Showing posts with label art girl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art girl. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 1, 2016

Where Do You Come Up With Your Ideas?

Homer Simpson Heart Sticker Design by Palm Treat artists Jeff Nolan and Marie Nolan
Early Palm Treat design for a 4 inch vinyl sticker.

The Origins of Palm Treat

"Frankly, I am not sure where my ideas come from. I have been inspired by everything from passing images in my mind to brief glimpses of reflections in shop windows… anything that generates that initial flash of excitement. When I was developing the early ideas that Palm Treat's art is based on (distorted features, multiple sets of eyes, appropriated cartoon imagery) I was inspired by Facebook's early advertising failures. I read a study about how ineffective their early ad attempts were, in short no one was intentionally clicking on them. In the study I read they paid for something like 30,000 targeted views for a survey or some such thing and received something like 2 or 3 clicks that immediately bounced. I've worked as a web designer and this is an unimaginably terrible respsonse to online advertising.

The image that inspired Palm Treat
The image that inspired Palm Treat.
What interested me wasn't so much the dismal performance of the ads in that experiment, but an ad that they cited that did have a very high click rate, at the time I believe it was the most successful (possibly only successful) ad that had up until that point been run on facebook. It was an image of a woman's face with an extra set of eyes and an extra mouth, and the copy asked the viewer to count the features on the face. For some reason this advertisement really caught the attention of those early Facebook users when countless hundreds of other attempts had failed, spectacularly.

This made a great impact on me, I spent days thinking about the ad and marveling at how such a simple and stupid idea was so incredibly effective when so many other advertisements had failed. I knew that our brains are configured to recognize facial patterns above all else, and that faces are very good at getting our attention, but I was endlessly facinated with how such a simple variation to the human face seemed to short circuit the brain's attention. Or maybe not short circuit our facial recognition, but more hyper activate it. Somehow a face with multiple sets of eyes triggered an incredibly strong response and a great amount of interest. It was as though our human eyes were magnetized.

As a designer I let this idea sit in my mind for the better part of a year. I knew that there was something significant or at least profitable to be done with this idea. The difficulty was figuring out how to implement it into an interesting type of art without just painting a bunch of portraits with too many eyes. Which I wasn't exactly opposed to, but it just seemed as though there must be a more effective or clever use of it.

I have always had a great interest in pop artists like Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, and Jasper Johns. I grew up on cartoons and loved how they straight up stole the cartoon imagery of their childhoods and turned it into large scale art, many times without altering it outside of the dimensions and medium. I was particularly inspired by Roy Lichtenstein's gigantic comic book panels after seeing some in person as a young child, they seemed so environmental and epic in their large scale, they were exciting. I feel that excitement is the most important factor in any type of art, arousing enthusiasm for a particular feeling or way of being.

So I ultimately landed on combining my favorite childhood cartoon, the Simpsons, with my new idea about facial distortions and repetitive patterns. I also felt that the Simpsons was a strong source to work from as they are the most popular and widely recognized cartoon characters ever conceived, I liked the idea of playing to the largest common demoninator. So, I printed out a few pictures of Bart Simpson on some shipping labels at my job and within a few minutes saw endless possiblities in exploiting the economy of form used in cartoons. Not just the Simpsons, but all cartoons… everything for that matter. It felt like sampling an image into a techno beat, it was enlightening.

From that initial discovery, I set out Photoshopping, tracing, re-drawing, hacking and cutting up everything I could find. At this point I have created years worth of source material. I have a lifetime of trippy pop art pasted together in Photoshop documents. At this point, its just about putting our stuff out there for as many people as we can find to put it in front of

Tuesday, April 26, 2016

Girl With Two Mouths Painting, Hot Pink Vintage Pop Art and Comic Book Retro Resurrection

Vintage film noir inspired 60's pop art painting by Palm Treat folk-art outsider psychedelic artists Jeff Nolan and Marie Nolan
Girl with Two Mouths vintage romance comic book inspired painting by Palm Treat.

Girl With Two Mouths Painting, Hot Pink Vintage Pop Art and Comic Book Retro Resurrection

Girl With Two Mouths painting by Palm Treat is a vintage comic book inspired pop art painting that uses neon hot pink, neon blue and beautiful, mysterious shapes. The painting is also available now in print form Palm Treat. Jeff Nolan and Marie Nolan create a stunning wall art piece that will recreate and decorate any house, design studio art, kids bedroom art, or office art.

If you're looking for a work of art for your office that is one of a kind Girl with Two Mouths is great. The artists Marie Nolan and Jeff Nolan aka Palm Treat are professional painters and illustrators who dominate the East coast pop are scene with eye catching original pop art for sale.

The theme of Girl with Two Mouths is nautical art, hipster art, vintage art poster, original vintage art, metro art, classic art, folk art, outsider art, and female art.

Click here to view more artwork like this beautiful trippy retro artwork.

Artwork in Progress and the Process of Painting Pop Art

Trippy retro comic book girl by Palm Treat designers and outsider folk artists Jeff Nolan & Marie Nolan, inspired by Roy Lichtenstein style of pop art painting and nostalgic artworks and posters from mid century americana
Folk artist Marie Nolan & Jeff Nolan working on a painting.

Artwork in Progress and the Process of Painting Pop Art

Palm Treat has an excellent visual art making process which includes viewing Andy Warhol references, Art Forum Magazine, Art in America Magazine, Mad Magazine, Hi Fructose Magazine, Art Blend Magazine, and other successful Magazines that showcase solo art shows and well known illustrators and designers.

 Then the process moves to a brainstorming session where the two artists Marie Nolan and Jeff Nolan meet up and discuss pop art techniques and designs. The meeting is full of thumbnail sketches, napkin drawings, Simpson's references, vintage comic book layouts, historical influences and visually stimulating color schemes and shapes. The design process begins with a digital mock up and is followed by hours, sometimes days of editing to achieve compositional correctness.

Next, Jeff Nolan and Marie Nolan hand draw the image onto hand stretched canvas and begin to manipulate the digital mock up with effervescent bursts of organic lines and shapes. Nothing is set in stone, so there is room to edit and redraw areas and even change colors along the way. It's a fun process that both artists enjoy.

Finally, Jeff Nolan and Marie Nolan post photos of the paintings on social media platforms such as Instagram, Facebook, Tumblr, and Blogger. This ensures that Palm Treat fans and Simpsons fans can locate their online store.

Find more pop art by internet artists Palm Treat.