This doodle came about because I’m excited for the upcoming album by those fine folks at Information Society.
I started drawing it right after pressing play on “Dominion,” a track to which those who preorder the album have been granted access, and stopped drawing when the song ended four minutes and twenty-one seconds later.
WARNING: Spoilers for the Doctor Who episode "Day of the Moon" ahead.
I really liked the nanorecorders from the episode. I started wondering how cosplayers and such might emulate the special effect of the nanorecorder in a live setting, and thought of the UV-reactive invisible ink used in things like hand-stamps at concert venues and nightclubs. This is a quick-and-dirty sketch of how such an idea might be put to work.
If you manage to make this effect work, please let me know!
10-minute sketch: "HOW'D IT GET BURNED?"
Done while watching this clip on a loop in the corner of my screen. Drawing this has made me crave a plate of nachos, slightly overdone with the cheese just a little bit burned.
Reis Telephone 1861
Having worked on his own telephonelike concept since the 1850s, German inventor Johann Philipp Reis successfully demonstrated that his invention could transmit speech over a decade before Alexander Graham Bell would achieve that goal. Reis' test phrase was “Das Pferd frisst keinen Gurkensalat,” which means “The horse does not eat cucumber salad.”
Acrylic on canvas, 7x5″. From my series of paintings of historical telephones.
My performance at "Say Everything" yesterday, August 13, 2015, chatting with intrepid interim hosts Davey Stevey Dave and Babe Parker.
"Say Everything," the unique interactive standup showcase where comics eschew prepared material and just have a freeform chat with the hosts and the crowd, happens every Thursday evening at Paddy Reilly's Music Bar in Manhattan. More info at www.facebook.com/sayeverythingcomedy !
The logo of the fictional Union Broadcasting System (UBS) television network, from the brilliant Sidney Lumet film Network. Recreated using screenshots from the film. I thought I might someday use this to make a microphone flag, or maybe some novelty press credentials.
If you haven't seen Network yet watch it ASAP, preferably without looking up any plot points or spoilers beforehand. It's a requirement for membership in the human race.
Bell “Gallows-Frame” telephone 1875
Alexander Graham Bell's original telephone prototype used a single magneto-based device as both transmitter and receiver. The user spoke into the single orifice, and put the device to their ear to hear the response.
The device, which gets its nickname from its elegant mahogany frame, was the first with which Bell demonstrated transmission of voice-like sounds. Intelligible speech would be transmitted by Bell with a redesigned unit the following year.
Acrylic on canvas, 7x5″. From my series of paintings of historical telephones.
Nikola Tesla (July 10, 1856-January 7, 1943)
Tesla, a Serbian-American inventor never fully appreciated in his own lifetime, has in retrospect become known as one of the most important inventors on record. Much of our 21st -century technological environment has its roots in Tesla's work with electricity, radio, and more.
Acrylic on canvas, 5x7″. From my September 2015 set Luminaries of the Hacker World.
This is a digital painting of Mrs. Ho, the Cook from the wonderful film Clue. Mrs. Ho was played by Kellye Nakahara, and her only line of dialogue is represented here.
I scratched this out with the classic/modelling brush in MyPaint.
A dramatic reading I performed from the LiveJournal my old friend Murd0c used to have, as originally posted by him on September 1, 2003. NSFW for sweariness.
Unfortunately the post I'm reading can no longer be seen; Murd0c deleted his LiveJournal because he didn't want a bunch of crap he wrote as a teenager still out there. I don't see what his damn problem is, this was some ace material.
It's National Draw T-Rex Day, as started by crashsuit and spread around by nedroid over on Twitter yeterday. For my contribution I riffed (very badly) on this guy.
Hello there. I'm Rob. This used to be my art blog until I left Tumblr; here's why you won't see me around here anymore. This is my website, you can find the rest of what I do from there. Here's a bunch of social media I do still use. Here's how to contact me directly if you wish, please feel free. All my original artwork posted on this Tumblr is released under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license. Feel free to reuse, remix, etc. any of my stuff under the terms of this license.
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