Thursday, January 21, 2010

Haiti Relief

Hello world! As many of you have heard, the earthquake in Haiti has devastated millions. Much help is needed and now is the time for the human race to show that it can help itself survive. Many of you have probably already helped in one way or another, but for those who haven't yet gotten around to it, I have decided to give some incentive for your help!

For the next week, I am offering a free watercolor painting (your choice of subject matter (I guess kinda like a commision)) for a donation of $10 dollars to your choice of charity. Here's how:

1. Pick an charity to donate to online.
2. Donate via their website.
3. Send me an email (jehucampos@gmail.com) with a screenshot or copy of your reciept showing you donated $10 or more. Include your painting request in the email, along with an address I can ship it to.
4. I'll paint it and mail it out via USPS, at my cost.
It's that simple. You provide help in the relief effort and get a painting as a thanks!

Here are a few organizations that accept online donations.


Save The Children (click here for Haiti donations page)

Clinton Foundation (click here for Haiti donations page)

You can also find plenty other organizations via Google. Again, remember this is for direct relief of millions having very hard times, and many of us can help. Hopefully I will be painting for months to come! We can make a difference!


Paintings will be 4x6 watercolor/gouache on Arches 140lb Hotpress paper.

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

First Flight, Pg 9



The End! But where is he going? Why is he flying an airplane? WHAT IS HIS NAME??? Stay tuned for future adventures!
Also, you can read the whole thing here!

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Thursday, December 17, 2009

First Flight, Pg 7



THAT WAS CLOSE, HUH? Read the rest here!

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

First Flight, Pg 6




BRACE FOR IMPACT! Read the rest here!

Sunday, December 13, 2009

First Flight, Pg 5



OH NOES, SOMETHING IS HAPPENING! Read the rest here.

Friday, December 11, 2009

Tuesday, December 08, 2009

First Flight, Pg 3



Page 3 makes me realize this looks kinda incomplete without background paintings... Anyone want to help with that? You can find the rest here.

Sunday, December 06, 2009

Friday, December 04, 2009

First Flight

I made this comic a few months ago. I call it "First Flight."

This is page 1 of 9. Click to see higher res.



I'll be posting the other pages every other day, although the rest can be found here if you are the impatient kind. Hope you enjoy it!

Monday, November 23, 2009

SketchCrawl Numero Vignt & Go

That means number 25 in spanish, french, and japanese!

Alex and I went to the Fort Worth Botanical Gardens hoping to meet other sketchers, but unfortunately didn't run into them. We spent our time at the Japanese Gardens! Some peekatures of my sketches (click for embiggening):


Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Where The Wild Things Are - a personal interpretation



It's been over a year since I've written in this blog, but seeing as my "official" website is down, I've come back to blogging on the blogspot.

First things first: this post won't be a review of the film, nor of the book. If you want to know whether you should spend the money to go watch the film, don't ask me. I did, and in my opinion, it was worth every penny of both mine and Alex's ticket purchase. Instead, this post is my personal analysis and reconciliation of the book, the movie, and myself.
The wild things in Maurice Sendak's book are scary. There is something about the way the creatures are drawn that gives me chills, even disturbs me a little. Max encounters them fearlessly, however. They are his wild things, created from his imagination. He subdues and rules over them, befriends them and plays with them. In the film, the wild things are, by contrast) very lovable. Still giant monsters, their representation in three dimensions, their expressive faces, and their distinct personalities makes them each very easy to empathize with. Their voices, however, bring them to life. The inflections in their manner of speaking, subtle changes in their tone, and masterful reading of the script can all be praised as marvelous acting, but it was the frantic, desperate cries and dialogue which makes them true wild things. I found myself getting teary-eyed as each one's character was revealed, because in them I saw and heard the wild things in me.
In Spike Jonez's film, these monsters were blatantly and unapologetically the monsters found inside each and every one of us. Our primal anxieties, fears, insecurities, all manifested in their rawest, most concentrated forms. These are the emotions that come from what scientists would call the reptilian part of our brain, our basest instincts. We live with these everyday, yet rarely stop and look at the wild things within, often letting them romp about our lives, building up fortresses, instigating chaos. These traits are hidden in the characters in the original children's book, but as I watched the film, something resonated within me as these monsters' tempers flared, as they broke down crying, threw their tantrums, and withdrew within themselves.
It was clear to me within the first few minutes that the film was not going to be a film for children, but rather a film for the child within all of us: a film that forced us to explore the wild things within ourselves. These concepts might be lost on children who do watch this film. Sadly, many children these days aren't brought up to understand their wild, dark side. It frightens me often when I teach (yeah, I kinda teach) and find that most of the kids would rather be playing their mindless video games than exploring the fascinating natural world, the infinite cosmos without, and the infinitesimal cosmos within. Could much of what is diagnosed as behavioral disorders very well be due to an ineptness to tame the wild things within? Perhaps instead of drugs to correct behaviors we could encourage a conversation with the wild things, perhaps they will make us their king? If the the wild in us is the remnants of an ancient brain, then perhaps reason and creativity, the products of an evolved brain, can rule over these emotions?
But neither book nor film ends with harmony between the king and the wild things. They both explore what is perhaps our inability to contain the monsters. Echoed throughout the film is the idea of endings. We are reminded that the sun dies, that rocks erode to sand, to dust, and, "and then I don't even know what comes after dust." That which is most solid in our lives will someday crumble; that which is most constant will someday cease. I was personally reminded of the death of my faith.
In an interview on NPR's Fresh Air, Spike Jonze explained to Terri Gross that Maurice wanted him to make something personal. "You can't care what anybody else thinks, you just got to make something that's personal to you," said Maurice. This, I believe, is the true heart of art. There are, and no doubt will be, countless conplaining that the film strays drastically from the book. On the contrary, Jonze argues that he just went deeper into what was presented in the book, reading between the hatch lines, if you will.
So do I recommend this film? If you are willing to explore the depths of your darkest emotions, cry a little, laugh a little, then this film is right for you. If you want a cookie cutter film with a happy ending, perfect resolution, and nonthreatening ideas, go watch something else. As for me, I thoroughly enjoyed the journey through night and day, in and out of weeks, and almost over a year to where the wild things are.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

A small sketch dump

A girl playing the Wii. I wish I had one.
The model called it "The Sleeping Guard,".
These are sketches in preparation for a team animation project due in a couple of weeks. I am really excited! I hope this animation turns out fantastic and I get a job because of it. COME ON, CAUSALITY!!! These first Homer ones are when I was warming up.
These are when I realized Homer is harder to draw than he seems to be.
And lovable Lisa Simpson. At first, she was really tough(top left), but once I learned the inner shapes and proportions, she became really fun to draw(bottom left AND right!!!)!

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

I swear I'm still alive!

Today I had some extra time at school and decided to draw up some "digitized" comics with photoshop and my trusty 4x5 tablet. This is what I came up with. It's a random story that popped into my head as I drew, so I most likely won't come back to it (unless it takes me somewhere I don't expect (which it might) (maybe)).Page 2 is very confusing. I can't tell what's going on if I try looking at the pictures, so it's going to change if I decide to keep working on this story. But I like the last panel. :3

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Amazing Artist Alert!!

I just ran across this blog linked over at Cartoon Brew. Amazing artist with wonderful, intriguing works. James Jean produces a definite must-see style of art, rich in line with beautiful figure renderings, so if you are on the web, swing by his neighborhood.

Friday, February 08, 2008

You know you're tired when...

your cat starts giving you animation advice.

Tuesday, February 05, 2008

What's all this, then???

I hadn't drawn one of these in a while. Quick comic of the day.

Aunt Tisip: Asian

Anticipation, also. This is what I came up with. This, I confess, was harder than it looks. Body mechanics and motion, combined with perpective and timing, are very taxing both on my mind and on my hand. Not to mention the pencils. ANYHOO... it was really fun to make. Credit to Vera Brosgol on the character, and YES, I did it because it's cool...



Also, I just remembered I need a background... it'll be fun background drawing practice!!! -_-,

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Sketchamaroo! (Also, zombies do it for the lulz)

Did I make up that word? If I did, that should totally be a club I'll start... So it's kinda late. I learned all sorts of awesome gesture methods today from Sheldon Borenstein over on his YouTube channel. I've taken the process he teaches and am running with it. These are a couple of pages of sketching that I did tonight. There is an interesting story about a drunk and a zombie that came of out of an "on demand" gesture session. It was a very fun exercise. I hope you find it as humorous as I did while drawing it. It starts on the top right of the second page and ends on the fourth.


Tuesday, January 29, 2008

A transformation.

Just stepping it up a notch. Gotta get hundreds of times better than this.



It doesn't really mean anything. Do you see something?