know, it was like we should say like it’s.
463
00:43:39.030 –> 00:43:41.850
Tim Trabon: it’s kind of like that week with npr where they’re like.
464
00:43:44.160 –> 00:43:45.570
John English: we’re taking donations.
465
00:43:45.900 –> 00:43:47.160
John English: yeah please just.
466
00:43:47.370 –> 00:43:50.430
Tim Trabon: donate your used car to visual arts passage.
467
00:43:53.610 –> 00:43:57.120
Tim Trabon: We still yeah no doubt we have enough used cars.
468
00:43:59.400 –> 00:43:59.850
John English: But.
469
00:44:00.960 –> 00:44:05.160
John English: You get to see a bit of our Community here on Thursdays and I think it.
470
00:44:07.980 –> 00:44:16.830
John English: it’s a it’s a glimpse of what we do it’s not the the the mentorship classes are extremely focused and.
471
00:44:17.970 –> 00:44:19.710
John English: some great work is being produced their.
472
00:44:20.820 –> 00:44:21.990
John English: Success comes from it.
473
00:44:23.010 –> 00:44:25.110
John English: All right, so we’re on pose number two.
474
00:44:25.410 –> 00:44:27.720
Tim Trabon: yeah and we’re back to raise tech issue.
475
00:44:28.470 –> 00:44:29.190
John English: Right now.
476
00:44:29.550 –> 00:44:31.020
Raymond Bonilla: Is it better or worse.
477
00:44:32.880 –> 00:44:34.020
Tim Trabon: I think will survive.
478
00:44:34.380 –> 00:44:35.760
John English: It we’re fine right don’t worry about it.
479
00:44:35.850 –> 00:44:38.190
Raymond Bonilla: Is it you gotta tell me to me.
480
00:44:38.370 –> 00:44:39.060
John English: It sounds as though.
481
00:44:39.600 –> 00:44:39.900
it’s.
482
00:44:41.400 –> 00:44:42.360
Tim Trabon: Still clicking in.
483
00:44:42.390 –> 00:44:43.320
John English: But we hear you fine.
484
00:44:43.860 –> 00:44:44.220
yeah.
485
00:44:45.450 –> 00:44:49.740
John English: you’re just don’t have that radio voice that you always have yeah.
486
00:44:52.050 –> 00:45:01.650
Tim Trabon: You know I think john you would probably do this best we have so many new people night it’s easy to forget we have such a new audience, many of them, probably have not met Ray.
487
00:45:03.120 –> 00:45:03.600
Tim Trabon: So.
488
00:45:05.550 –> 00:45:08.370
Tim Trabon: I think you do a much better introduction john I.
489
00:45:11.640 –> 00:45:13.320
Tim Trabon: Know they’ve never met event illustration.
490
00:45:13.320 –> 00:45:13.950
isolation.
491
00:45:15.330 –> 00:45:18.150
John English: yeah just kidding I I.
492
00:45:19.440 –> 00:45:34.950
John English: I got a phone call from one of rays instructors at the Academy of art, the chair of the illustration program there he called me he said I, I have a name for you and I said Okay, he said Raymond bonita.
493
00:45:36.390 –> 00:45:40.680
John English: And he said someday he’ll be teaching at your Program.
494
00:45:41.910 –> 00:45:42.150
John English: and
495
00:45:43.410 –> 00:45:47.280
John English: This guy must be good, I mean it must be one hell of a student and.
496
00:45:48.360 –> 00:45:49.920
John English: That was a long time ago right.
497
00:45:51.450 –> 00:45:56.370
John English: That that chuck reach out to me that’s about 1800s of thing yeah I think so.
498
00:45:57.900 –> 00:46:05.280
John English: Then what a call I mean Ray Ray taught a class first last fall and love for him to teach more classes for us.
499
00:46:07.020 –> 00:46:15.000
John English: He is an exceptionally talented illustrator and it extremely good painter.
500
00:46:16.860 –> 00:46:19.710
John English: He did he’s done lectures on studio bridge.
501
00:46:21.180 –> 00:46:33.630
John English: demonstrations and studio branches and his process and the way he approaches his understanding of the illustration industry is amazing, the history of it, Terry.
502
00:46:35.640 –> 00:46:37.590
John English: You should listen to.
503
00:46:39.240 –> 00:46:46.620
John English: It you should have a long discussion someday and i’m sure you already have but Ray really knows his stuff and.
504
00:46:47.640 –> 00:46:55.740
John English: Just so excited when he agreed to do some things with us and work with us because he’s just an amazingly talented guy.
505
00:46:57.810 –> 00:47:00.240
John English: who’s worked at it really hard and.
506
00:47:01.860 –> 00:47:04.110
John English: he’s a good explainer of what he does.
507
00:47:05.580 –> 00:47:07.170
John English: Great explain what he does.
508
00:47:10.740 –> 00:47:13.770
Well john Thank you read the script exactly as I wrote it.
509
00:47:15.900 –> 00:47:20.160
Tim Trabon: hey great I texted you an idea that I think will fix this problem.
510
00:47:22.560 –> 00:47:30.330
John English: I lucked out the some of the some pro tips that you wrote that you sent to me I just I felt that was enough.
511
00:47:33.180 –> 00:47:34.020
Cassandra Loomis Kim: To simplify.
512
00:47:34.590 –> 00:47:35.910
Cassandra Loomis Kim: simplify yeah.
513
00:47:39.150 –> 00:47:46.950
Cassandra Loomis Kim: yeah and re in your studio bridge I love that you really went into your influences and like I really enjoyed that aspect.
514
00:47:50.190 –> 00:47:51.870
Tim Trabon: Sandra I just gave Ray.
515
00:47:52.140 –> 00:47:54.300
Cassandra Loomis Kim: I know he’s totally work on in the sound, but I just.
516
00:47:56.010 –> 00:47:58.650
Tim Trabon: Know it’s fine I just didn’t want you to think he was ignoring you.
517
00:47:59.070 –> 00:47:59.580
Tim Trabon: I got it.
518
00:47:59.670 –> 00:48:01.530
Tim Trabon: I got it I know he’s juggling that.
519
00:48:01.560 –> 00:48:05.460
Tim Trabon: Because he just gave up to my my concept.
520
00:48:06.960 –> 00:48:12.630
Terry Brown: I think, for a seven year 10 month old daughter can probably step right up there and ran with pushed your.
521
00:48:12.630 –> 00:48:14.070
Terry Brown: buttons and it would be perfect.
522
00:48:14.430 –> 00:48:14.940
Tim Trabon: yeah.
523
00:48:14.970 –> 00:48:18.150
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Probably law working technology.
524
00:48:19.980 –> 00:48:20.400
Tim Trabon: yeah.
525
00:48:21.270 –> 00:48:26.250
John English: I think we should say a bunch of great things about Ray that he will hit they won’t even respond to.
526
00:48:27.690 –> 00:48:33.240
John English: Everybody what what an arrogant guy that guy was they said some of the nicest things about him.
527
00:48:33.990 –> 00:48:35.160
John English: response what.
528
00:48:36.000 –> 00:48:36.810
Cassandra Loomis Kim: The nerve.
529
00:48:37.710 –> 00:48:38.220
Terry Brown: john you.
530
00:48:38.280 –> 00:48:40.320
Terry Brown: You made a good point and I think it is.
531
00:48:41.610 –> 00:48:55.830
Terry Brown: I think it is true, he he knows his history, but he also knows the current industry, and I think the only reason you studied history is so you can interpret your current industry in the light of how they adapt to their current industry.
532
00:48:56.880 –> 00:49:10.350
Terry Brown: changes and mores changes in technology changes and how your work was going to be used black and white color whatever now digital I think he’s good at a few times i’ve heard him talk on on isolation about it is that.
533
00:49:11.370 –> 00:49:23.820
Terry Brown: You can tell us what Rockwell how rock will determine how rock what we’re trying to gay and that’s kind of where I think if you touch on some of those historical aspect I know you guys did fashion, last week, so you weren’t pulling faces.
534
00:49:24.300 –> 00:49:34.890
Terry Brown: And there’s a lot of difference in the way you draw fashion, as opposed to join faces but there’s a reason to be able to draw fashion, today, just as there was back then.
535
00:49:36.120 –> 00:49:37.410
Terry Brown: I think Ray knows that stuff.
536
00:49:39.570 –> 00:49:40.230
John English: Thank you, Terry.
537
00:49:41.910 –> 00:49:43.350
John English: comics tremendous sense.
538
00:49:44.940 –> 00:49:46.620
John English: I told a.
539
00:49:47.670 –> 00:49:55.530
John English: kind of a funny little story about Gary Kelly responding to a student in a debate with an argument, it was a it was a healthy debate.
540
00:49:56.490 –> 00:50:17.670
John English: And Gary pointed out to the student that has worked looks similar to allow them illustrator well, excuse me well known painter and the art of the student took the defense of well I need to know who that painter is and Gary his response was so great, he said.
541
00:50:18.720 –> 00:50:31.170
John English: that’s even worse, he said, you know that’s your job as an artist to know who that person is and that’s a well known painter that’s part of being an artist you gotta pay attention to history and who’s currently working, but I think that’s really true.
542
00:50:33.210 –> 00:50:37.410
John English: know our past and knowing what’s going on right now, extremely important.
543
00:50:38.610 –> 00:50:40.830
Raymond Bonilla: yeah I absolutely agree, can you guys hear me better.
544
00:50:41.070 –> 00:50:44.040
John English: yeah actually your radio voice there you go.
545
00:50:47.670 –> 00:50:50.040
Raymond Bonilla: yeah hey john thanks for the Nice.
546
00:50:51.870 –> 00:50:57.060
Raymond Bonilla: You know kind of comments on my work my work and whatnot I really, really appreciate that.
547
00:50:58.170 –> 00:51:02.130
Raymond Bonilla: yeah I was just sorry I was scrambling to find my phone.
548
00:51:04.110 –> 00:51:08.280
Raymond Bonilla: So yeah I think I love it illustration history.
549
00:51:09.360 –> 00:51:13.440
Raymond Bonilla: Probably would never want to go toe to toe with Jerry brown in a million years.
550
00:51:13.830 –> 00:51:15.180
Raymond Bonilla: I see having a discussion.
551
00:51:15.540 –> 00:51:16.950
Raymond Bonilla: See frightens me to death.
552
00:51:18.030 –> 00:51:20.370
Raymond Bonilla: So you hold your own don’t worry you.
553
00:51:23.010 –> 00:51:24.540
Raymond Bonilla: Know it’s like.
554
00:51:26.340 –> 00:51:27.930
Raymond Bonilla: yeah yeah so I.
555
00:51:29.340 –> 00:51:46.740
Raymond Bonilla: yeah but I totally agree about the the history of things in its man, you know i’ve never I honestly believe, like if you’re not conscious or aware of illustrators and painters, or just aware of the history you’re really starting to grow as an artist.
556
00:51:48.150 –> 00:51:57.810
Raymond Bonilla: Because you just don’t know what’s possible I mean I remember when I was a student I ran across I was I tell this story often I was.
557
00:51:58.260 –> 00:52:15.450
Raymond Bonilla: Studying to be I wanted to become an animator and early on, and I was just going over everything Disney and any DVD and get my hands on with it behind the scenes, because you know YouTube wasn’t really around like it is now, you know and.
558
00:52:16.590 –> 00:52:18.780
Raymond Bonilla: DVDs are still around so that tells you how old I am.
559
00:52:19.890 –> 00:52:22.080
Raymond Bonilla: And I was looking at a.
560
00:52:23.520 –> 00:52:26.490
Raymond Bonilla: But the added DVD of treasure planet anybody remember that.
561
00:52:26.790 –> 00:52:27.150
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Oh yeah.
562
00:52:27.720 –> 00:52:28.680
Raymond Bonilla: yeah so.
563
00:52:30.720 –> 00:52:38.970
Raymond Bonilla: And I would just watch it over and over and over again, because I was just you know it wasn’t the like the greatest it was a flop for Disney huge expensive flop, but.
564
00:52:39.450 –> 00:52:50.190
Raymond Bonilla: It was such a beautiful movie and I didn’t understand why night why I just was just enamored with it and they did it behind on the DVD they actually had a.
565
00:52:50.910 –> 00:53:00.570
Raymond Bonilla: A whole documentary on the visual inspiration for it, and that was an nc wyeth and the brandywine artists and I was the first time that I came across.
566
00:53:02.190 –> 00:53:17.520
Raymond Bonilla: Their work and I was just shocked, because I didn’t realize, you know imagery could be that powerful i’ve never seen anything like that in my life, and I just thought think to myself, like had, I never seen that had, I never was like you know aware of it, I.
567
00:53:18.660 –> 00:53:21.990
Raymond Bonilla: don’t think I would have gone down the path that have gone down, you know.
568
00:53:23.850 –> 00:53:30.030
Raymond Bonilla: And so it’s it’s just you know you just you don’t know until you see it, you know you don’t know what you don’t know you know.
569
00:53:31.470 –> 00:53:33.300
Raymond Bonilla: You got to kind of see it to believe it, you know.
570
00:53:34.320 –> 00:53:47.910
Terry Brown: I used to timeline in my class that PIC of the movies see think of the imagery that job for grew up with it was nc wyeth and and the brandywine those adventure books.
571
00:53:48.420 –> 00:53:51.660
Terry Brown: yeah and made all those great movies in the 30s and 40s.
572
00:53:52.410 –> 00:54:02.940
Terry Brown: Right who saw those as a kid well, they were Steven Spielberg so he made his movies, and then there’s a generation that grew up with the kind of creative inventive visual.
573
00:54:04.050 –> 00:54:09.840
Terry Brown: perfection of a Spielberg movie they’re making our imagery today it’s kind of it’s kind of timeline to it and.
574
00:54:10.020 –> 00:54:13.650
Terry Brown: What you grow up with I think affects you in a big way it’s.
575
00:54:15.750 –> 00:54:31.230
Raymond Bonilla: yeah absolutely yeah and and it’s knowing the I think the like the extra step as like artists is is knowing you know who influenced the people that influenced us, you know, and you find it’s always like kind of you always find.
576
00:54:32.250 –> 00:54:38.820
Raymond Bonilla: You know, like a, at least for me, I found that like artists, that I really love his work i’ve just just enamored with.
577
00:54:39.630 –> 00:54:50.610
Raymond Bonilla: they’re all everyone’s kind of looking at each other’s work and everybody’s influenced by each other’s work, you know, because from from there, you know I you know just found out like.
578
00:54:51.780 –> 00:54:58.980
Raymond Bonilla: You know you go from the 30s to the you know the turn of the century, and then you have you know lydekker, then you have then Rockwell.
579
00:54:59.400 –> 00:55:09.360
Raymond Bonilla: Like you start to see all these these connection connection points and you could see like you know brand new wine school in in tons of concept artwork now you know.
580
00:55:09.960 –> 00:55:16.110
Raymond Bonilla: If you know what you’re looking for and people might not know the reference to them, I mean they would but you know you could.
581
00:55:16.980 –> 00:55:28.710
Raymond Bonilla: The average sort of the beginning art student probably wouldn’t know that like Oh, you know that you know that giant you know the it like a classic image of a giant walking on the beach in the clouds you know.
582
00:55:29.850 –> 00:55:44.370
Raymond Bonilla: Like that atmosphere like oh that’s an nc wyeth reference like that’s been used, you know i’ve seen that that use so many like as much time does like the man sit, you know standing on the rock with the crashing waves I forgot which.
583
00:55:45.750 –> 00:55:46.110
Raymond Bonilla: You know.
584
00:55:47.640 –> 00:55:49.110
Raymond Bonilla: Who was the artists behind that but.
585
00:55:50.580 –> 00:55:52.110
Raymond Bonilla: yeah it’s just like one of these types of.
586
00:55:53.280 –> 00:56:10.710
Raymond Bonilla: These tropes you know and and I was going through a divorce, he went to a show with the about Leonardo da Vinci and they had this section where they had artists that were influenced by the Vinci, and you can see.
587
00:56:11.940 –> 00:56:24.030
Raymond Bonilla: All of these dementia mannerisms in the other artists work like the eye or like how he did hair and one painting kind of showed up in another one kind of a different take, but it was still the same thing you know.
588
00:56:25.230 –> 00:56:28.260
Raymond Bonilla: And I thought to myself Oh, my goodness they’ve been doing this for centuries, you know.
589
00:56:28.350 –> 00:56:30.060
Raymond Bonilla: Artists have been influencing other artists and.
590
00:56:30.060 –> 00:56:38.700
Raymond Bonilla: Just being aware, can you imagine ours, that being then not being aware of Leonardo da Vinci and I kind of feel the same way when it comes to like you know.
591
00:56:39.660 –> 00:56:49.800
Terry Brown: Focusing they were focusing on different things, and if you get that in the back of your mind you think of Howard pyle said don’t pick the sleeve.
592
00:56:50.700 –> 00:57:00.900
Terry Brown: be the arm feel the essence So if you look at the brand new Agnes very true if you look at the brandywine painting they spend a whole lot more time painting the hand than they did painting street.
593
00:57:01.410 –> 00:57:08.160
Terry Brown: And you mentioned skyline Decker from the teens and 20s he spent his whole day just painting the clothes like you did.
594
00:57:08.160 –> 00:57:08.880
Terry Brown: Last week.
595
00:57:09.090 –> 00:57:11.550
Terry Brown: Here, he couldn’t care less than the guy look like it was.
596
00:57:12.150 –> 00:57:13.470
Terry Brown: his friend Charlie beach so.
597
00:57:14.730 –> 00:57:15.600
Terry Brown: Every time so.
598
00:57:16.050 –> 00:57:22.260
Terry Brown: it’s like you sweat you enjoy focusing on becomes becomes your passion.
599
00:57:22.830 –> 00:57:23.880
Raymond Bonilla: yeah absolutely.
600
00:57:23.970 –> 00:57:26.400
Terry Brown: So welcome back how’s your artwork going there rick.
601
00:57:26.910 –> 00:57:29.970
Raymond Bonilla: it’s it’s going very, very busy it’s a.
602
00:57:30.840 –> 00:57:31.650
Terry Brown: Drawing right now.
603
00:57:32.700 –> 00:57:37.230
Raymond Bonilla: Oh, this oh I don’t know yet i’ll find out, you know when.
604
00:57:38.340 –> 00:57:42.720
Raymond Bonilla: The timer goes off or something you know, and if it’s bad i’ll just blame my audio you know.
605
00:57:46.470 –> 00:57:51.390
Raymond Bonilla: But it’s it’s really it feels really good to be back in and drawing with.
606
00:57:52.410 –> 00:58:08.520
Raymond Bonilla: With everyone it’s always a real privilege, I was you know i’ve been meaning to come back for weeks now, but I have been secretly in the background, you know looking always looking at everyone’s drives it’s always fantastic and and also.
607
00:58:09.630 –> 00:58:17.490
Raymond Bonilla: catching up on studio bridge and I just was spent the morning watching the second part of Catherine lambs.
608
00:58:18.630 –> 00:58:19.530
John English: Was that scary.
609
00:58:19.980 –> 00:58:23.490
Raymond Bonilla: Oh, my goodness, I went to my wife I says.
610
00:58:25.290 –> 00:58:27.570
Raymond Bonilla: You know she’s Michigan 24.
611
00:58:29.070 –> 00:58:32.160
John English: Somewhere in there really she’s very young.
612
00:58:32.880 –> 00:58:33.870
John English: And I said hey.
613
00:58:35.040 –> 00:58:49.620
Raymond Bonilla: This this woman’s an animal she’s good I mean like what this is like the most of the most incredible powerful workup i’ve seen like I was just stunned, you know, and I loved her her journey to that you know and.
614
00:58:50.790 –> 00:58:53.970
Raymond Bonilla: It just yeah, but I just really, really enjoyed.
615
00:58:53.970 –> 00:58:55.890
John English: want to chime in on that a little bit rate.
616
00:58:56.220 –> 00:59:00.420
John English: How easily she put those pictures together.
617
00:59:00.930 –> 00:59:03.330
John English: And how easily she did her.
618
00:59:04.950 –> 00:59:13.860
John English: You know the putting those thumbnails together and designing that piece, it was really impressive i’ve been very few that can do that at that.
619
00:59:13.890 –> 00:59:14.250
Raymond Bonilla: yeah.
620
00:59:14.310 –> 00:59:15.570
John English: we’re certainly at that pace.
621
00:59:16.170 –> 00:59:18.180
Raymond Bonilla: yeah absolutely absolutely.
622
00:59:18.600 –> 00:59:19.980
John English: And then she’s interested.
623
00:59:20.400 –> 00:59:29.910
Raymond Bonilla: yeah the gorgeous and really well thought out and just you know her you know I won’t spoil too much because For those of you haven’t signed up sign up for studio bridge.
624
00:59:30.480 –> 00:59:35.430
Raymond Bonilla: You get all this stuff on demand, if i’m correct right, even if you missed it yeah so it’s like.
625
00:59:36.390 –> 00:59:52.200
Raymond Bonilla: Just I mean it’s just take a look at Catherine lands work, I mean the one with the student work the piece with the with the news that was the pit the frame the picture frame it was symbolic for the news.
626
00:59:52.560 –> 00:59:54.810
Raymond Bonilla: Right other woman standing in the bed, I was like.
627
00:59:56.220 –> 01:00:00.420
Raymond Bonilla: that’s brilliant you know and yeah that’s that’s a.
628
01:00:01.980 –> 01:00:02.580
John English: And she is.
629
01:00:03.570 –> 01:00:29.100
John English: Catherine is you know just a great example of a very fresh face to the industry within the last few years that knew what she wanted to do and and developed a body of work that was appropriate for where she wanted to go and boy did she put it to work man.
630
01:00:29.760 –> 01:00:35.460
Raymond Bonilla: yeah yeah and was very extremely focused, I was really impressed, you know.
631
01:00:36.570 –> 01:00:41.130
Raymond Bonilla: And you could tell that stuff doesn’t happen on by accident, you know she was.
632
01:00:42.870 –> 01:00:49.530
Raymond Bonilla: I mean, she worked you could tell she put in the hours to get up to that level that young you know um.
633
01:00:49.980 –> 01:00:51.450
Tim Trabon: yeah it seems like there was this like.
634
01:00:51.480 –> 01:00:53.550
Tim Trabon: there’s so much intention with.
635
01:00:53.670 –> 01:00:57.270
Tim Trabon: The legions if it didn’t just like happened by accident.
636
01:00:57.300 –> 01:00:58.230
Tim Trabon: Like you said well.
637
01:00:58.680 –> 01:01:00.120
Tim Trabon: there’s a lot of intention.
638
01:01:01.890 –> 01:01:12.990
Tim Trabon: You know I mean I think about that john I mean just to go full circle, when I think of our classes, that when they you start like kind of day one it’s like what do you want to do.
639
01:01:14.100 –> 01:01:21.150
Tim Trabon: Okay yeah students, what do you want to do and from there, everything you do should be to work towards that.
640
01:01:21.600 –> 01:01:25.020
John English: yeah ready, did you hear katherine’s.
641
01:01:26.610 –> 01:01:28.920
John English: discussion which i’m going to.
642
01:01:30.420 –> 01:01:35.640
John English: Post about this from the Academy, but we have an assignment at the Academy, called the flat assignment.
643
01:01:36.720 –> 01:01:50.760
John English: And it’s the help students understand that picture, making is not about as much about Polish and finished, as most people think it is it’s about concept it’s about construction and and.
644
01:01:51.990 –> 01:01:54.330
John English: and shape design and.
645
01:01:55.380 –> 01:02:09.060
John English: Her if you look at her work she talked about the work that she’s doing now, and how influence, she was from that that one assignment and you can see it in her work now I mean.
646
01:02:09.180 –> 01:02:09.870
Absolutely.
647
01:02:11.310 –> 01:02:12.300
Raymond Bonilla: Absolutely.
648
01:02:13.500 –> 01:02:29.760
Raymond Bonilla: it’s a it wasn’t kind of night and day difference in my career was strong but but, but after illustration Academy, you can tell the amount of intent, you know it was like almost an artist, the amount of her voice was coming through.
649
01:02:31.170 –> 01:02:49.290
Raymond Bonilla: Was was really stunning, to see that you know what, when what when you know from what was what were just really wonderfully beautiful pictures became pieces of artwork that had a concept behind it in a design that supported that concept in this.
650
01:02:50.490 –> 01:02:55.890
Raymond Bonilla: You know that was a illustrated in a really eloquent manner so um you know in.
651
01:02:56.790 –> 01:03:07.500
Raymond Bonilla: yeah she doesn’t waste value, I can tell you that and it’s just really, really just such such wonderful design, it was it was really great I was really excited to see your work after you had told me that she was coming down.
652
01:03:10.200 –> 01:03:12.900
Raymond Bonilla: To talk and it was it was great you know.
653
01:03:14.160 –> 01:03:20.460
Raymond Bonilla: Yes, I recommend, those of you that sign up and just take a look at that, I mean that’s that that is a.
654
01:03:21.720 –> 01:03:27.090
Raymond Bonilla: really incredible talk, you know i’m glad I went i’m glad I went before Catherine let’s just say that.
655
01:03:36.060 –> 01:03:39.690
John English: catherine’s also like a great example of.
656
01:03:40.860 –> 01:03:44.970
John English: Very contemporary illustration, and she does a lot of like New York time dailies.
657
01:03:46.260 –> 01:03:49.260
John English: And those those illustrations are made in six hours.
658
01:03:50.520 –> 01:03:58.740
John English: I mean, she did the work is so has to turn around so fast and.
659
01:04:02.130 –> 01:04:03.810
John English: She talks about that quite a bit.
660
01:04:04.470 –> 01:04:04.890
Raymond Bonilla: mm hmm.
661
01:04:05.310 –> 01:04:07.050
John English: She also discusses.
662
01:04:08.580 –> 01:04:09.090
John English: The.
663
01:04:10.200 –> 01:04:18.960
John English: You know, learning how to adapt to be in an illustrator and being on assignment and and really.
664
01:04:20.010 –> 01:04:21.480
John English: Trying to be.
665
01:04:23.370 –> 01:04:31.890
John English: schedule your time appropriately and be efficient, I think I think Catherine did a great job discussing all that was very open about it.
666
01:04:34.800 –> 01:04:38.940
Terry Brown: that’s, what are the key elements of illustration, is timing you’ve got a deadline.
667
01:04:40.380 –> 01:04:49.290
Terry Brown: you’ve got to deliver a quality product and we hired again on a specific time scale and if you’ve only got a few hours that’s all you’ve got.
668
01:04:49.770 –> 01:04:58.440
Terry Brown: You can’t tell an art director well I can’t do it you’re going to do it it’s Thomas Jefferson said you want something done well give it to the person who doesn’t have the time to do.
669
01:04:59.970 –> 01:05:06.540
Terry Brown: All your energies focus on getting that final product out the door and then you move on to the next one.
670
01:05:08.250 –> 01:05:17.490
Terry Brown: I hope all of you who’ve done this for many years that’s part of the joy that is you diet now you go on to the next one.
671
01:05:18.660 –> 01:05:19.500
Terry Brown: You connect sale.
672
01:05:20.550 –> 01:05:25.950
John English: Great Chris pains definition of illustration, is part and under the circumstances.
673
01:05:28.320 –> 01:05:29.460
John English: that’s so perfect.
674
01:05:35.610 –> 01:05:40.830
Terry Brown: One of the great stories of the past of the artists who could never finishes work is Johnny Ghanem.
675
01:05:42.750 –> 01:05:47.790
Terry Brown: Who did all those marvelous ads for for sheet companies.
676
01:05:49.380 –> 01:05:53.250
Terry Brown: And created betting companies white on white with.
677
01:05:54.090 –> 01:06:08.130
Terry Brown: The woman in there with the kids because the guy couldn’t be in bed with her she’s wearing white white or white on white and the art director would come over to a studio and physically say there’s a phone call for you, when you got the answer the phone he takes the art off the easel.
678
01:06:08.700 –> 01:06:10.110
Terry Brown: Because this guy was never done.
679
01:06:11.640 –> 01:06:12.300
Terry Brown: I can use it.
680
01:06:12.360 –> 01:06:12.930
Terry Brown: By.
681
01:06:13.620 –> 01:06:14.970
Terry Brown: yeah move on to the next one.
682
01:06:16.860 –> 01:06:17.550
John English: that’s fine.
683
01:06:17.790 –> 01:06:19.350
Terry Brown: Those those are the circumstances.
684
01:06:22.140 –> 01:06:29.730
Terry Brown: I bet john your dad could tell stories of having to be finished on time to meet the conductor or the train was going to take the original in the midnight.
685
01:06:30.930 –> 01:06:43.890
John English: yeah well, I think we, one of the reasons my dad seeking out that property at the end of our street little town of reading Connecticut there was a train station.
686
01:06:44.910 –> 01:06:48.240
John English: And he used to pay the conductors.
687
01:06:49.680 –> 01:06:53.400
John English: That we’re going into Manhattan to deliver all of his artwork for him.
688
01:06:54.600 –> 01:07:12.150
John English: And so, he would finish the finish the work and early in the morning, meet the train at at whatever training as soon as he could get there that the probably the 645 or 730 train and an hour and a half later, it would be in the.
689
01:07:13.590 –> 01:07:14.910
John English: The hands of the art director.
690
01:07:17.310 –> 01:07:19.890
John English: And I just that’s so romantic that you know.
691
01:07:20.280 –> 01:07:20.580
Raymond Bonilla: I think.
692
01:07:21.150 –> 01:07:22.740
John English: That was technology at the time.
693
01:07:23.160 –> 01:07:24.570
Terry Brown: It was intelligences.
694
01:07:24.870 –> 01:07:34.680
John English: It did tell a really funny story about he had a dog that jumped in the back of his convertible and drove to the station with him.
695
01:07:35.790 –> 01:07:45.120
John English: hi Ted handed the guy that the artwork the dog jumped aboard the train and and as the train was moving and and his.
696
01:07:45.420 –> 01:08:00.360
John English: father’s description of it, he said about three or 400 yards down, you know he’s just what he didn’t know what to do, the training left in his dogs on the train going to New York City and so said about 300 yards down the track his dog just they just threw him off the train.
697
01:08:01.590 –> 01:08:04.170
John English: Was gonna fly into the into the bushes.
698
01:08:07.980 –> 01:08:08.430
Raymond Bonilla: what’s good.
699
01:08:08.700 –> 01:08:09.360
John English: Old World.
700
01:08:09.960 –> 01:08:10.980
Raymond Bonilla: yeah yeah.
701
01:08:12.750 –> 01:08:24.870
Raymond Bonilla: David grove used to tell me stories about how he would be flying flying is like convertible like over the hills of San Francisco to try and get to the airport.
702
01:08:26.490 –> 01:08:31.800
Raymond Bonilla: In order to get to that the special art ship or that would ship is illustration know like just in time.
703
01:08:34.230 –> 01:08:34.920
Raymond Bonilla: yeah.
704
01:08:40.380 –> 01:08:44.670
Terry Brown: So if you doing something digitally now it’s just a question of when you press.
705
01:08:45.390 –> 01:08:49.710
Terry Brown: download to the cloud you probably don’t send your files anymore, you probably download them to something.
706
01:08:50.220 –> 01:08:53.850
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Well, you know the modern stresses like how’s your wi fi.
707
01:08:55.440 –> 01:08:56.430
Terry Brown: Yes.
708
01:08:57.690 –> 01:08:58.110
There is.
709
01:08:59.430 –> 01:09:00.480
Terry Brown: that it was an issue.
710
01:09:02.610 –> 01:09:09.990
Cassandra Loomis Kim: i’m like there’s been times, where it difficulty sending things, but nothing is that has been an issue with a deadline.
711
01:09:12.810 –> 01:09:18.750
Cassandra Loomis Kim: But yeah it’s not good, when you need to get something for me it’s just image Nino simple images no big deal.
712
01:09:22.860 –> 01:09:24.120
Raymond Bonilla: yeah but usually, when something.
713
01:09:25.350 –> 01:09:30.900
Raymond Bonilla: If something’s going to fail, usually happens, you know right right at the last minute, so i’m always.
714
01:09:32.550 –> 01:09:38.820
Raymond Bonilla: stressed out because I hear it when i’m sending off a piece of artwork because I I hear so many horror stories like.
715
01:09:40.110 –> 01:09:51.870
Raymond Bonilla: You know nightmares where I get an email from the art director saying like is everything Okay, we didn’t receive your artwork and it’s a week late and i’m like oh no I sent it, you know so.
716
01:09:53.280 –> 01:09:54.540
Raymond Bonilla: We are here to.
717
01:09:55.200 –> 01:10:04.650
Cassandra Loomis Kim: I still stressed about shipping and I had a piece on a truck certainly you know charleston South Carolina for four days, and it was supposed to be there between.
718
01:10:05.040 –> 01:10:15.060
Cassandra Loomis Kim: This past Friday and Monday and their weather was bonkers so just date on the truck for four days and i’ve just sent emails quits and so sorry it’s near you, but not with you.
719
01:10:16.410 –> 01:10:18.120
Raymond Bonilla: yeah that’s the that’s the.
720
01:10:19.830 –> 01:10:21.360
Raymond Bonilla: Shipping stuff for galleries.
721
01:10:22.110 –> 01:10:29.100
Tim Trabon: I was just trying to look up the tips and tricks I used to follow to submit assignments late.
722
01:10:32.820 –> 01:10:38.190
Tim Trabon: And there was the thing I used to do with files or would make it look like it was a complete file.
723
01:10:41.130 –> 01:10:41.430
Tim Trabon: and
724
01:10:42.660 –> 01:10:47.850
Tim Trabon: And it by you, it by you, I mean like if the teacher wasn’t On top of that game by like 72 hours.
725
01:10:51.030 –> 01:10:52.020
Terry Brown: bad form.
726
01:10:52.260 –> 01:10:57.930
Tim Trabon: Because, then it then it comes down to if How long are they gonna procrastinate bringing up the broken file to you.
727
01:10:58.500 –> 01:11:02.130
Raymond Bonilla: So this is what illustration isolation is turned into since i’ve been gone.
728
01:11:02.250 –> 01:11:03.420
Tim Trabon: But then I looked.
729
01:11:03.930 –> 01:11:04.830
Raymond Bonilla: At these tips.
730
01:11:06.660 –> 01:11:14.910
Tim Trabon: I tried looking it up online how to buy more time on your assignment and the number one suggestion on wiki how is blame technology.
731
01:11:17.400 –> 01:11:18.030
Like yeah.
732
01:11:22.020 –> 01:11:28.410
Tim Trabon: there’s a show on HBO called the other two and it’s like an aspiring actor and he gets signed to an agent.
733
01:11:31.500 –> 01:11:38.910
Tim Trabon: predicated on the idea that he’s a writer too and he’s he’s not a writer, and he knows he knows her a screenplay.
734
01:11:40.020 –> 01:11:42.690
Tim Trabon: And he’s got to like write a screenplay that weekend and.
735
01:11:44.640 –> 01:11:48.000
Tim Trabon: In a manic state he just submits a title page.
736
01:11:50.760 –> 01:11:57.690
Tim Trabon: And the story then becomes a freaking out because the actor is approaching her and she’s like I never read a script.
737
01:12:00.390 –> 01:12:01.530
Tim Trabon: he’s like oh my God.
738
01:12:03.570 –> 01:12:17.310
Tim Trabon: yeah I love that stuff I mean I wasn’t yeah for an English major I wasn’t I never understood that, like page, you know the sticklers for like page requirements and word count.
739
01:12:18.990 –> 01:12:25.830
Terry Brown: there’s that scary scene at the opening of where the buffalo roam the hunter s Thompson movie with.
740
01:12:28.410 –> 01:12:42.120
Terry Brown: Be with bill Murray, and his phone keeps ringing because it’s Rolling Stone and he’s missing his deadline and he’s got a fax machine, so he just takes up some some newspaper tears it up and throws it in the fax machine is yeah go ahead chew on that for a while.
741
01:12:44.610 –> 01:12:51.720
Terry Brown: Technology of its day he probably sitting back Sir that’s sketches Johnny said faxed sketches when you were young.
742
01:12:52.080 –> 01:12:54.240
John English: I did a lot had a fax machine.
743
01:12:55.260 –> 01:12:55.770
John English: If you.
744
01:12:56.940 –> 01:13:00.600
John English: I think if you were doing work with Gary Kelly right now you’d probably get facts.
745
01:13:03.420 –> 01:13:04.020
Terry Brown: To go.
746
01:13:09.270 –> 01:13:09.600
Cassandra Loomis Kim: My.
747
01:13:10.380 –> 01:13:16.860
Cassandra Loomis Kim: sweet older neighbor was just trying to get me to fax something for her, and I was like, how do we just scan it and email it.
748
01:13:19.200 –> 01:13:20.040
John English: Without work.
749
01:13:21.180 –> 01:13:25.290
Tim Trabon: yeah did your neighbor go I, I understand, to have the words you just.
750
01:13:26.160 –> 01:13:31.230
Cassandra Loomis Kim: yeah she’s really sweet but she’s definitely older, so I just did it for her and then everything was OK.
751
01:13:31.740 –> 01:13:33.390
Tim Trabon: OK, that was nice of you.
752
01:13:34.170 –> 01:13:36.390
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Just very nicely yeah.
753
01:13:38.760 –> 01:13:42.480
Raymond Bonilla: yeah it’s just you know stuff some newspapers in.
754
01:13:43.530 –> 01:13:44.970
Raymond Bonilla: The fantasy and send it out.
755
01:13:47.670 –> 01:13:47.880
Raymond Bonilla: To.
756
01:13:48.930 –> 01:13:50.190
John English: buy some time to the.
757
01:13:55.710 –> 01:13:57.510
Tim Trabon: Hope you, I do not buy you some time.
758
01:14:02.370 –> 01:14:02.760
Tim Trabon: yeah.
759
01:14:04.980 –> 01:14:07.020
Raymond Bonilla: that’s great it’s good stuff.
760
01:14:07.560 –> 01:14:09.690
Terry Brown: You guys move along and number three pretty soon.
761
01:14:12.210 –> 01:14:12.480
Raymond Bonilla: yeah.
762
01:14:13.470 –> 01:14:15.030
John English: I didn’t I didn’t draw number two.
763
01:14:16.470 –> 01:14:19.800
Tim Trabon: All right, so yeah we do need Terry that’s a good point because we’re.
764
01:14:21.450 –> 01:14:23.790
Tim Trabon: we’re we’re definitely ready for number three.
765
01:14:23.940 –> 01:14:26.880
John English: it’s exactly right perfect time.
766
01:14:27.900 –> 01:14:33.870
Tim Trabon: yeah so just a reminder, be sure to post your work to instagram using hashtag illustration isolation.
767
01:14:34.530 –> 01:14:46.860
Tim Trabon: and add visual arts passage i’ll type in the chat but, before the nights over we’re will open up instagram will check out everybody’s both highly recommend it but uh don’t wait till the end you won’t have enough time.
768
01:14:48.810 –> 01:15:03.270
Terry Brown: It is great fun to see them, I shall tomorrow always enjoy your company gang race good to see you back here I don’t hold the fact that you’re from Queens against you, but someday we’re gonna have to get together and talk about the good old artist from the past.
769
01:15:03.810 –> 01:15:05.130
Raymond Bonilla: they’ve been incredible very.
770
01:15:05.640 –> 01:15:08.430
Terry Brown: Good luck and good luck on number three and four i’ll see you next week.
771
01:15:08.640 –> 01:15:10.980
Raymond Bonilla: Thanks Harry Harry Harry great Sir.
772
01:15:11.370 –> 01:15:11.850
yeah.
773
01:15:18.060 –> 01:15:19.440
Raymond Bonilla: That was Terry brown wow.
774
01:15:21.960 –> 01:15:22.140
Cassandra Loomis Kim: He.
775
01:15:22.410 –> 01:15:23.040
Raymond Bonilla: Was awesome.
776
01:15:23.310 –> 01:15:28.350
Cassandra Loomis Kim: he’s got a story for everything like he’s he’s connected to all aspects of life it’s amazing.
777
01:15:31.710 –> 01:15:36.300
John English: hey you know my perspective and rate, this probably happened to you a little bit.
778
01:15:37.860 –> 01:15:42.480
John English: too to beginning but man Terry will did a lot of power.
779
01:15:43.620 –> 01:15:44.280
Raymond Bonilla: Oh yeah.
780
01:15:44.370 –> 01:15:52.950
John English: You know, being the director of the society of illustrators he kind of kept that organization together and somebody you wanted to.
781
01:15:54.150 –> 01:15:57.120
John English: Make sure you are on the right side of the industry.
782
01:15:59.850 –> 01:16:01.200
John English: He got that he was.
783
01:16:01.740 –> 01:16:02.160
John English: You know.
784
01:16:03.900 –> 01:16:08.880
John English: An aggressive or had a bad side, he just had a lot he had a lot hit a big job.
785
01:16:11.160 –> 01:16:12.300
John English: lot of influence.
786
01:16:15.270 –> 01:16:15.900
Raymond Bonilla: And he was a.
787
01:16:16.950 –> 01:16:23.220
Raymond Bonilla: He still is still X, you know he’s still very much one to the steward of like the history of illustration, I mean it’s like.
788
01:16:24.420 –> 01:16:25.320
Raymond Bonilla: I just feel like he.
789
01:16:26.580 –> 01:16:37.950
Raymond Bonilla: You know, he knows what he has like the knowledge he’s been sharing it’s like a great responsibility on he feels responsible to pass it on as much as possible and i’ve always appreciated that about him.
790
01:16:39.480 –> 01:16:39.840
John English: yeah.
791
01:16:42.510 –> 01:16:46.290
John English: he’s you know he thinks about the legacy side of it a lot.
792
01:16:49.050 –> 01:16:51.060
John English: and actually now that’s.
793
01:16:52.650 –> 01:17:03.990
John English: had been and I don’t know if as much as it is now I don’t want to say anything negative about the society of illustrators, but it was very much, I think.
794
01:17:05.010 –> 01:17:09.990
John English: You know they cured it curated American illustration for since 1901 and.
795
01:17:11.790 –> 01:17:14.220
John English: I hope that I hope it keeps going that direction.
796
01:17:17.220 –> 01:17:21.510
Raymond Bonilla: Absolutely, especially for that next generation coming and they just.
797
01:17:23.340 –> 01:17:24.480
Raymond Bonilla: important institution.
798
01:17:25.050 –> 01:17:25.590
Cassandra Loomis Kim: mm hmm.
799
01:17:26.700 –> 01:17:27.000
Raymond Bonilla: You know.
800
01:17:30.540 –> 01:17:31.500
John English: it’s important to us.
801
01:17:32.130 –> 01:17:33.330
Raymond Bonilla: yeah absolutely.
802
01:17:37.560 –> 01:17:44.430
Raymond Bonilla: I mean, where else can you sit down and have a drink, you know next to looking at of Norman Rockwell you know.
803
01:17:46.020 –> 01:17:48.330
Raymond Bonilla: And then over your shoulders at nc wyeth and.
804
01:17:50.160 –> 01:17:59.340
Raymond Bonilla: You know it’s just like you have like the drum where people like frank rosetta and Austin briggs you know signed signed it, you know.
805
01:18:01.980 –> 01:18:04.770
Raymond Bonilla: Your dad your dad time that the drum.
806
01:18:05.340 –> 01:18:05.940
John English: yep john.
807
01:18:06.840 –> 01:18:09.450
Raymond Bonilla: Was is, you have the first the second one I.
808
01:18:09.630 –> 01:18:10.830
John English: think the first one.
809
01:18:13.530 –> 01:18:17.760
John English: He he was, I mean he was part of the hall of fame when he was.
810
01:18:19.140 –> 01:18:19.830
John English: He was early.
811
01:18:22.230 –> 01:18:26.070
John English: It you know, he was, I think he was 43 years old.
812
01:18:26.730 –> 01:18:28.110
Cassandra Loomis Kim: wow wow.
813
01:18:30.630 –> 01:18:34.860
John English: I think the only one younger than him to do it was was burning.
814
01:18:37.590 –> 01:18:37.800
Raymond Bonilla: out.
815
01:18:37.980 –> 01:18:40.740
Raymond Bonilla: How is this bread bread harlan when he when he entered in.
816
01:18:41.490 –> 01:18:41.910
John English: I don’t know.
817
01:18:45.120 –> 01:18:47.220
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Do you need to ask these questions when Terry was still here.
818
01:18:47.880 –> 01:18:48.960
Raymond Bonilla: yeah dang it Terry.
819
01:18:49.740 –> 01:18:53.280
John English: It all is it all it’s a moving target and all changes.
820
01:18:53.370 –> 01:18:54.600
Raymond Bonilla: You know so yeah now.
821
01:18:54.720 –> 01:18:57.300
John English: who won the most awards well that’s that’s all changed.
822
01:18:59.550 –> 01:19:05.580
John English: My dad like to point out to everybody knows he said when I quit illustrating I had one one is anybody.
823
01:19:08.880 –> 01:19:13.800
John English: You stay because the first person to surpassing was Gary.
824
01:19:14.190 –> 01:19:15.600
Raymond Bonilla: Was Gary right so.
825
01:19:15.660 –> 01:19:18.630
John English: Gary brad I think Gary Gary brad.
826
01:19:20.100 –> 01:19:22.020
John English: there’s a whole bunch of them that are real close now.
827
01:19:23.790 –> 01:19:24.390
John English: But.
828
01:19:25.650 –> 01:19:32.010
John English: He told Gary what I did dinner, he said so, how many of you do the how many of those words, did you win, win your past 50.
829
01:19:38.790 –> 01:19:40.320
John English: He wasn’t competitive at all.
830
01:19:43.590 –> 01:19:43.860
Raymond Bonilla: But.
831
01:19:46.170 –> 01:19:56.940
Tim Trabon: here’s a question from the crowd that I thought would be good is do you guys have any comic book artists, that you would recommend checking out if you’re interested in pursuing that.
832
01:19:59.070 –> 01:20:00.090
John English: You want to go first.
833
01:20:00.510 –> 01:20:02.280
Raymond Bonilla: yeah I got a laundry list.
834
01:20:03.660 –> 01:20:04.410
Raymond Bonilla: So.
835
01:20:04.860 –> 01:20:13.350
Raymond Bonilla: I mean there’s like artists to look at I mean there’s there’s so many of them like I love.
836
01:20:14.670 –> 01:20:16.500
Raymond Bonilla: Fiona staples work, who do did.
837
01:20:17.640 –> 01:20:21.480
Raymond Bonilla: Oh, my goodness i’m blanking on the series that that she did.
838
01:20:24.150 –> 01:20:25.380
Raymond Bonilla: sock was a saga.
839
01:20:25.770 –> 01:20:27.150
Tim Trabon: Think i’m gonna check.
840
01:20:28.230 –> 01:20:40.470
Raymond Bonilla: yeah so like YouTube wise where you can go to right now, like David finch Jim Lee they have like YouTube channels up and just chill chock full of just tutorials and.
841
01:20:41.010 –> 01:20:54.420
Raymond Bonilla: And i’m drawing talking about are talking about the industry, I mean just you know, and it really for two people that really stress really solid foundations and having an intent and put the proper picture, making procedures and.
842
01:20:55.980 –> 01:20:57.030
Tim Trabon: Fiona stable.
843
01:20:58.020 –> 01:21:06.150
Raymond Bonilla: There it is oh yeah yeah I love it I love saga so much I got actually that that wrap up to me.
844
01:21:07.980 –> 01:21:11.250
Tim Trabon: Man I don’t know, I was buying the books for a while I need to.
845
01:21:12.750 –> 01:21:14.220
Tim Trabon: I need to i’m behind.
846
01:21:16.680 –> 01:21:22.170
Raymond Bonilla: yeah totally me too okay so we’re in the same same same predicament, you know.
847
01:21:23.490 –> 01:21:36.450
Raymond Bonilla: Where there’s like a lot of incredible artists working in the comic book industry it’s, just like the illustration industry like you stop for like two seconds and john can attest to this like if you’re not aware, like coke just like you wake up.
848
01:21:37.590 –> 01:21:42.810
Raymond Bonilla: You won’t recognize anyone who’s working you know, at a certain point you’re like whoa where’d all these people come from you know.
849
01:21:44.010 –> 01:21:45.630
Raymond Bonilla: Because people move in and out of that.
850
01:21:46.770 –> 01:21:49.410
Raymond Bonilla: A good amount, I mean I was just talking to.
851
01:21:50.850 –> 01:21:54.000
Raymond Bonilla: A friend of mine his name is Paul Rivera do you know paul’s work john.
852
01:21:54.690 –> 01:21:59.760
Raymond Bonilla: I don’t is worked for marvel.
853
01:22:00.810 –> 01:22:14.850
Raymond Bonilla: valiant I mean all the major companies, but he was he had done like a really incredible painted comic book series called me ethos and and they really based the captain America movie a lot on his.
854
01:22:15.840 –> 01:22:27.180
Raymond Bonilla: On his expanded comic book, which is crazy so now he’s working he’s actually went from that to working in concept art for marvel so, and you know.
855
01:22:27.270 –> 01:22:29.070
John English: They do know who you talk about now.
856
01:22:32.610 –> 01:22:33.750
John English: How old is he.
857
01:22:35.250 –> 01:22:42.300
Raymond Bonilla: he’s a little older than I am he’s in his 40s early 40s I think I don’t think he’s that much older than that.
858
01:22:45.000 –> 01:22:47.280
Raymond Bonilla: Scott, a lot more hair than I do now.
859
01:22:49.230 –> 01:22:50.310
Raymond Bonilla: On his head, you know.
860
01:22:52.110 –> 01:22:53.070
Raymond Bonilla: he’s uh.
861
01:22:54.870 –> 01:22:55.380
Raymond Bonilla: he’s.
862
01:22:56.490 –> 01:23:01.380
Raymond Bonilla: Trying to think of like who he went to I think he went to ringling actually to be honest, to be I think he went to me.
863
01:23:03.030 –> 01:23:05.550
Raymond Bonilla: So I don’t know George George would have ran into.
864
01:23:07.410 –> 01:23:08.070
Raymond Bonilla: At the time.
865
01:23:09.510 –> 01:23:10.770
Raymond Bonilla: But i’ll actually put his.
866
01:23:12.180 –> 01:23:26.280
Raymond Bonilla: His work in the chat because I really I think he, like bridges, the gap between like it was like traditional illustration and back even figurative painting and comic books, because his process it’s just so.
867
01:23:27.960 –> 01:23:28.950
Raymond Bonilla: So incredible.
868
01:23:30.630 –> 01:23:31.950
John English: I feel that way about.
869
01:23:33.150 –> 01:23:34.950
John English: Jason Alexander and.
870
01:23:35.760 –> 01:23:36.870
Raymond Bonilla: Exactly yeah.
871
01:23:37.560 –> 01:23:41.910
John English: I feel the same way about that guy is a great painter doing comics.
872
01:23:42.390 –> 01:23:56.310
Raymond Bonilla: Oh yeah yeah that’s it that’s a he’s like on another level, you know, like I put him like like in the same vein, like thinking wise as George and Kent Williams and like you know.
873
01:23:56.760 –> 01:23:58.260
John English: feel like it doesn’t seem.
874
01:23:58.290 –> 01:23:59.130
John English: To leverage talent.
875
01:23:59.910 –> 01:24:15.600
Raymond Bonilla: yeah yeah absolutely absolutely yeah I was fortunate enough to meet them and run into when your comic con and we just talked painting, and it was just like wow this he’s like a painter painter like you talk to somebody like that, like wow you’re you’re a real artist.
876
01:24:18.840 –> 01:24:21.990
Raymond Bonilla: Like here’s the thing from earlier this morning, when you were in your studio.
877
01:24:23.070 –> 01:24:23.370
Raymond Bonilla: This is.
878
01:24:24.360 –> 01:24:27.210
John English: I really like looking at stuff that’s good yeah.
879
01:24:29.220 –> 01:24:36.390
Tim Trabon: john somebody just asked is ideation and visual storytelling appropriate for like an aspiring cartoonist or is it to fine art.
880
01:24:37.590 –> 01:24:37.950
Tim Trabon: know.
881
01:24:38.100 –> 01:24:40.560
John English: It would work very well for.
882
01:24:42.570 –> 01:24:46.980
John English: The whole idea is it’s a method to.
883
01:24:48.150 –> 01:24:50.130
John English: be a better visual storyteller.
884
01:24:51.420 –> 01:25:09.690
John English: You get in a learning process of how to identify problems and solving this that solve them you with either conceptual or narrative solution and so it’s very broad and its outcome but it’s more about the process than anything and.
885
01:25:10.770 –> 01:25:16.950
John English: You know, good habits good you know, a way to be on target all the time way to be consistent.
886
01:25:19.500 –> 01:25:24.330
John English: And it’s you know said word console a teaching the class he’s he’s okay.
887
01:25:26.760 –> 01:25:28.290
Raymond Bonilla: Is that solid B minus john.
888
01:25:28.410 –> 01:25:29.130
decided.
889
01:25:30.720 –> 01:25:39.990
Tim Trabon: hey Ray I found your copy of saga on Amazon it’s the first compendium and it’s 1400 pages.
890
01:25:43.740 –> 01:25:45.630
Tim Trabon: And it just sounds.
891
01:25:48.000 –> 01:25:48.960
Tim Trabon: So much better.
892
01:25:49.980 –> 01:25:55.050
Raymond Bonilla: just get yeah they’ll probably after probably special airlifted and then drop it off in a forklift you know.
893
01:25:57.540 –> 01:26:02.460
Raymond Bonilla: that’s that’s that’s fine 1400 pages wow wow wow wow.
894
01:26:03.810 –> 01:26:09.420
Tim Trabon: And i’m assuming the format is, you know as big as the book I just held up i’m assuming they kept it big.
895
01:26:09.450 –> 01:26:14.940
Raymond Bonilla: Oh yeah I would imagine, so I mean it’s wow that’s that’s crazy, I mean.
896
01:26:15.720 –> 01:26:17.880
Tim Trabon: You have to like reinforced my coffee table.
897
01:26:20.220 –> 01:26:22.230
Raymond Bonilla: The craziest thing if anybody’s ever read saga.
898
01:26:23.250 –> 01:26:27.990
Raymond Bonilla: it’s your staples very much a incredible storyteller.
899
01:26:29.190 –> 01:26:30.840
Raymond Bonilla: And it’s fully painted.
900
01:26:31.770 –> 01:26:33.000
Raymond Bonilla: yeah here I mean this is the.
901
01:26:33.300 –> 01:26:36.390
Raymond Bonilla: Full color I mean yeah let’s look at that, I mean that stuff is like.
902
01:26:38.160 –> 01:26:39.600
Raymond Bonilla: sighs i’m not showing up.
903
01:26:40.920 –> 01:26:41.610
Raymond Bonilla: Are we on a grid.
904
01:26:42.600 –> 01:26:42.960
Oh yeah.
905
01:26:47.880 –> 01:26:50.400
Raymond Bonilla: I so good, so good.
906
01:26:55.590 –> 01:26:56.040
Raymond Bonilla: yeah.
907
01:27:01.980 –> 01:27:03.420
Raymond Bonilla: output, the line cat.
908
01:27:03.990 –> 01:27:08.010
Tim Trabon: I didn’t even think I didn’t even think I didn’t look at that page, but I you kind of gotta be careful.
909
01:27:08.400 –> 01:27:10.080
Raymond Bonilla: yeah you have to be careful.
910
01:27:14.250 –> 01:27:16.350
Tim Trabon: Sorry, this is episodes are rated.
911
01:27:16.890 –> 01:27:17.280
yeah.
912
01:27:19.140 –> 01:27:20.850
Tim Trabon: yeah yeah.
913
01:27:21.390 –> 01:27:25.170
Raymond Bonilla: Okay, you can play me, you know i’m like I come every so often.
914
01:27:25.980 –> 01:27:26.700
Tim Trabon: yeah already.
915
01:27:26.970 –> 01:27:28.830
Raymond Bonilla: be blamed down, this is the reason why Dale.
916
01:27:28.860 –> 01:27:30.240
Raymond Bonilla: should never not you know.
917
01:27:31.200 –> 01:27:34.590
Tim Trabon: I already flipped to another page was like thank God it wasn’t that page.
918
01:27:37.050 –> 01:27:37.500
Tim Trabon: trouble.
919
01:27:39.930 –> 01:27:43.170
Raymond Bonilla: You know one thing I was going to say like like.
920
01:27:44.460 –> 01:27:54.810
Raymond Bonilla: The that students question about how it relates to cop, you know ideation and in that process that you guys see I mean it’s.
921
01:27:56.190 –> 01:28:06.150
Raymond Bonilla: If you look at someone like Fiona staples i’m sure like that’s all planned out, I mean that’s that’s careful consideration, I mean I know Apollo works and everything is just.
922
01:28:06.600 –> 01:28:15.540
Raymond Bonilla: It starts with thumbnails it starts with you know studying value pattern then reference build that it goes to the whole it goes through the whole process of me.
923
01:28:16.230 –> 01:28:28.530
Raymond Bonilla: And he still does that, I mean he’s such a consonant artists, you know it’s everything down to like you know sculpting the cats, for his his characters and.
924
01:28:30.030 –> 01:28:42.480
Raymond Bonilla: You know just said, for lighting reference and things like that, and how he goes about doing is really you know that that’s type of stuff that’s not exclusive to any sort of you know.
925
01:28:44.130 –> 01:28:45.870
Raymond Bonilla: I guess venue you would call it, you know.
926
01:28:47.160 –> 01:28:49.800
Raymond Bonilla: Because it’s the same stuff that I do for my gallery paint.
927
01:28:52.080 –> 01:28:59.640
Raymond Bonilla: And you know I don’t really see the difference, the only difference is application it’s where the work is going to be shown so I mean.
928
01:29:02.610 –> 01:29:05.070
Raymond Bonilla: I don’t know what is it was everybody else, think about that, I mean.
929
01:29:06.150 –> 01:29:06.750
John English: I think.
930
01:29:07.290 –> 01:29:07.590
John English: You know.
931
01:29:07.650 –> 01:29:14.040
John English: First of all, the illustration industry is a process driven industry so obviously a comic book comic work as to.
932
01:29:15.300 –> 01:29:15.780
John English: and
933
01:29:16.890 –> 01:29:24.660
John English: Understanding process, I mean just just the fact that that’s how you communicate, I mean as an illustrator your.
934
01:29:26.220 –> 01:29:33.540
John English: You you work for art directors and you have to communicate with them you communicate in communicate with them through a three value thumbnail.
935
01:29:33.900 –> 01:29:49.440
John English: Value study finished drawing whatever the the project requires but you know you don’t just get up one morning decide oh i’m going to do a Time Magazine cover so somebody it’s an assignment so you’re working with the team and.
936
01:29:52.050 –> 01:30:00.720
John English: You got to get in the habit process allows you to work in the right pipeline and it makes you a better artist immediately.
937
01:30:02.520 –> 01:30:03.570
John English: Because you get everything right.
938
01:30:06.660 –> 01:30:13.530
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Right, if you have your process down pat and it’s second nature, when you have to go, you know change something else.
939
01:30:13.530 –> 01:30:13.950
Cassandra Loomis Kim: You don’t.
940
01:30:14.760 –> 01:30:17.550
Cassandra Loomis Kim: know what you’re doing you can move at a higher speed.
941
01:30:21.600 –> 01:30:31.110
Raymond Bonilla: yeah you can’t have much of a career when you know if you have a process that you know where sometimes the peace comes out Okay, and sometimes it doesn’t and you don’t know why.
942
01:30:37.200 –> 01:30:43.710
Raymond Bonilla: There are a gallery owner or art director, say, give us five pieces for them to be okay.
943
01:30:46.560 –> 01:30:58.860
Tim Trabon: here’s a here’s an elaboration on the question right, it sounds like like they’re saying like cartoon for the new yorker say hey I think I know the answer but john I wanna I think it’s still practical.
944
01:30:59.400 –> 01:31:02.100
John English: Oh yeah very much so yeah.
945
01:31:05.550 –> 01:31:10.380
Tim Trabon: yeah like panel single panel cartooning yeah absolutely still yeah.
946
01:31:12.990 –> 01:31:20.430
John English: that’s that’s even more so it’s all it’s all idea it’s all concept and idea so.
947
01:31:21.810 –> 01:31:25.110
John English: have been well equipped that that is incredibly important.
948
01:31:28.920 –> 01:31:40.110
Raymond Bonilla: You think about somebody like jack Davis like how good of an artist, he was you know, like it’s just to be something that’s somebody that’s that quick and you have to be so facile.
949
01:31:40.770 –> 01:31:51.450
Raymond Bonilla: With what you’re doing like you have to have everything in such a streamlined process because efficiency is the name of the game, I mean like and.
950
01:31:53.250 –> 01:31:59.190
Raymond Bonilla: yeah I just thought you know it would I would love to wake up one day and be like okay i’m gonna go ahead and.
951
01:31:59.970 –> 01:32:10.860
Raymond Bonilla: Just you know i’m going to do this 30 by 40 painting and then yeah i’ll go home and maybe do a cover sure, and then I you know, I have a cup of tea and then maybe i’ll finish that uh.
952
01:32:11.790 –> 01:32:22.920
Raymond Bonilla: You know that entire comic book page and I was working on to you know, without any planning that’d be great but it’s just not the way it works, unfortunately, you know.
953
01:32:25.140 –> 01:32:27.630
Raymond Bonilla: didn’t didn’t mark Schultz john.
954
01:32:29.880 –> 01:32:31.110
Raymond Bonilla: Are you familiar with his work.
955
01:32:31.590 –> 01:32:32.310
John English: I know.
956
01:32:33.060 –> 01:32:33.810
But so.
957
01:32:35.820 –> 01:32:36.360
John English: Yes.
958
01:32:36.600 –> 01:32:40.470
Raymond Bonilla: yeah I know and you’ve told me that too and i’m like and I still say, have you heard you know.
959
01:32:43.470 –> 01:32:57.150
Raymond Bonilla: He did dinosaurs and cadillacs and dinosaurs was a series back in the 90s like MTV, but it was based off his comic book called zone tales and shelters done writing and.
960
01:32:58.710 –> 01:33:18.660
Raymond Bonilla: he’s done separately like isn’t conan and online so he was he had this talk and he talked about process and talked about how I mean just thorough, I mean we were just there he actually prints his books, plus pub job plus Prince does a lot of his art books for him.
961
01:33:19.470 –> 01:33:21.600
Raymond Bonilla: And he.
962
01:33:22.770 –> 01:33:30.240
Raymond Bonilla: Is there’s pages of it just says thumbnails for just a single image like and just they’re beautiful and I remember a talk he gave.
963
01:33:31.500 –> 01:33:50.760
Raymond Bonilla: Talking about how you know as it as artists, you have to you have to have a process, this is how you work things out, you have to work things out, he says, you know when you’re a student you learn, you have to go through the process of going from a consumer of art to a producer of art.
964
01:33:51.900 –> 01:34:04.470
Raymond Bonilla: And that is a very different mindset that you have to have this it’s a lot easier to consume this this stuff than it is to you know produce it and i’ve never heard somebody put it like that, you know.
965
01:34:05.670 –> 01:34:06.300
John English: Well, said.
966
01:34:13.680 –> 01:34:17.250
Raymond Bonilla: That being said, since you’ve never heard of him, I should have stopped that I should have taken the credit for it.
967
01:34:22.350 –> 01:34:22.980
John English: So.
968
01:34:24.510 –> 01:34:30.240
John English: whoever’s asking that question, I would, I would encourage you to look at my favorite new yorker.
969
01:34:32.460 –> 01:34:36.300
John English: illustrator cartoonist is john can you.
970
01:34:37.350 –> 01:34:37.980
Raymond Bonilla: Oh yeah.
971
01:34:38.730 –> 01:34:39.300
and
972
01:34:42.810 –> 01:34:46.170
John English: yeah you kind of have to watch his stuff too, if you were going to show it on.
973
01:34:46.620 –> 01:34:48.030
Raymond Bonilla: yeah yeah so.
974
01:34:48.630 –> 01:34:50.310
Raymond Bonilla: Today let’s not show that.
975
01:34:51.360 –> 01:34:52.860
Tim Trabon: Let me just pull up Google images.
976
01:34:56.310 –> 01:34:58.500
John English: Shared share your desktop to me what i’m saying.
977
01:34:58.560 –> 01:35:00.990
Tim Trabon: Well, that was that was you know.
978
01:35:02.400 –> 01:35:15.600
Tim Trabon: That I remember grabbing copies of like esquire when I was a kid and seeing his column, and it was it was just wild I was far too young to be stumbling across john cooney.
979
01:35:19.560 –> 01:35:33.840
Raymond Bonilla: it’s just incredible incredible do you think I wanted, I want to ask him, one day, you know if I ever run into him again this is like is this hand still drawing when he’s sleeping because the man does not stop I mean like.
980
01:35:34.920 –> 01:35:40.590
Raymond Bonilla: he’s just idea after idea after idea after idea i’ve never just the output.
981
01:35:41.760 –> 01:35:46.680
Raymond Bonilla: You know it’s it’s really it’s just so incredibly just.
982
01:35:48.480 –> 01:35:53.550
Raymond Bonilla: it’s inspiring to see somebody just he’s just always on it seems like you know yeah.
983
01:35:55.380 –> 01:35:56.160
John English: He is good.
984
01:36:01.290 –> 01:36:12.240
John English: I gotta kick I met him at the society of illustrators to the awards night 2000 February 7 2020.
985
01:36:13.230 –> 01:36:24.960
John English: And he walked up to me, introduced himself and he stuck out his hand and I said you’re john Kenya, because smiled and he said that’s happened to me before and I said yeah you look, just like your artwork.
986
01:36:27.360 –> 01:36:29.190
John English: And I knew what he looked like because I follow.
987
01:36:29.550 –> 01:36:31.620
Raymond Bonilla: Everything is the notes.
988
01:36:31.950 –> 01:36:43.830
John English: I told him a story which he knew that it was true because my father started following him and they had shared I guess shared messages, but.
989
01:36:44.880 –> 01:36:50.280
John English: I my dad was convalescing in the hospital, but a year before he passed away.
990
01:36:51.780 –> 01:37:03.690
John English: Really down, and I was just trying to do anything to try to make them feel better playing cards with them hanging out talking are, and I was going through my instagram feeds and I said dad you know this guy.
991
01:37:04.740 –> 01:37:08.580
John English: And I handed him my phone, I could not get my phone back.
992
01:37:09.180 –> 01:37:25.530
John English: She fell in love with kenya’s work and then he said something that was so telling he said, you know a lot of guys have good ideas they’re funny but there’s very few people that dropped on me and he said he.
993
01:37:27.120 –> 01:37:31.290
John English: He said his line everything works to his advantage so beautiful.
994
01:37:32.640 –> 01:37:33.750
John English: Such a good draw.
995
01:37:35.550 –> 01:37:37.050
Raymond Bonilla: that’s really well said yeah.
996
01:37:43.410 –> 01:37:45.450
Raymond Bonilla: yeah I couldn’t do that that stuff is.
997
01:37:46.860 –> 01:37:47.370
John English: that’s.
998
01:37:48.570 –> 01:37:51.630
John English: that’s that’s a different mindset, from what I do.
999
01:37:55.500 –> 01:37:57.750
Raymond Bonilla: And I I stress out.
1000
01:37:58.110 –> 01:37:58.620
Raymond Bonilla: let’s say.
1001
01:37:59.160 –> 01:38:02.670
John English: But Ray let’s to go ahead and say this, I doubt he could do what we do either.
1002
01:38:04.680 –> 01:38:06.270
John English: don’t know that to anybody.
1003
01:38:07.530 –> 01:38:07.860
John English: That.
1004
01:38:08.340 –> 01:38:21.120
Tim Trabon: You know what what’s funny is john and you’ll you’ll get a kick out of this because he’s you know we’ve dealt with this is will post a tasteful nude figure drawing and someone will report it on instagram.
1005
01:38:23.250 –> 01:38:25.380
Tim Trabon: And then i’m scrolling through, and I see john cooney.
1006
01:38:27.180 –> 01:38:30.630
Tim Trabon: I see what he plays i’m like do we just have the wrong audience.
1007
01:38:32.700 –> 01:38:34.320
John English: How does he get away with that stuff.
1008
01:38:34.350 –> 01:38:34.710
Tim Trabon: yeah.
1009
01:38:34.950 –> 01:38:36.180
Tim Trabon: Like yeah like.
1010
01:38:36.240 –> 01:38:37.920
John English: He knows somebody or something.
1011
01:38:37.920 –> 01:38:38.460
John English: I don’t.
1012
01:38:38.760 –> 01:38:39.270
Tim Trabon: know I don’t.
1013
01:38:39.360 –> 01:38:40.680
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Even the sensor thinks he’s.
1014
01:38:40.680 –> 01:38:41.070
Cassandra Loomis Kim: funny.
1015
01:38:41.610 –> 01:38:42.210
John English: yeah that’s right.
1016
01:38:43.980 –> 01:38:44.340
Raymond Bonilla: yeah.
1017
01:38:45.120 –> 01:38:49.860
Tim Trabon: like an office at Facebook like this, this is this is absurd.
1018
01:38:52.440 –> 01:38:54.420
John English: he’s definitely breaking the rules.
1019
01:38:54.990 –> 01:39:01.620
Tim Trabon: yeah but yeah we’ve we’ve had like, just like the most heinous images get flagged you like, really.
1020
01:39:04.050 –> 01:39:05.280
Tim Trabon: We probably.
1021
01:39:05.670 –> 01:39:07.830
John English: Use of nudes get flagged.
1022
01:39:09.090 –> 01:39:09.720
Tim Trabon: It doesn’t.
1023
01:39:11.250 –> 01:39:23.340
Tim Trabon: And we’re very actually i’ll say we’re very thoughtful with that, because we know we’ve got you know all we’ve got a lot of followers many ages, but like like john is off the rails.
1024
01:39:29.280 –> 01:39:29.940
Tim Trabon: I mean, he knows.
1025
01:39:35.130 –> 01:39:36.150
John English: I wonder if it’s like.
1026
01:39:36.480 –> 01:39:41.520
John English: we’re getting flagged because they’re flagging us for the drawings not be very good or something.
1027
01:39:43.470 –> 01:39:44.490
John English: Because of the nudity.
1028
01:39:46.830 –> 01:39:49.620
Tim Trabon: it’s a quality it’s a quality control issue.
1029
01:39:51.510 –> 01:39:52.560
Cassandra Loomis Kim: On it could have been better.
1030
01:39:53.100 –> 01:39:55.080
Raymond Bonilla: yeah good better right.
1031
01:39:55.500 –> 01:40:03.900
Tim Trabon: That it makes it, it says like, why did you flag this and it says like it was offensive it spam, it could have been better.
1032
01:40:05.640 –> 01:40:06.240
John English: So funny.
1033
01:40:06.450 –> 01:40:07.170
John English: There you sit.
1034
01:40:07.800 –> 01:40:11.640
John English: There you some material was really poor that was awful.
1035
01:40:14.400 –> 01:40:15.060
John English: Do it from.
1036
01:40:15.300 –> 01:40:17.250
Tim Trabon: an artist perspective yeah.
1037
01:40:20.880 –> 01:40:22.500
John English: yeah oh design sense.
1038
01:40:24.480 –> 01:40:27.510
Raymond Bonilla: Please double check that leg like it looks a little long.
1039
01:40:28.020 –> 01:40:28.470
yeah.
1040
01:40:30.180 –> 01:40:31.410
John English: i’m not drawing the legs.
1041
01:40:35.670 –> 01:40:39.090
Raymond Bonilla: that’s that’s that’s what I would like, for ahead drawing.
1042
01:40:40.770 –> 01:40:42.990
Raymond Bonilla: head looks a little short legs, a little short.
1043
01:40:43.650 –> 01:40:47.430
John English: Although I have stretched her head out a little bit, but i’m still not going to get to the legs.
1044
01:40:48.300 –> 01:40:50.190
Raymond Bonilla: around to the third one, I didn’t realize that.
1045
01:40:52.500 –> 01:40:53.610
John English: Right i’m almost done.
1046
01:40:53.700 –> 01:40:54.330
Tim Trabon: Cheese for a.
1047
01:40:55.080 –> 01:40:56.280
Tim Trabon: long time and we I.
1048
01:40:56.280 –> 01:41:00.450
Tim Trabon: don’t know that we told you this, but we only do three poses now.
1049
01:41:01.680 –> 01:41:02.160
Raymond Bonilla: Really.
1050
01:41:02.550 –> 01:41:05.100
John English: yeah we do a longer third post.
1051
01:41:07.980 –> 01:41:08.670
Raymond Bonilla: stick with it.
1052
01:41:08.760 –> 01:41:09.900
Tim Trabon: As long as you want it re.
1053
01:41:10.260 –> 01:41:13.110
Raymond Bonilla: Oh okay yeah This is great.
1054
01:41:14.790 –> 01:41:20.190
John English: So I put the fourth reference in there, and so you have options of one or the other.
1055
01:41:21.060 –> 01:41:22.680
Tim Trabon: You already rolled the dice though so.
1056
01:41:24.750 –> 01:41:29.250
Raymond Bonilla: Just i’ll do another one, you know I don’t know I don’t know what I want to do now.
1057
01:41:30.210 –> 01:41:30.570
Tim Trabon: Where.
1058
01:41:30.630 –> 01:41:31.110
Raymond Bonilla: Do I can.
1059
01:41:32.430 –> 01:41:38.880
Raymond Bonilla: continue on this, this is great, this is like timmy minutes to the Max for those season one there’s you know.
1060
01:41:40.380 –> 01:41:50.460
Cassandra Loomis Kim: What it was this funny moment where we had a week where we just weren’t getting to the last one, and then we’re all like yeah let’s just not and we everybody was the crowd was kind of cool with it.
1061
01:41:51.030 –> 01:41:57.510
Cassandra Loomis Kim: And then we were kind of like they put a vote and really let’s just keep the format it’s kind of Nice.
1062
01:41:59.760 –> 01:42:03.750
John English: Who do you think the one person that would take the opposite argument.
1063
01:42:06.120 –> 01:42:07.200
Raymond Bonilla: And I would.
1064
01:42:07.680 –> 01:42:10.020
Raymond Bonilla: I would say, Chris Payne.
1065
01:42:10.230 –> 01:42:10.890
John English: You got it.
1066
01:42:11.040 –> 01:42:11.790
right there yeah.
1067
01:42:13.200 –> 01:42:15.600
John English: I got plenty of time to do all these things yeah.
1068
01:42:16.200 –> 01:42:16.650
Raymond Bonilla: Oh, I.
1069
01:42:17.730 –> 01:42:18.660
Raymond Bonilla: wish there were more.
1070
01:42:19.980 –> 01:42:23.670
Tim Trabon: My response was like maybe we could even consider to.
1071
01:42:27.870 –> 01:42:28.260
Raymond Bonilla: yeah.
1072
01:42:29.250 –> 01:42:32.790
John English: No i’m actually actually Chris likes it yeah.
1073
01:42:34.560 –> 01:42:37.020
Raymond Bonilla: Because that he could probably just another reason run the show off.
1074
01:42:37.260 –> 01:42:39.060
Raymond Bonilla: What is he doing is he went out the.
1075
01:42:39.870 –> 01:42:41.340
Raymond Bonilla: ashes and stuff you know.
1076
01:42:43.410 –> 01:42:44.010
John English: Of course.
1077
01:42:44.790 –> 01:42:51.210
Tim Trabon: It was a couple months ago I was like it’s eight o’clock let’s I want to watch it, I want to watch an episode of marius town.
1078
01:42:55.110 –> 01:42:56.460
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Finally, watched that, by the way.
1079
01:42:57.870 –> 01:42:58.830
John English: I like that show.
1080
01:42:59.220 –> 01:43:04.110
Cassandra Loomis Kim: I was really good and I get your comment about the bronco I agree, why does he have a bronco.
1081
01:43:05.820 –> 01:43:08.790
Tim Trabon: It was absurd, it was the biggest mystery in the whole show.
1082
01:43:09.000 –> 01:43:18.900
Cassandra Loomis Kim: It really was I don’t get it, and so I was like really aware of the bronco because you talked about it before I solid and then I was like yeah but that makes zero sense.
1083
01:43:20.610 –> 01:43:25.950
Tim Trabon: like this, this downtrodden kid is driving a $90,000 classic car.
1084
01:43:26.040 –> 01:43:27.090
yeah.
1085
01:43:28.350 –> 01:43:28.890
Tim Trabon: yeah.
1086
01:43:30.000 –> 01:43:31.770
Cassandra Loomis Kim: and talking about how expensive things are.
1087
01:43:32.130 –> 01:43:39.630
Tim Trabon: yeah yeah their money they’re like we don’t have the money for the surgery, but it was like just like.
1088
01:43:40.800 –> 01:43:43.260
Tim Trabon: Just like sell the door handle on your bronco.
1089
01:43:44.220 –> 01:43:49.770
Cassandra Loomis Kim: I was like his conscious with the extra shiny Yes, he complained about it yeah yeah.
1090
01:43:50.250 –> 01:43:51.540
Raymond Bonilla: I wish I was this.
1091
01:43:51.900 –> 01:43:53.160
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Mayor of East town.
1092
01:43:53.970 –> 01:43:56.730
Raymond Bonilla: Mayor of East hat Okay, I think i’ve heard of it.
1093
01:43:57.090 –> 01:43:58.080
Cassandra Loomis Kim: it’s on HBO.
1094
01:43:59.130 –> 01:43:59.520
Raymond Bonilla: Okay.
1095
01:44:00.510 –> 01:44:02.880
Raymond Bonilla: Oh yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah Okay, yes.
1096
01:44:04.680 –> 01:44:14.520
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Well, it was fun because I watched back to back I watched hacks first and then I watched me or East town and gene smartest in both and you see here be two very different people and.
1097
01:44:15.000 –> 01:44:16.440
Tim Trabon: she’s still still great.
1098
01:44:16.590 –> 01:44:17.520
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Really talented.
1099
01:44:18.240 –> 01:44:21.930
Tim Trabon: I watched those basically at the same time as well Cassandra is so great.
1100
01:44:22.290 –> 01:44:23.580
Cassandra Loomis Kim: yeah oh.
1101
01:44:23.670 –> 01:44:25.830
Cassandra Loomis Kim: yeah say that have you cringing a.
1102
01:44:25.830 –> 01:44:27.810
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Time yeah.
1103
01:44:28.050 –> 01:44:31.710
Tim Trabon: That was really hard to watch some time but I loved it.
1104
01:44:32.520 –> 01:44:32.790
Like.
1105
01:44:34.110 –> 01:44:36.330
Cassandra Loomis Kim: that’s some poor decision making, you keep making.
1106
01:44:36.750 –> 01:44:39.060
Tim Trabon: I know it’s so great that.
1107
01:44:40.320 –> 01:44:49.050
Tim Trabon: i’ve been tuning into like I love HBO shows, but then I started to realize that now HBO is not a place of like.
1108
01:44:50.460 –> 01:44:55.050
Tim Trabon: Like I feel like it used to be like, if you turn on HBO like whatever he did was amazing.
1109
01:44:55.470 –> 01:44:55.950
Cassandra Loomis Kim: mm hmm.
1110
01:44:56.310 –> 01:44:58.950
Tim Trabon: And now you turn it on and it’ll be like.
1111
01:45:00.000 –> 01:45:06.450
Tim Trabon: It they were like trying to pitch like a child doctor show something like Dr Dr kid.
1112
01:45:08.910 –> 01:45:10.290
Tim Trabon: you’re talking about what is it called.
1113
01:45:10.650 –> 01:45:11.730
Raymond Bonilla: yeah yeah.
1114
01:45:13.800 –> 01:45:14.370
Tim Trabon: it’s just like.
1115
01:45:15.030 –> 01:45:15.690
Raymond Bonilla: clay yeah.
1116
01:45:15.750 –> 01:45:16.980
Tim Trabon: yeah what’s going to happen.
1117
01:45:19.410 –> 01:45:26.160
Tim Trabon: Because I was, I listened to an interview with David chase the the guy who wrote sopranos.
1118
01:45:26.670 –> 01:45:27.900
Cassandra Loomis Kim: mm hmm and.
1119
01:45:27.960 –> 01:45:31.740
Tim Trabon: It was fascinating I had no idea I mean I knew sopranos change TV.
1120
01:45:32.070 –> 01:45:34.470
Tim Trabon: But I didn’t realize the HBO just was not what it.
1121
01:45:34.710 –> 01:45:37.650
Tim Trabon: Is until that until that.
1122
01:45:38.130 –> 01:45:48.630
Raymond Bonilla: Right yeah their their claim to fame at the time was their first directed their first produced movie which was about the Jay leno.
1123
01:45:51.480 –> 01:45:54.570
Raymond Bonilla: letterman letterman thing before the Johnny Carson.
1124
01:45:56.760 –> 01:45:59.790
Raymond Bonilla: Show like who was taking over and stuff you know.
1125
01:45:59.940 –> 01:46:01.140
Tim Trabon: You have I don’t know if this is.
1126
01:46:01.140 –> 01:46:04.410
Tim Trabon: Public but right right right you you’ve got like some personal ties right.
1127
01:46:05.190 –> 01:46:07.410
Raymond Bonilla: To HP with food do.
1128
01:46:07.590 –> 01:46:08.760
Tim Trabon: You have a history of some sort.
1129
01:46:09.810 –> 01:46:15.480
Raymond Bonilla: Now yeah, but I have a family member that that works at HBO so they would always.
1130
01:46:16.710 –> 01:46:30.030
Raymond Bonilla: tell me what was coming out the movies wise and stuff, and so what, but when HBO went to their own programming was a big deal because it was like, no, no, you guys do sports in boxing just stick with that you know yeah.
1131
01:46:30.420 –> 01:46:43.500
Tim Trabon: Well, if anybody wants like kind of I thought it was a heartwarming story because David chase is this individual who, if you think about it, you would think he’s this like person that.
1132
01:46:44.640 –> 01:46:59.070
Tim Trabon: got everything you ever wanted, but I didn’t realize, like all the only thing he wanted to do like his entire career was make a movie that was like he wanted to do that so badly and he got stuck in television.
1133
01:47:00.480 –> 01:47:04.950
Tim Trabon: And then he’s kind of single handedly responsible for like making.
1134
01:47:06.120 –> 01:47:07.350
Tim Trabon: TV movies.
1135
01:47:07.950 –> 01:47:10.680
Tim Trabon: yeah like the mini series or movies.
1136
01:47:10.710 –> 01:47:12.990
Cassandra Loomis Kim: yeah that’s the place to be.
1137
01:47:13.350 –> 01:47:26.970
Tim Trabon: it’s the place to be he, like completely flipped the script on the whole, you know it’s very like I thought it was very sweet because he doesn’t even seem to be aware of that that he, like manifested what he wanted.
1138
01:47:28.200 –> 01:47:31.980
Tim Trabon: I don’t know it was it’s really very special story.
1139
01:47:33.150 –> 01:47:35.490
Cassandra Loomis Kim: So is it like a documentary about him or.
1140
01:47:35.850 –> 01:47:39.240
Tim Trabon: his interview it’s just an interview with him and he’s just talking about how.
1141
01:47:39.240 –> 01:47:42.360
Tim Trabon: badly he wanted to do movies and.
1142
01:47:42.900 –> 01:47:43.290
Raymond Bonilla: well.
1143
01:47:43.680 –> 01:47:48.930
Tim Trabon: And I think he was just he’s just doing press in supportive like the new sopranos film.
1144
01:47:49.380 –> 01:47:49.950
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Oh cool.
1145
01:47:50.700 –> 01:47:52.770
Raymond Bonilla: And this is sopranos film coming on.
1146
01:47:53.040 –> 01:48:01.380
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Oh yeah better it’s supposed to be about like the main character as a young boy and it’s his actual son playing him as a young guy.
1147
01:48:01.890 –> 01:48:02.520
Oh.
1148
01:48:03.990 –> 01:48:05.370
Raymond Bonilla: wow that’s kind of Meta wow.
1149
01:48:05.790 –> 01:48:06.480
Cassandra Loomis Kim: yeah yeah.
1150
01:48:07.710 –> 01:48:08.100
Raymond Bonilla: yeah.
1151
01:48:09.210 –> 01:48:10.650
Tim Trabon: The mini saints of Newark.
1152
01:48:10.740 –> 01:48:13.380
John English: I thought you said meadow because I know that was his daughter.
1153
01:48:18.510 –> 01:48:23.040
Tim Trabon: I like I really like I really love late bloomer stories, you know.
1154
01:48:23.370 –> 01:48:24.000
Cassandra Loomis Kim: mm hmm.
1155
01:48:24.390 –> 01:48:29.280
Tim Trabon: That definitely felt like when I mean, even though he was like making you know big TV.
1156
01:48:30.300 –> 01:48:36.570
Raymond Bonilla: productions and stuff well yeah I mean like it was that, like George George rr martin’s another person that sounds like.
1157
01:48:37.680 –> 01:48:40.680
Raymond Bonilla: same thing right he had just wanted to get into movies and.
1158
01:48:41.790 –> 01:48:53.100
Raymond Bonilla: He wanted to get into what was this whole deal like he wanted to get into TV writing and nobody would read his stuff and so, then he decided, I was like obviously gonna write books, then I guess i’ll go into publishing and then he wrote gave us.
1159
01:48:53.820 –> 01:48:54.540
Cassandra Loomis Kim: yeah.
1160
01:48:55.140 –> 01:48:59.580
Raymond Bonilla: You know they asked me would be instead of writing this you know, like what.
1161
01:49:01.410 –> 01:49:04.050
Raymond Bonilla: yeah you know yeah.
1162
01:49:04.530 –> 01:49:12.060
Cassandra Loomis Kim: What do you got the new Lord of the Rings series, where each episode is like 100 million dollars or something ridiculous like that.
1163
01:49:12.090 –> 01:49:25.500
Raymond Bonilla: I heard, I heard about that that’s like that’s crazy so that’s that is either going to be incredible or the the biggest cautionary tale that we like double probably either be like incredible.
1164
01:49:25.560 –> 01:49:27.750
Raymond Bonilla: Or the end of streaming, as we know.
1165
01:49:27.810 –> 01:49:33.600
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Nothing basically what i’m seeing it like you know phases can’t go to space again because this fans.
1166
01:49:35.760 –> 01:49:38.340
Tim Trabon: I was just gonna say I was just gonna say if.
1167
01:49:39.510 –> 01:49:49.200
Tim Trabon: The entertainment is so important to us that we’re like oh about a billion dollars that could go into science and research, no i’d rather see.
1168
01:49:50.400 –> 01:49:51.990
Tim Trabon: Other revisits is the look of the.
1169
01:49:52.770 –> 01:49:55.740
Raymond Bonilla: 30% million, though.
1170
01:49:56.280 –> 01:49:56.640
Tim Trabon: yeah.
1171
01:49:57.150 –> 01:49:59.190
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Well, they like someone actually calculated.
1172
01:49:59.220 –> 01:50:06.480
Cassandra Loomis Kim: How like how expensive each minutes was, and it was like like over a million dollars per minute.
1173
01:50:07.230 –> 01:50:11.790
Raymond Bonilla: yeah yeah and and what a shocker they’re behind schedule.
1174
01:50:13.260 –> 01:50:13.620
Raymond Bonilla: So.
1175
01:50:14.550 –> 01:50:15.600
Raymond Bonilla: They don’t.
1176
01:50:15.960 –> 01:50:16.980
Have the budget to do.
1177
01:50:20.220 –> 01:50:29.970
Raymond Bonilla: You know what I get the feeling of I don’t know if anybody else gets this this is when like when when they it’s like them going to Lord of the Rings coming to Amazon prime.
1178
01:50:30.600 –> 01:50:43.080
Raymond Bonilla: feels like spider man going on broadway like right right it’s like we have the best people working on it we’re throwing the most money at it, this cannot fail.
1179
01:50:43.800 –> 01:50:52.830
Tim Trabon: yeah hey whenever I think of the spider man on broadway do you really think that seeing it live wouldn’t have been maybe one of the most entertaining Brian.
1180
01:50:54.840 –> 01:50:57.270
Raymond Bonilla: yeah it totally yeah, but the fact.
1181
01:50:57.840 –> 01:51:07.890
Raymond Bonilla: Is that like it so that’s what i’m worried like Lord of the Rings going to be so crazy to see but no one’s gonna watch it like they can they can recoup their costs and.
1182
01:51:08.640 –> 01:51:21.720
Raymond Bonilla: And like you know they’ll have like you know people getting hurt or like you know, like a spider man like the guy felt like the harness yeah snapped and he, like was hospitalized and a preview show like.
1183
01:51:22.170 –> 01:51:24.420
Raymond Bonilla: yeah and yeah I mean just.
1184
01:51:24.630 –> 01:51:29.370
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Just crazy several people were it wasn’t just like one guy like I think.
1185
01:51:29.730 –> 01:51:32.610
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Right show, I want to say it was something like.
1186
01:51:33.570 –> 01:51:35.760
Tim Trabon: They really have to dig in the Multi verse.
1187
01:51:38.250 –> 01:51:39.690
Raymond Bonilla: We got who else we got.
1188
01:51:40.470 –> 01:51:42.390
Tim Trabon: Here they were going through all the spider man and.
1189
01:51:45.480 –> 01:51:51.270
Cassandra Loomis Kim: It did it did sound cool I was like is this like the circus lay at broadway.
1190
01:51:51.510 –> 01:51:51.960
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Oh yeah.
1191
01:51:52.020 –> 01:51:57.690
Raymond Bonilla: yeah yeah totally and and you know the was it the edge from you.
1192
01:51:58.380 –> 01:51:59.250
Cassandra Loomis Kim: yeah.
1193
01:51:59.940 –> 01:52:01.980
Raymond Bonilla: it’s like your comic books right yeah.
1194
01:52:03.720 –> 01:52:08.040
Raymond Bonilla: yeah just tons of money, this was, I think before Disney right.
1195
01:52:08.400 –> 01:52:10.080
Cassandra Loomis Kim: yeah yeah yeah.
1196
01:52:10.770 –> 01:52:18.330
Raymond Bonilla: yeah that is pre Disney money, so I don’t know so I don’t know i’m hopeful I want I want this stuff to do well, because you know i’m in.
1197
01:52:19.440 –> 01:52:21.150
Raymond Bonilla: And I want nerd culture to.
1198
01:52:22.500 –> 01:52:25.650
Raymond Bonilla: to survive, you know I mean I remember the dark times.
1199
01:52:26.040 –> 01:52:29.400
Tim Trabon: it’ll be a whole new generation of kids who gets to see it, you know.
1200
01:52:29.790 –> 01:52:30.780
Raymond Bonilla: yeah that’s true.
1201
01:52:31.200 –> 01:52:32.940
Raymond Bonilla: yeah that’s true yeah.
1202
01:52:33.030 –> 01:52:46.200
Tim Trabon: I mean, but you know what right like I was just as we were talking earlier, I was like man, I wonder when Bryan cave on he’s going to do saga the miniseries because, like that, but then I was like I can’t even imagine.
1203
01:52:47.100 –> 01:52:48.240
Tim Trabon: I the.
1204
01:52:48.330 –> 01:52:50.070
Tim Trabon: HBO the budget.
1205
01:52:50.640 –> 01:52:51.330
Tim Trabon: To do that.
1206
01:52:51.690 –> 01:52:55.950
Raymond Bonilla: would be insane yeah yeah I yeah I wonder.
1207
01:52:56.340 –> 01:52:58.110
Tim Trabon: Or it would I want really cheesy.
1208
01:52:59.490 –> 01:52:59.790
Raymond Bonilla: It.
1209
01:53:00.810 –> 01:53:04.050
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Well, you know man it’s just about to come out right.
1210
01:53:04.530 –> 01:53:11.520
Raymond Bonilla: yeah Sam man’s about that, and then a Jupiter ascending you know that they handle that pretty darn well, I thought.
1211
01:53:11.970 –> 01:53:12.930
Raymond Bonilla: You guys have led to.
1212
01:53:13.470 –> 01:53:13.920
Tim Trabon: them yeah.
1213
01:53:15.720 –> 01:53:16.410
Raymond Bonilla: with him.
1214
01:53:16.740 –> 01:53:17.790
Tim Trabon: with him.
1215
01:53:18.780 –> 01:53:19.920
Raymond Bonilla: With with David.
1216
01:53:20.010 –> 01:53:21.570
Raymond Bonilla: No, he was in Jupiter ascending.
1217
01:53:21.720 –> 01:53:23.670
Raymond Bonilla: yeah Boise.
1218
01:53:23.910 –> 01:53:25.320
Tim Trabon: I didn’t know that went well.
1219
01:53:25.950 –> 01:53:28.260
John English: hey timmy can I interrupt and say.
1220
01:53:29.070 –> 01:53:30.720
John English: we’re about done with this post.
1221
01:53:30.750 –> 01:53:33.600
Tim Trabon: yeah we’re probably yeah we’re getting too excited.
1222
01:53:35.850 –> 01:53:36.330
Tim Trabon: yeah.
1223
01:53:38.040 –> 01:53:50.670
Tim Trabon: yeah, I just wanted so everybody we’re going to wrap this up john’s gonna draw for a couple john’s going to open up instagram soon, but please post your work be sure to post it using hashtag station Eiffel.
1224
01:53:52.050 –> 01:53:55.650
Tim Trabon: and add visual arts passage do it now don’t wait.
1225
01:53:56.040 –> 01:53:57.150
John English: I want to see raymond’s.
1226
01:53:58.350 –> 01:53:59.460
John English: piece, has been working on.
1227
01:54:04.560 –> 01:54:05.970
Raymond Bonilla: I deleted it sound sorry.
1228
01:54:07.050 –> 01:54:07.560
Oh come on.
1229
01:54:09.750 –> 01:54:11.430
John English: Give me you want to bounce around the room, and then we.
1230
01:54:11.430 –> 01:54:12.330
Tim Trabon: can do that.
1231
01:54:13.710 –> 01:54:14.040
Tim Trabon: Stop.
1232
01:54:14.310 –> 01:54:15.720
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Alex really good john.
1233
01:54:16.470 –> 01:54:17.010
Tim Trabon: Alex great.
1234
01:54:27.480 –> 01:54:28.140
Raymond Bonilla: that’s awesome.
1235
01:54:28.500 –> 01:54:29.520
Cassandra Loomis Kim: yeah i’m still.
1236
01:54:31.170 –> 01:54:33.390
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Not quite her yeah.
1237
01:54:37.170 –> 01:54:37.890
Tim Trabon: awesome right.
1238
01:54:39.510 –> 01:54:39.810
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Nice.
1239
01:54:42.240 –> 01:54:42.630
Raymond Bonilla: Thank you.
1240
01:54:44.280 –> 01:54:46.200
Raymond Bonilla: that’s a scary poses are tough.
1241
01:54:46.680 –> 01:54:47.760
Cassandra Loomis Kim: they’re really hard.
1242
01:54:48.930 –> 01:54:51.210
John English: I kind of avoided that one for that reason.
1243
01:54:52.470 –> 01:54:54.480
Tim Trabon: Why do you think, why do you think is because.
1244
01:54:56.370 –> 01:54:56.550
well.
1245
01:54:58.410 –> 01:55:04.050
Raymond Bonilla: You could I mean you have to get the angles, of the mouth right because it’s just the way that stretching happens and.
1246
01:55:04.530 –> 01:55:05.520
Raymond Bonilla: You can make it look.
1247
01:55:05.790 –> 01:55:11.520
Raymond Bonilla: Like someone has a fat lip because you have a lot of overlapping between the inside, and the outside of the mouth yeah.
1248
01:55:11.730 –> 01:55:15.570
Cassandra Loomis Kim: teeth are hard to to make them like the job with the lips over.
1249
01:55:16.110 –> 01:55:16.530
yeah.
1250
01:55:17.760 –> 01:55:21.270
Tim Trabon: I just saw pete in like bad tattoos.
1251
01:55:31.980 –> 01:55:32.970
Raymond Bonilla: gotta paint on cardboard.
1252
01:55:33.780 –> 01:55:35.400
Cassandra Loomis Kim: they’re gonna join me cardboard.
1253
01:55:36.210 –> 01:55:38.340
Raymond Bonilla: I gotta do that I gotta bust out the.
1254
01:55:40.290 –> 01:55:42.240
Raymond Bonilla: The paints next time.
1255
01:55:46.410 –> 01:55:48.540
Raymond Bonilla: So we’re looking at some instagram stuff.
1256
01:55:48.780 –> 01:55:49.590
John English: we’re about to.
1257
01:55:50.100 –> 01:55:50.730
Raymond Bonilla: Okay cool.
1258
01:55:50.850 –> 01:55:53.610
John English: giving them like another few seconds here.
1259
01:55:53.850 –> 01:55:54.390
Okay.
1260
01:56:03.360 –> 01:56:04.080
Raymond Bonilla: I love those.
1261
01:56:06.060 –> 01:56:10.350
Raymond Bonilla: That landscape that you’ve posted That was a DEMO you said.
1262
01:56:10.950 –> 01:56:12.510
John English: So my foundations class.
1263
01:56:12.900 –> 01:56:13.920
Raymond Bonilla: yeah it’s beautiful.
1264
01:56:14.340 –> 01:56:14.820
Thanks.
1265
01:56:15.960 –> 01:56:17.370
John English: I was trying to I was trying to.
1266
01:56:19.500 –> 01:56:20.340
John English: summon you.
1267
01:56:20.820 –> 01:56:21.390
trying to get.
1268
01:56:23.550 –> 01:56:29.730
Raymond Bonilla: You drop your Palate and stuff like I think I dropped like that drop almost dropped my palate during my studio bridge thing.
1269
01:56:30.150 –> 01:56:31.290
Cassandra Loomis Kim: It looks like a slight bump.
1270
01:56:31.920 –> 01:56:32.340
yeah.
1271
01:56:34.860 –> 01:56:35.190
Raymond Bonilla: wow.
1272
01:56:36.930 –> 01:56:38.790
John English: We got some really good stuff to look at here.
1273
01:56:39.210 –> 01:56:41.550
John English: I believe and refreshing one last time.
1274
01:56:41.940 –> 01:56:48.690
Tim Trabon: yeah we’re only we’re also only seven we’re only seven posts away from 10,000 drawings.
1275
01:56:48.930 –> 01:56:52.230
Tim Trabon: wow which is amazing so.
1276
01:56:56.640 –> 01:56:57.480
John English: hold on a second.
1277
01:56:58.740 –> 01:56:59.340
John English: Come on.
1278
01:57:10.950 –> 01:57:11.370
John English: Here we go.
1279
01:57:15.810 –> 01:57:17.250
John English: You never know what you’re gonna get to me.
1280
01:57:18.270 –> 01:57:19.260
Tim Trabon: yeah I was gonna say.
1281
01:57:20.580 –> 01:57:23.280
Tim Trabon: i’m gonna tell you anything, the last one, because there’s some junk.
1282
01:57:25.380 –> 01:57:27.030
John English: there’s like some photos of people.
1283
01:57:27.300 –> 01:57:31.470
Tim Trabon: I know people are sneaking in on our.
1284
01:57:33.570 –> 01:57:35.640
Tim Trabon: desk yeah.
1285
01:57:36.720 –> 01:57:37.620
Raymond Bonilla: wow that’s great.
1286
01:57:37.830 –> 01:57:39.330
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Oh that’s amazing.
1287
01:57:39.750 –> 01:57:40.710
John English: that’s awesome.
1288
01:57:40.830 –> 01:57:42.720
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Beautiful like the color.
1289
01:57:44.790 –> 01:57:46.110
John English: Beautiful.
1290
01:57:47.100 –> 01:57:49.200
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Creative expression yeah.
1291
01:57:51.000 –> 01:57:51.840
John English: Oh, look at this.
1292
01:57:53.400 –> 01:57:54.300
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Oh, really.
1293
01:57:55.410 –> 01:57:56.850
John English: yeah very cool.
1294
01:57:58.770 –> 01:58:01.800
John English: Okay, I saw this was the first piece, I saw when I opened up.
1295
01:58:01.980 –> 01:58:03.600
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Oh yeah.
1296
01:58:05.100 –> 01:58:06.150
John English: Beautiful piece.
1297
01:58:06.540 –> 01:58:09.120
Cassandra Loomis Kim: yeah really, really good job.
1298
01:58:11.460 –> 01:58:12.120
John English: Nice.
1299
01:58:13.590 –> 01:58:14.190
Cassandra Loomis Kim: good night.
1300
01:58:15.240 –> 01:58:15.720
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Great.
1301
01:58:17.220 –> 01:58:17.970
John English: Devon.
1302
01:58:18.960 –> 01:58:19.770
Devon.
1303
01:58:27.660 –> 01:58:28.080
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Oh.
1304
01:58:32.160 –> 01:58:34.200
John English: Like a little color palette at the top.
1305
01:58:35.040 –> 01:58:35.520
Raymond Bonilla: I love it.
1306
01:58:37.890 –> 01:58:39.330
John English: it’s good stuff in here.
1307
01:58:40.800 –> 01:58:42.330
Raymond Bonilla: If people got that attitude of the.
1308
01:58:42.330 –> 01:58:43.560
John English: pose yeah.
1309
01:58:44.070 –> 01:58:44.670
Raymond Bonilla: yeah.
1310
01:58:45.150 –> 01:58:48.930
Cassandra Loomis Kim: yeah that’s a good everyone’s getting that posture yeah.
1311
01:58:49.590 –> 01:58:51.510
Raymond Bonilla: Wonderful contra positive right there that’s.
1312
01:58:51.510 –> 01:58:51.870
Good.
1313
01:58:53.040 –> 01:58:53.760
John English: Nice.
1314
01:58:55.140 –> 01:58:55.740
John English: Very good.
1315
01:58:57.210 –> 01:58:58.560
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Oh good and Nice Randy.
1316
01:58:58.740 –> 01:59:01.350
Cassandra Loomis Kim: ready oh I love all the texture around it.
1317
01:59:03.810 –> 01:59:04.740
John English: there’s a good screen.
1318
01:59:05.190 –> 01:59:05.910
Raymond Bonilla: yeah.
1319
01:59:06.090 –> 01:59:06.570
Oh yeah.
1320
01:59:11.700 –> 01:59:12.840
John English: studio bridge this morning.
1321
01:59:15.330 –> 01:59:16.140
John English: they’re warmed up.
1322
01:59:17.520 –> 01:59:19.140
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Oh really nice.
1323
01:59:19.710 –> 01:59:21.360
John English: Good stuff yeah.
1324
01:59:23.010 –> 01:59:24.420
John English: So many good things.
1325
01:59:25.980 –> 01:59:25.980
Cassandra Loomis Kim: masha.
1326
01:59:26.610 –> 01:59:28.200
Cassandra Loomis Kim: montage yeah.
1327
01:59:28.530 –> 01:59:30.150
John English: Great took this.
1328
01:59:30.780 –> 01:59:32.280
Tim Trabon: that’s like a movie poster right there.
1329
01:59:32.340 –> 01:59:34.410
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Oh really nice.
1330
01:59:34.470 –> 01:59:35.040
wow.
1331
01:59:36.480 –> 01:59:38.730
John English: hey did you get the reference earlier something.
1332
01:59:41.190 –> 01:59:41.970
John English: that’s beautiful.
1333
01:59:45.750 –> 01:59:48.780
Raymond Bonilla: that’s great that’s great yeah.
1334
01:59:51.660 –> 01:59:52.080
John English: Great.
1335
01:59:53.580 –> 01:59:55.230
Raymond Bonilla: Nice thanks.
1336
01:59:56.550 –> 01:59:57.690
John English: I know who, that is.
1337
01:59:59.040 –> 01:59:59.940
Raymond Bonilla: I could tell from the.
1338
02:00:02.310 –> 02:00:04.320
John English: i’m confused it a couple times.
1339
02:00:04.350 –> 02:00:11.250
John English: Sometimes I confuse not that their work with set much alike it’s just down small but julian’s.
1340
02:00:11.340 –> 02:00:15.900
Raymond Bonilla: wow yeah totally surprised, they haven’t been Gary yet that’s.
1341
02:00:18.150 –> 02:00:19.560
Raymond Bonilla: How religion of it.
1342
02:00:19.980 –> 02:00:20.280
Raymond Bonilla: love it.
1343
02:00:23.340 –> 02:00:24.180
Raymond Bonilla: that’s another game.
1344
02:00:24.930 –> 02:00:25.620
John English: Nice very.
1345
02:00:32.430 –> 02:00:32.700
John English: Nice.
1346
02:00:34.680 –> 02:00:35.670
John English: that’s really good.
1347
02:00:42.660 –> 02:00:43.560
that’s AJ.
1348
02:00:48.360 –> 02:00:49.980
John English: Look at that it’s been.
1349
02:00:50.730 –> 02:00:51.270
awesome.
1350
02:00:55.050 –> 02:00:56.520
Tim Trabon: I feel like there’s like a note.
1351
02:00:56.760 –> 02:00:58.740
Cassandra Loomis Kim: about that.
1352
02:00:59.730 –> 02:01:01.260
John English: it’s pretty loose for Doug bell.
1353
02:01:01.830 –> 02:01:04.200
Tim Trabon: I like it hey I wouldn’t have seen that one.
1354
02:01:05.910 –> 02:01:06.420
Raymond Bonilla: yeah.
1355
02:01:08.490 –> 02:01:08.880
John English: I got.
1356
02:01:14.070 –> 02:01:16.560
Raymond Bonilla: You know I just don’t okay.
1357
02:01:18.090 –> 02:01:19.860
Raymond Bonilla: He just sent one out, please.
1358
02:01:21.450 –> 02:01:23.250
John English: football game on or something day.
1359
02:01:23.250 –> 02:01:23.880
Raymond Bonilla: yeah yeah.
1360
02:01:26.220 –> 02:01:27.750
John English: entertaining yourself somewhere.
1361
02:01:27.810 –> 02:01:28.260
yeah.
1362
02:01:33.150 –> 02:01:34.920
John English: That was that that was a record.
1363
02:01:37.080 –> 02:01:37.740
John English: For.
1364
02:01:39.060 –> 02:01:42.810
John English: know you know the rule that you can only put your.
1365
02:01:43.980 –> 02:01:50.160
John English: Of course i’ll be at when this happens, you can when you go to double digits you gotta you gotta quit putting your age.
1366
02:01:52.230 –> 02:01:54.570
John English: I refuse refuse to put 60 on my.
1367
02:01:56.010 –> 02:01:56.280
Cassandra Loomis Kim: head.
1368
02:02:00.450 –> 02:02:01.080
John English: is so.
1369
02:02:02.700 –> 02:02:03.870
Raymond Bonilla: Nice oh yeah.
1370
02:02:04.380 –> 02:02:05.100
John English: Look at that.
1371
02:02:06.510 –> 02:02:08.310
Tim Trabon: Look john no age.
1372
02:02:09.270 –> 02:02:11.520
John English: I know I told her, she can do, she turned 10.
1373
02:02:13.350 –> 02:02:13.890
John English: listening.
1374
02:02:17.190 –> 02:02:18.600
John English: These things are beautiful.
1375
02:02:18.780 –> 02:02:22.470
Raymond Bonilla: yeah let’s say stuff got it and then some wow.
1376
02:02:23.520 –> 02:02:24.510
John English: wow look at some of these.
1377
02:02:24.840 –> 02:02:25.590
Tim Trabon: that’s so great.
1378
02:02:25.650 –> 02:02:27.390
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Oh that’s really cool.
1379
02:02:30.060 –> 02:02:30.960
Tim Trabon: that’s so cool.
1380
02:02:33.090 –> 02:02:34.620
Tim Trabon: First time joining awesome.
1381
02:02:35.310 –> 02:02:35.580
well.
1382
02:02:37.170 –> 02:02:38.190
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Thanks for joining.
1383
02:02:38.820 –> 02:02:40.200
Tim Trabon: yeah keep keep joining.
1384
02:02:42.900 –> 02:02:43.470
John English: Laughter
1385
02:02:43.980 –> 02:02:45.390
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Oh, I, like my next tip.
1386
02:02:45.990 –> 02:02:46.530
John English: yeah that’s.
1387
02:02:48.840 –> 02:02:49.800
Tim Trabon: cool that’s cool.
1388
02:02:51.180 –> 02:02:55.020
John English: It looks like they have they’re approaching like prep with the putty knife.
1389
02:02:56.520 –> 02:02:56.880
Raymond Bonilla: yeah.
1390
02:02:57.120 –> 02:02:57.840
Absolutely.
1391
02:02:59.340 –> 02:03:01.290
Cassandra Loomis Kim: that’s really nice.
1392
02:03:04.200 –> 02:03:05.220
John English: Some good ones.
1393
02:03:06.780 –> 02:03:07.650
John English: Rebecca again.
1394
02:03:07.890 –> 02:03:08.370
yep.
1395
02:03:09.630 –> 02:03:10.110
Cassandra Loomis Kim: night.
1396
02:03:10.200 –> 02:03:13.140
John English: She got here we go again look at that.
1397
02:03:14.760 –> 02:03:15.780
John English: that’s really interesting.
1398
02:03:17.430 –> 02:03:22.530
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Oh, that reminds me this interlaced remember this scary storybooks illustrations.
1399
02:03:23.640 –> 02:03:24.060
Tim Trabon: yeah.
1400
02:03:24.210 –> 02:03:26.430
Tim Trabon: I know exactly haunting stories.
1401
02:03:26.580 –> 02:03:29.610
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Yes, and the illustrations are amazing that made me think of that.
1402
02:03:29.970 –> 02:03:33.810
Tim Trabon: And then those those stories I have gave me nightmares just.
1403
02:03:33.810 –> 02:03:34.380
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Oh yeah.
1404
02:03:35.550 –> 02:03:36.810
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Totally a little arrow on that.
1405
02:03:37.950 –> 02:03:38.520
Cassandra Loomis Kim: There we go.
1406
02:03:48.870 –> 02:03:49.440
John English: Nice.
1407
02:03:55.170 –> 02:03:55.860
John English: Very cool.
1408
02:03:56.130 –> 02:03:56.850
yeah.
1409
02:03:58.560 –> 02:04:00.150
John English: All three of these are terrific.
1410
02:04:00.420 –> 02:04:03.420
Oh that’s fantastic that’s my.
1411
02:04:04.740 –> 02:04:05.670
John English: Who, that is.
1412
02:04:05.820 –> 02:04:06.690
Raymond Bonilla: Peter eye out.
1413
02:04:09.120 –> 02:04:09.480
Cassandra Loomis Kim: For it.
1414
02:04:12.660 –> 02:04:13.290
John English: that’s good.
1415
02:04:17.790 –> 02:04:18.660
Oh cool.
1416
02:04:21.570 –> 02:04:23.670
John English: Nice very good, well done.
1417
02:04:24.000 –> 02:04:24.540
Cassandra Loomis Kim: mm hmm.
1418
02:04:26.340 –> 02:04:28.500
John English: Sorry, I could just click on all of them.
1419
02:04:30.180 –> 02:04:31.200
John English: are supposed to be.
1420
02:04:33.990 –> 02:04:35.580
John English: Spreading it out, I just can’t do it.
1421
02:04:38.130 –> 02:04:39.750
Raymond Bonilla: it’s good problem to have john yeah.
1422
02:04:41.250 –> 02:04:41.640
John English: yeah.
1423
02:04:42.810 –> 02:04:44.640
John English: I got plenty of problems, this is.
1424
02:04:46.230 –> 02:04:47.550
Raymond Bonilla: that’s great I love that one’s.
1425
02:04:47.550 –> 02:04:48.780
fun cool.
1426
02:04:52.350 –> 02:04:55.620
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Like everybody did such a good job, we need to look at them all.
1427
02:04:56.670 –> 02:04:58.200
John English: I know check this out.
1428
02:04:58.920 –> 02:05:00.120
John English: Oh very nice.
1429
02:05:02.310 –> 02:05:03.630
John English: very, very, very nice.
1430
02:05:04.950 –> 02:05:05.790
John English: that’s interesting.
1431
02:05:08.730 –> 02:05:09.570
John English: got the pain out.
1432
02:05:09.630 –> 02:05:11.970
Raymond Bonilla: On black that’s that’s awesome.
1433
02:05:12.360 –> 02:05:14.220
John English: yeah oh wow.
1434
02:05:14.280 –> 02:05:15.420
Tim Trabon: This is where I just.
1435
02:05:16.710 –> 02:05:25.650
Tim Trabon: I just want to remind you, interesting as we’re wrapping things up, I just want to remind everybody enrollment closes October 2 if you had fun drawing with us tonight.
1436
02:05:26.160 –> 02:05:39.330
Tim Trabon: I guarantee you’re going to like our mentorship classes, I just dropped a link I go check it out highly recommend checking out john is offering free portfolio reviews right now.
1437
02:05:39.960 –> 02:05:41.400
Cassandra Loomis Kim: that’s cool mercy.
1438
02:05:42.600 –> 02:05:43.800
John English: Take is really well done.
1439
02:05:46.860 –> 02:05:49.980
Cassandra Loomis Kim: yeah john does a great portfolio review, I took him up on that offer.
1440
02:05:53.040 –> 02:05:54.150
John English: didn’t have which to said.
1441
02:05:56.190 –> 02:05:58.950
Cassandra Loomis Kim: I wanted your opinion oh that looks really good Randy.
1442
02:06:00.510 –> 02:06:08.790
Tim Trabon: The classes are 999 but we actually just have we have shopify payments available, so you can break that up.
1443
02:06:10.320 –> 02:06:12.690
Tim Trabon: into a bi monthly payment so.
1444
02:06:13.200 –> 02:06:28.560
John English: And it’s not those classes have a huge amount of interaction it’s not a three hour class it’s three hours on homeroom three hours in the study all you got to open drawing here, and then you got the slack channel all week long with your mentor.
1445
02:06:29.280 –> 02:06:40.410
Tim Trabon: it’s an immersive interaction it’s fully immersive experience and you’re going to have a mentor that you have a relationship with as you develop your portfolio.
1446
02:06:41.580 –> 02:06:41.910
John English: Nice.
1447
02:06:47.430 –> 02:06:47.910
John English: wow.
1448
02:06:50.700 –> 02:06:51.330
Cassandra Loomis Kim: that’s cool.
1449
02:06:52.770 –> 02:06:55.290
John English: I keep I can’t keep keep clicking.
1450
02:06:56.580 –> 02:06:56.760
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Oh.
1451
02:06:57.450 –> 02:06:59.760
Raymond Bonilla: I mean I don’t blame me john is there, like.
1452
02:07:00.690 –> 02:07:01.710
John English: Last to.
1453
02:07:07.020 –> 02:07:07.950
John English: Look at that really.
1454
02:07:08.190 –> 02:07:09.510
Cassandra Loomis Kim: awesome yeah.
1455
02:07:09.630 –> 02:07:12.840
John English: What a great night oh Nice.
1456
02:07:13.560 –> 02:07:15.600
John English: wow everybody, this was great.
1457
02:07:17.280 –> 02:07:18.720
Raymond Bonilla: What we say baker everyone.
1458
02:07:19.110 –> 02:07:24.150
John English: timmy we blame the side you in study Hall, we use the line is always be re-enrolling.
1459
02:07:25.440 –> 02:07:25.890
Tim Trabon: Always.
1460
02:07:26.430 –> 02:07:27.720
John English: always been really.
1461
02:07:28.560 –> 02:07:29.370
Tim Trabon: A br.
1462
02:07:33.090 –> 02:07:33.720
John English: Alright, everybody.
1463
02:07:34.050 –> 02:07:36.180
John English: Thanks so much for coming in it’s great to see a.
1464
02:07:36.870 –> 02:07:38.370
Raymond Bonilla: Great great great great tip I.
1465
02:07:38.370 –> 02:07:38.880
John English: really do.
1466
02:07:39.240 –> 02:07:40.770
Raymond Bonilla: Thank you missy guys to.
1467
02:07:40.830 –> 02:07:41.700
Raymond Bonilla: Thank you everyone.
1468
02:07:42.000 –> 02:07:52.290
John English: Cassandra Thank you so much for being here to me and then Terry I know you’ve already left, but thanks for being here very fun night hope to see you all next week.
1469
02:07:53.820 –> 02:07:54.450
Cassandra Loomis Kim: Take care.
1470
02:07:54.570 –> 02:07:55.440
Raymond Bonilla: Take care everyone.