Monday, August 06, 2007

big changes

well, my blog's probably all messed up now.
I reloaded artlovemagic with an entirely new design tonight. SO anything linked here (which is a lot) will be fubar.

Keep watch and I'll either replace the entire blog, or fix the damaged issues.

thanks for you patience, citizen!

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

New toons for Shep

Shep Hyken is a business writer and speaker who uses me to turn his articles and concepts into cartoons. Here's some new stuff done for him.

Saturday, July 14, 2007

Back from Awaken


Wow. The Awaken show is a memory and was another true success. We don't have an exact count, but I'm fairly sure we drew over 400 people in attendance. A very cool crowd, extremely supportive. People are inspired by what we're doing. A lot of people thanked us for what we're trying to do with the Dallas art scene, and for local artists.

The artists and performers kicked ass. This time I actually got to see a lot more of that. The previous show was a bit more hectic for us and I spent most of the night running around like crazy. This time our leadership team resolved to go "deeper not wider". We didn't try to expan d or pull off new tricks, we just focused on doing what we do even better. It worked too. Everything on this show from the promotion, to the pre-meeting, to the night itself went down pretty smooth. We're getting better at this.

Justin put up a great report of the show that you can read at artlovemagic.com The photos with it are excellent. Sherry Smith proved that there's extra value in inviting a good photographer. She took a lot of great photos and shared them with us for the site. I love it when we invite someone I haven't met yet (she's a friend of Justin's), and they contribute immensely.

Anyway, another event down. I think it was our best effort. We've gotten some good feedback and we're continuing to tweak as we go. As far as our efforts to help the local art scene, I couldn't be happier. We've now had something like 50+ artists, poets, photographers, crafters, and musicians create live at our events. Several artists have shown for the first time anywhere with artlovemagic, and several people have sold their first ever work at our shows. One poet I know of (me) spit for the first time at our events.

I'm really proud of what we're doing here.

Ha! Feels good.

-Mike

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

artlovemagic AWAKENS

Here we go with our third show!!!!

PRESS RELEASE
Awaken to a celebration of a diverse body of Dallas Arts. Join local Painters, Poets, Musicians, Photographers, Crafters and Comic Artists of the artlovemagic collective as they present their third live experience, AWAKEN, on Saturday June 30th from 7-11pm.
ArtLoveMagic shows go beyond the typical art opening and invite our audiences to experience the creation of the work live. Visual artists will create, showcase and sell work while the performance stage will rotate live music and poetry all evening long.

There is a $7 admission to the show that helps us support the local art scene and continue to put on events.

The show is also supported by a free gallery exhibit from the 26th through 30th which features selected paintings, illustrations, and photography from the event.

Location
The Jeanette Kennedy Gallery
at The South Side on Lamar
1409 South Lamar - Dallas

map and more info at www.artlovemagic.com

Thursday, May 31, 2007

4 recent illustrations

Here's some recent drawings. The original on each was hand-colored, which becomes a problem when scanning. Materials like colored pencil usually don't scan well, but I did my best and tweaked 'em a little in photoshop to try and keep how they look on paper.
Enjoy.



Saturday, May 19, 2007

Inspiring work in Pittsburgh

I just came back from Pennsylvania where I was asked to provide live artwork for a pretty unique business session. Two companies that design and build churches, Cogun and Aspen, came together for a day long discussion about where culture is moving and specifically what it means to their work. They brought in about 100 of their people, two authors who've written books on the subject, and me.

This was a pretty inspiring event. Right from the beginning they kicked off with a video montage (just something they threw together to add inspiration to the morning) that was perhaps the best multi media piece I've ever seen used in this context. U2 playing Vertigo and interviews with everyday folks and beautiful footage of church architecture. Then to set us firmly in the moment, a list with images from of the current #1 tv show in America, the #1 books, movies, and singles. It was a snapshot of right now.

For me, as I was sitting there watching it at 8am in the morning (keep in mind, I'm scheduled to do art live art all the way until 5pm) it was like, "okay. here we go. I thought this was a regular season game, but obviously we're in the playoffs. I better bring it today."


I think I did. Throughout the day, the content they gave me to work with was excellent. I really think the level of discussion was outstanding and the tone of the day was open minded and progressive- not in-spite of it being Christian, but specifically because it was.

For instance, author Joe Myers spoke of how he was asked to start a church in a very rough, crime-ridden area (somewhere outside Chicago, I believe). He agreed to do it, but only if it was clearly understood that he had no desire to just displace the local crime element to another part of the city. Therefore, those people (the dealers, the prostitutes, the criminals, etc.) had to be engaged as humans. You have to talk to them if you have any hope of doing anything better than just forcing them commit crimes somewhere else. Today, he literally has drug dealers who help with his services, open doors whatever, who go back to the streets to sell after church. Now is that blasphemy or Christianity? Did Jesus heal the well, or the sick?


It asks the question- who in your world are you acting as if God does not reside in? One interesting side note- an area of crime that they have seen dramatic change in there is the selling of drugs to minors. Joe encourages the dealers to respect kids, talk to them a bit, give a shit about them. While drugs are still sold in the neighborhood, an unspoken law has permeated the culture. You do not sell to minors here. Joe says the dealers know how to - and do - police their own on this issue. 'Nuff said.

That was just one instance of the kind of conversation that went down. The day was filled with great thought, as you can see if you read some of the scribing. Much of it centering around what the function of good buildings are and how do you build to a culture that's largely moving toward more and more digital methods and virtual environments.

I used illustration board to draw the art on, rather than dry erase - and this technique is really becoming more and more comfortable to me. 'Illo' board allows for all kinds of things that dry erase does not, like shading and gradations. Plus, instead of just using Expo markers, I get to use things like crayon and colored pencil, or even paint if I wanted (I didn't use paint though because I'm not terribly fast with it- see David Rodriguez)

Working with these tools and techniques is a bit slower than traditional scribing anyway, and therefore I'm usually minutes behind the speaker, rather than seconds. In some contexts (like this session) that was definitely worth it. In other enviroments, LIVE is the thing and it's better for me to move as fast as possible. But here, they were thrilled with how it was working early on and urged me to not change a thing in how I was doing it.


Good stuff. Sessions like these make me kick my game up to the next level. I'd enjoy working with these clients again. At one point the facilitator asked me to comment to the audience on what my thoughts were about how the discussion was going. My comment came down to the fact that they were dealing with big things, big ideas, and big questions - and the great thing was that they weren't answering with arrogance. New systems, young people, the digital culture- you just can't control it like the old. But control is not a necessary element of success, and I suggested as architects, they could still build to something that had less control. They just had to be open minded about how to do it, and build for users who make up their own rules.

This was good work. The kind that makes the world a bit better.

Being an artist is messy


Yeah, we're kind of like that.

My blog's gotten messy too. It takes a while to load because everything loads on the one page. I've now switched it so that only the last 25 posts load. But I hope folks will go to the archive and read through some old stuff if you haven't, as I believe there's good writing and art there.

Sunday, May 13, 2007

good read- the :FUSION: report


:FUSION: report
I've begun to ask artists and performers who work our shows to handle reporting on them for artlovemagic.com. The first example of this is the :FUSION: report just posted at the site. Blessings, one of our poets, wrote the text - and Erin Lenard, who works for the JK gallery was cool enough to supply the photography. It's a cool read, and if you haven't made it out to our shows yet, it will give you a glimpse of what they're like. Check it out at http://artlovemagic.com/index/fusion/fusion_fly.htm

Tuesday, May 08, 2007

Oh my God, I love Basketball


What else is there to say? The playoffs have started great, and round two looks like it's going to amp up. The Suns-Spurs series looks incredible, as does the Jazz-Warriors. Everyone is counting out the East, but Detroit is making a statement that you just can't ignore.
It's a good time to be a bball fan.


Admittedly, it may not be the best time to be Steve Nash.

Monday, May 07, 2007

3 shows in 7 days!

It's been a crazy couple weeks here. Artlovemagic put on our second live art experience, :FUSION:, on Saturday the 28th. 6 days later I created at Zues' Live Art Benefit and the next morning I was at the CAPE event promoting artlovemagic.

Whew. I'm loving the art, loving the getting to know people, and loving that artists are having success working with us. We've gotten a lot of compliments that amount to "thanks for giving me a reason to get my sh#% together". That's a good enough start for me.

The business stuff is less appealing to me, and ultimately I'm going to need to find someone else to cover it for us. We're trying to do big things, and big things do require some level of business discipline. I'll be more useful to the degree that I'm working on art and working directly with artists.






All the events were successful. Big attendance. For our event, I have one of our poets, Blessings, working on a report for artlovemagic.com. So I'll leave the storytelling there to her. For Cape and the Live Art Benefit, I'll just say that the good folks at Zeus know what they're doing with events. They always bring out a big crowd and always throw entertaining events. The pictures you see of me doing the drawing of the girl (Death from the Sandman comics) were done at the benefit. At CAPE, artlovemagic brought out 3 artists beside myself, Shelly Pinder, and David Rodriguez and Laura Terry (both pictured).

It was a real pleasure at these appearances to be promoting artlovemagic and have people say things like, "oh, I already know all about you, I've been to your events and read your website". That's encouraging. The word is getting out there.

Much more soon.

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Fusion Rock

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

FUSION


This is going to be amazing. If you were at our last show, you know what I'm talking about. This one's bigger, has more artists, more bands, and more poets. New additions like Laura Terry, Cal Slayton, and eleven year old spoken word poet Lil' G should make things interesting.

Come out and support us and the local Dallas art scene. Saturday, April 28th from 7pm-11pm at the beautiful Jeanette Kennedy gallery in the South Side on Lamar bldg (minutes from downtown).

PS- I'm looking for people to help me get the word out. If you want to help, drop me a line at mike@artlovemagic.com

jackie's photo

Saturday, April 07, 2007

Making Comics


My favorite thing to do. I had kind of a creative "burst" this week and wrote, penciled, and inked 8 pages in something like 4 1/2 days. That's a lot of work and it felt great. I think the story I'm working on will be somewhere around 12 pages when it's done.

Now my attention will have to be diverted a bit toward the April 28th show artlovemagic is putting on. I'll also be publishing something for that, a small book made up of the work of several artlovemagic contributers.

Monday, March 05, 2007

He's painting again!


Man, It was really great to have people be receptive to my paintings at the Reach show. You see, all it takes is a little encouragement. I hadn't painted in years. But selling one at the show and then having so many people come up and ask me about the paintings, has left me with the jones to pick up the brush again.

I painted a small one first, and am currently working on the one in the pic. After that, I have the next biggest size up canvas. I'll either be unsing that one or saying, "damn the fear!", and I'll paint billboard size - like Dave!

REVOLUTION~!~!~!

Friday, March 02, 2007

our first big success


report by Michael Lagocki
Art Love Magic's first live event, REACH, was more than I could imagine. It was inspiring, it was artful, it touched people. There is something absolutely magical that happens when positive people express themselves, together, in a wide range of art forms. Painting, music, poetry, jewelry crafting, comics and photography were all part of it. We brought it together and we brought it out of each other and it was alive with passion.

55 days into Art Love Magic's existence as a real company (and not just my website), our first live event, drew well over 300 people, and made a profit. Not a big profit mind you, but we're going to figure that one out. It was a great start. True beauty. Thanks be to God, we filmed it. I may try to make that available sometime. But here's some highlights:

A half dozen visual artists creating and selling original works.
Some really amazing art was on display and plenty was created at the show. When you see it all together, held up high like that, respected, it's beautiful. I believe the overall quality of the gallery (Jeanette Kennedy) really led us to put something special into the setups. Rebecca Brooks' art literally "reached" out into the space, as did several of David Rodriguez's 8ft tall paintings.

J. O'Barr showed a body of work that few of his fans get to see. Everyone sees The Crow stuff regularly, but James brought a large selection of personal paintings that he wouldn't normally take to the comic shows he does. I'm also well aware that he lent us his celebrity for the show. A lot of the people who attended came because they are deeply passionate about his work.


Pegasus and Word Became Flesh, two 8 foot tall
paintings by David Rodriguez were both shown.

The music of the soul
I'm a cartoonist. What do I know about live music and poetry? Thankfully, I involved Justin Nygren (of the Tribe and Blue Door shows) to put the pieces together. He assembled a live show that brought the house down. People were enthralled. His plan was to rotate the acts quickly and mix in poetry and live jamming. The rapid pace felt dynamic, agile, and alive. If you weren't feeling the stage, you could walk around, watch people make art for 10 minutes, and by the time you came back something completely different was happening. The bands Faint Image and Many Days Waiting have that kind of free flow feel anyway. People just came up and jammed with them all night.

The language of the soul
Legions of Will Richey fans showed up (many of 'em under 3ft tall). Will teaches for a living. He teaches children to do spoken word poetry. Now that I've seen it live, I understand how much he's empowering them. A child - creating art out of their words and thoughts - and then reading those words live, with soulful expression - to an enthusiastic audience. That is holy work if there ever was such. And there was, and it is.

Look below. I even did a poem, for the first time in my life. I was so nervous I had to pull my hat over my eyes so as not to look at the audience. I performed a poem I wrote titled "The Spoken Word".
'Lil G liked it, so there you go.


Epiphany
Halfway through the show, our jewelry artist, Sarah Gillmore came up to me and screamed, "Art Love Magic happened to me!!!" She was referring to the moment she found herself doing what she loves to do (making jewelry), surrounded by the people she loves (her boy James was there, as well as her momma and many good friends), listening to great live music, and selling her work to a receptive audience.
Yeah, that is Art Love Magic.

What's next?
Halfway through the show, the gallery told us they'd like us to return. We will be back at Jeanette Kennedy on April 28th, with a completely new show with completely new performers. I have 2-3 other shows popping as well and we'll do what we can to keep the info here current.

If you'd like to get on the mailing list and experience this for yourself, drop me a line at mike@artlovemagic.com

Things are jumping offfffff. Much much love to everyone who was there and saw it happen. I love you.


If you have any question of who we are,
well this is who we be...
We are known on this planet mother earth
and throughout the galaxy
You'll recognize us by our eyes
the L - I - G - H - T
And when you are in our presence
you feel L - O - V - E.

We be the people with the love inside of we.

from the song "Love"
performed live by AP and Faint Image
at REACH


jump to artlovemagic - see Michael's art and scribing

Sunday, February 18, 2007

Slam dunk contest- a plea for change

I can't take this anymore. Hi everyone, I'm Michael, and I'm a slam dunk addict. Every year, one of my favorite parts of the season is the slam dunk contest during all star weekend. Now two years in a row, I wanna choke judges.

Last year was a real heartbreaker for me. Nate Robinson may have won the trophy, but there are about 5 people in the world who think he deserved it. Yeah, he's small. I get it. He jumped over another small guy. Yes, it was cool. But it was nothing compared to the creativity and athleticism of Andre Iguodala (who dang near took his own head off trying to wow us).

Recap for those who missed it: Teammate Allen Iverson throws the ball at the back of the backboard and as it bounces off, Andre Iguodala runs from out of the crowd, grabs it in mid air, pulls his neck far back (so as not to decapitate himself) and then dunks the ball (in reverse) on the front side of the hoop.

Check out the sequence below (click twice).



Thass just stoopid brilliant. Iggy sat out this year's contest- and who can really blame him?

This year, it happened again (kinda). Dwight Howard got one of the lowest scores of the night, doing one of the coolest dunks seen in NBA history. Why Why Why.

I'll tell you why. It was so innovative, that the judges scored it before they actually realized what the kid did. While the scorecards went up immediately, it even took the announcers a minute to figure out what happened. It looked like a decent dunk, he went high, he slammed it hard. The judges scores go up- 8s and 9s.

Then Dwight pointed.

12 feet 6 inches above the ground, (twice my height and I'm a big dude) Dwight Howard stuck a sticker with his non dunking hand on the backboard. 12 feet 6 inches. The sticker had Dwight's face, his number, and a simple note that said "through Christ all things are possible".

Here's the pics.



Judges missed it. Scored it like it was so-so, like we'd seen it before.

Want more heartbreak? I found out today that the NBA denied Howard's first request. He wanted to bring in a TWLEVE FOOT HOOP and dunk on it. Two feet higher than NBA regulation.

Sigh.

Then I hear that if he had gone onto the final, Howard was planning a slam where he kisses the rim with his lips while dunking.

Sigh. Sigh,

So here's my plea, and may it make it to the ears of commissioner David Stern. Please, please let the judges watch a replay before scoring. A dunk happens in a split second. You cannot catch the nuance, the little bits of creativity that these guys are going for. Let the judges watch a replay and let's get an accurate idea of who did what.

Oh well. I can only hope. As for Dwight, I'm sure I'm not the only person in America who just became a huge Dwight Howard fan last night. Anyone wants to pick me up a Howard jersey for my next bday, you've got the green light.

Ah well, even through the heartache...only 364 days until the next dunk contest. Waiting with anticipation.

Sunday, February 11, 2007

whyartlovemagic




why art love and magic

Artists provide a valuable service to society. We dream and we seek to inspire and at our very best, we plant seeds for a better future. We remind people of beauty. When someone's engaged in a piece of art, they're present and they let that which drags them down slip away for a moment.

So many artists I know have struggled to turn their talents into careers. Art careers generally fall into three categories- the successful entrepreneur, the underpaid work for hire, or the starving artist. Not everyone was born to be an entrepreneur. In many ways the skills which make for a genius artist (unbounded creativity) are in conflict with the skills it takes to launch an entrepreneurial career (organization, timeliness).

A driving force behind what I'm doing is the belief that there is a staggering amount of talent out there that goes underdeveloped. I know scores of talented artists who struggle with living two lives- a day job to allow them to make it, and their true life as an artist that they live in stunted gaps. I happen to believe that living this way breeds manic suicidal depression.

With the close of 2006, I thanked the folks at WildWorks and set out to do my own thing. On January 1st, Art Love Magic (or artlovemagic- I love both) officially began operations as my full time passion. We're publishing, we're doing live art events, and we're going to help artists develop their careers.

I fundamentality believe that the universe works as a mirror and it reflects back at you what you bring to it. All these things I've wanted my whole life- a career in comics, affluence, collaborating with artists who've inspired me- I'm trying to create them for others. And myself. We'll do it together.

-Mike

Friday, February 09, 2007

I'm putting to gether a live event!



Monday, January 15, 2007

Intellectual Debate


Last night my homestead was the site of a really cool conservation, with an incredibly diverse group. My father was over and some friends came by to say hello, as well as to enjoy our first visit with our friend Mario since his return from Iraq. What ensued was one of the most interesting, passionate, and opinionated debates I've been privy to attend.

Everyone was pretty respectful, which was great, but you couldn't have had more divergent viewpoints. You've got a hard line Bush republican, a returning Iraq vet, a radical pacifist, and a host of others all along the political spectrum.

I don't know that anyone solved anything, but we all had open minds and certainly tried to see it from each other's view. If anything, I was mostly a spectator. To be honest, I kept guarding against anything spilling over to an actual argument. It never did.

Great night.

Sunday, December 10, 2006

Collaboration with DTM

DTM is an artist I met on myspace. He cartoons gorillas too. I saw a drawing he did that I really liked and offered to color it for him. He obliged and this is the result.


You can check out DTM's other work, here.

Sunday, December 03, 2006

New Orleans recovery- live art





This weekend, I got a last minute request to provide art for a conference around the rebuilding effort in New Orleans. 500 Katrina refugees gathered in downtown Dallas and connected with 5 other sites around the country via satellite.

They gave me a corner of the room and asked me to create illustrations based on what I heard. It wasn't hard to come up with imagery for such an important cause, such a lively town, and such affected people. The freedom of being asked to create whatever I chose is something I'm really thankful for.

I used a lot of different art supplies (thanks to Jenn for assistance with everything). Markers and colored pencil and crayons and airbrush dye and several different types of paper. It was a blast.

At the end of the day, they did a really nice tribute to the artists at each site and broadcast images of all our work across the country to each site. I was proud to have my art shown to everyone and it got a great response. There were ooohs and aahhs when they showed the image that says "the courage to HOPE in the midst of crisis".

This is the type of work I'd like to see more and more of come to my life.
And it seems to be happening.

Friday, November 10, 2006

photomographs



You never know what's going to happen at a get together at the manor. Steelo could be hanging with the chitlens, drawing- or Jan might even take a super sonic ride on the ku-rocket.

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

Gorilla Aura


New joint.

Sunday, October 15, 2006

Gorilla Target


This drawing was made to vent my frustrations. I've had a really crazy week. And while some really good things are going on for me, some really lousy stuff has gone down too. I think there's a lesson here- something about being unchanged by circumstance, trying to be who you are no matter what's coming at you.

Facing some hardships these last several days, I've felt fairly weak. I need to get ahold of that. Drawing this stuff out is one way I deal with it positively.

And I really like this drawing.

-Mike