Saturday, January 8, 2011

Insane Caffeine Fueled View of Gravitational Ley Lines at EJ's Luncheonette NYC: Clockwork Atomics x199

Proof positive that these drawings are not planned. Its one of the things I love about them. They capture a specific time, day and mood. Better than a snap shot or a journal entry. Here I was spending several hours killing time between appointments at a dinner on the Upper East Side. Apparently I was drinking far too much coffee for far too long.

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Geometric Comparison of Shock Waves from a Nuclear Sky Burst Detonation vs. Ground Detonation: Clockwork Atomics x167

What can I say? This is what I think about during a morning espresso in the city. I blame the morning commute with the idiots on their cellphones. Seriously, who needs to talk that loud?

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Kafka-Tesla Suicide Machine: Prototype and Production Type: Clockwork Atomics x428 & x429


This is one of the rare cases where I did a smaller drawing and then immediately produced a larger version of that idea (mainly I was playing with conical gearing). But x428 is fun in its brevity and I was careless and left coffee stains on it (the ink is very water soluble). The next one was done during lunch breaks over a couple of days while we were sorting through an art collectors home (which was inspiring as always). As for their names, I am often bothered or interrupted while drawing. (Apparently headphones on and intently drawing in a corner is an invitation for interruption). When I was stopped by someone's curiosity this time by them wanting to know what I was drawing, I told them the first thing that popped into my head that I thought would make them go away. It was a drawing of a Kafka-Tesla Suicide Machine. They quickly left and the name stuck.

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Structural Matrix of a Nuclear Bullet: Clockwork Atomics x071

An early drawing, back when they took very little time. This was before the drawings became machines. All the drawings were based on something a read or heard about. Many were inspired by pulp novels from the early 20th century and the design of alchemy etchings.

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Mechanical Reliquary for a Forgotten Catholic Saint: Clockwork Atomics x442

There are a couple of great examples of reliquaries at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC. And after seeing them I thought a mechanical one was sorely needed or may have been made and lost to time. This is my second attempt in the series. It holds promise, but needs more work.

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Planet with Satellite Group Collapsing into a Black Hole's Event Horizon and Being Reduced to a Singularity: Clockwork Atomics x270

A ridiculously long title but that's what it is a drawing of. A few years ago there was a brief period where I was fascinated by black holes. As a child I saw Disney's The Black Hole (great in a weird way..although wildly inaccurate) and always thought it was mind blowing how they even exist. So I ended up reading JP Luminet's book Black Holes and became obsessed with them all over again. This one was drawn after work at a bar on a Starbucks' napkin that I happened to have on me (which has one of the ugliest shades of green logo on it).

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Leonardo Da Vinci's Geared Celestial Sundial: Clockwork Atomics x315

This is the first piece I sold at the show I was in at The Laundromat Gallery in NYC. I had no idea if anyone would get the whole elaborate drawing on napkin thing, but a few did. Anyway, Da Vinci has always been a huge influence. The pages of his various codex have fascinated me ever since my first exposure to them. I was lucky enough to see the Codex Leicester in NYC. I do not write backwards as he did, but I enjoy the look and writing out notations about the works.