illustration

Book launch for A Dazzling Display of Dogs!

Arf, Arf arf arf arf arf.

Please join us at Diesel Books in Oakland as we celebrate the release of the latest kids book by Betsy Franco and Michael Wertz, A Dazzling Display of Dogs. This book is the follow-up to A Curious Collection of Cats, honor winner for Lee Bennett Hopkins Poetry Award, NCTE Notable Poetry Book of 2009. A Dazzling Display of Dogs is already getting rave reviews.

We're super excited to return to Diesel Books for the launch party - the launch for the cat book was super fun.

We are such goofs. There will probably be more of this. Plus pens and books and things. And cheese. There will be cheese. I hope you can make it. Can you? Say yes!

UPDATE: looks like we'll be joined by Betsy Franco herself at this event! She'll be sharing images from the book and discussing her creative process. We'll also "enjoy" some light entertainment by the MUTTS: Andy Cowitt - ukelelelele, Suki O'Kane - Toy Drum Kit, Michael Wertz - vox.

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A Dazzling Display of Dogs on shelves this week!

Friends to the Four-Pawed: my second picture book, A Dazzling Display of Dogs (written by Betsy Franco - yes, that Betsy Franco), has been released and is available at your local bookstore and online. We're super excited about it over here, and hope you'll get yourself a copy!

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The book release party has been set for March 23, at Diesel Books here in Oakland. Andy and I will probably, as with the Curious Cats opening, embarrass ourselves in front of you. Just to let you know.

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Here's a great review from School Library Journal:

Starred Review. Grade 1–5 - This follow-up to A Curious Collection of Cats (Tricycle, 2009) is dazzling indeed. Each of the 34 poems features a different animal, most of them engaged in true dog behavior. From farting in the car to wheezing and snoring while sleeping, these pups are funny and lovable even when they're being annoying. The verses and the book's design are beautifully matched. In "Emmett's Ode to His Tennis Ball," the text is enclosed in a circle held firmly in the dog's mouth. It begins, "Slobbery, sloppy, slimy, sphere—oh, tennis ball, I hold you dear…." Like the poems, the pictures are funny and dynamic. The pages are definitely full, yet careful use of color, typeface, and detail means they never look chaotic. A note says the pictures were started in pencil and then finished using monoprints and Adobe Photoshop. Overall, a delight for kids, their adults, and maybe even their beloved canine companions.—Lauralyn Persson, Wilmette Public Library, IL

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Sadly, 'A Dazzling Display of Dogs' is one of the last books that Tricycle press will publish. I am so grateful to my editor Abigail Samoun for making this book happen!

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2010 halloween posters are here!

I AM SO EXCITED. The Halloween posters are done, and they look great! Thanks to Nat Swope at Bloom Press for another amazing print job. 18 x 24", blue, orange, and GLOW IN THE DARK inks! These posters commemorate yet another fabulous Driveway Follies in the Glenview district of Oakland, CA. Do you want one? Yes you do! Go directly to the Wertzateria shop and buy yourself one. As soon as it arrives, put it under some bright light and then get in a totally dark space. Say "Bloody Mary, Bloody Mary, Bloody Mary" in a spooky low voice, then open your eyes to see the Magical Glow of this poster!

BWA HA HA HA HA HA!

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If you're in Oakland for Halloween, join Aunt Grandma and Jitters, won't you?

Celebrate Halloween with Aunt Grandma and Jitters, Hosts of Driveway Follies 2010! Glenview's Free Marionette Show and Yard Haunt! 3854 Greenwood Avenue, Oakland.

October 30: 7-10 PM: Puppet Show Only.

October 31: Show begins at Nightfall and repeats throughout the evening.

Adults without children welcome after 9 pm.

See you there!

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Dog Dreams Release Party - You're Invited!

The Imprint of the SFCB is excited to announce the launch of Dog Dreams, an artist's board book written and illustrated by Michael Wertz. Dog Dreams imaginatively reveals the hopes, wishes, and ambitions of over a dozen dozing canines through playful imagery and rhyming text. The book is letterpress-printed in two colors on a Vandercook proof press on French Muscletone paper and is part of the Imprint's Small Plates series issued in 4" x 4" format, numbering 100 signed copies. Come join Michael and the Imprint crew in celebrating Dog Dreams' publication on Thursday July 29, 6-9 PM at the San Francisco Center for the Book. 300 De Haro Street (entrance on 16th Street), San Francisco CA 94103 | http://sfcb.org | 415.565.0545 you're invited.

Please bring your (leashed and friendly) dogs.

Can you make it? Say yes!

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A Curious Collection of Cats is Honored!

Meowsers! My kids book A Curious Collection of Cats has been awarded an Honor from the Pennsylvania Center for the Book: The Lee Bennett Hopkins Poetry Award.

From their site: “The national Lee Bennett Hopkins Award for Children’s Poetry shall be granted annually to an anthology of poetry or a single volume poem published for children in the previous calendar year (as per copyright) by a living American poet or anthologist. The Lee Bennett Hopkins Award for Children’s Poetry shall be administered by The Pennsylvania Center for the Book and Penn State University Libraries.”

Exciting!

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cvb apothecary posters are up in the shop!

dear friendlies, the cvb/cracker apothecary posters are up in the shop. two colors, 18 x 24". printed by nat at bloom press. yummy.

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p.s. these posters travelled all the way to st. louis, where they got signed by both bands. go get one if you're at one of the shows. also: there's a good interview with david lowery talking about cracker's recent trip to play for the soldiers in iraq here.

EDIT 1.13.10: the first 150 posters of the edition sold out at the first four shows of the tour! i'll be sending another 30 out for the show at the highline ballroom in NYC. there's a small stack available at the shop as well.

A few notes from the Alternative Press Expo

A few highlights from the Alternative Press Expo (a.k.a. 'The Temple of Spendy'): First of all, I have to mention my yearly APE companion: Anne-Maria. I love going to these things with AM. She talks to everyone. EVERYONE. She is not afraid tell the scary metal-obsessed tattooed boys that she wants their shirt. She draws out the shut-ins and makes them feel human again. She's a gem.

The Queer Comics Panel hosted by Justin Hall is always a lot of fun. A good discussion of Genre: Slice of Life books vs. Fantasy books. Sat with the Verasphere for this talk, and I think they should start a Mrs. Vera comic ! Was most interested in Cedric Hollows by Sina Grace. I need to get myself a copy. Liz Baillie was also amusing: need to check out 'My Brain Hurts'.

In other gay comics news: Wuvable Oaf. Bought a couple of issues, and they're hilarious. I was laughing at loud in the aisle at the image of Baby Wuvable Oaf emerging from his mother's loins, already sporting a thick beard and hairy arms. Too much.

Big news in lynda barry land (straight from the mouth of the D&Q guy): 'the near sighted monkey' is turning in to to a 'what it is' style work-book about drawing. All hail LYNDA BARRY!

A few new hardcover books (I budgeted $100 for the expo, aaand spent every thin dime) HOT POTATOE by Marc Bell, and Masterpiece Comics by Robert Sikoryak (who also gave a talk on Sunday with my friend Isabel Samaras). Got these fine fellows to sign my books.

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'Singing' for Cats this Sunday!

Friends to the Four-Pawed: Andy and I are doing another 'Singing' for A Curious Collection of Cats (a children's book lovingly illustrated by yours truly) this Sunday at Clayton Books in Clayton, California. If you are in the East Bay, come on out and getcher book signed and see Andy & I act like goofballs! Here's a little bit from the book launch party:

What: Ukeleles and Kitties and Drawings Where: Clayton Books, Clayton California When: 3 pm. Right after naptime.

See you then? xm

A Curious Collection of Cats Launches!

(a hairball? no, not a hairball...) Friendlies,

we had such a marvelous time at the book launch for A Curious Collection of Cats. Many, many thanks to Diesel Books in Oakland, thanks to Abigail and Hayley at Tricycle, thanks to my sweetie who set three of the poems to music so we could sing 'em. There were about 60 people in attendance, and we sold out of books! If you want a book, call Diesel (510-653-9965). They are ordering more books (and doesn't it feel good to support the indie bookstore instead of the nameless behemoth bookstore?) and should have more copies soon.

For those of you who came to the Launch, thank you so much! If you couldn't make it, we're scheduling a few more "singings" for the book: Betsy Franco and I will be doing a talk and signing at Kepler's Books in Menlo Park on June 28th at 11:30. I am also scheduling a singing for San Francisco - stay tuned for that info!

In the meantime, here's some video my brother Tim took of us singing:

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kicking out the crutches

Friendlies, 'Kicking out the Crutches' is how my friend Isabel describes the evolution of her artwork. Her work (and mine, for that matter), used to have dark lines surrounding all the shapes and giving form to her drawings. Now there's nary a dark line in her paintings - she kicked out the crutches she used in her earlier work.

I took Isabel's advice and started going from finishes where the linework was everpresent to finishes where the line is hardly there at all. The line is there, but the shape defines the line instead of the other way around.

Before:

After:

Client: Cracker

It wasn't easy for me to let this happen. Your work is essentially a collaboration with your Art Director, and your final piece - the final product - is so immediately public. The scrutiny can be a little difficult, especially when you're trying to branch out and do something new and different.

I've had some incredibly slow periods in my work when I've felt like the phone was never, ever going to ring again. At these times, I feel like my work is uninteresting, at best. My work relies so heavily on direct feedback from clients that when the phone stops ringing I instantly go into a bit of a panic. I end up on the couch with Auntie Mame on the tv and a bag of crispy fatty salties on my chest. It's ok when this happens every once in a while, but after a few days it gets dull. It's time to get off the couch and do something with yourself, fer chrissake.

Here's a quick list of stuff to do when the work dries up: This list is mostly for myself. Because it will dry up, I promise. Best to be prepared.

1. Use this time to try something new for your portfolio - or, hell, just for yourself. Look in an old sketchbook and expand on an old idea. You already have the map to the new place you want to be. Open it and take a look. Try a completely new media. This was the idea behind my dog blog (which is about to be taken down, so look at it while you still can). I made artwork about what I loved - dogs - and worked in flat color, which I had never dared to do before. It made me new clients and gave me a 'specialty' (dogs) I really enjoy.

2. Take a class at a place like the San Francisco Center for the Book. Taking classes here introduced me to monoprinting, which showed up in later work.

3. See what happens after you drink three espressos and let loose on the pages of your sketchbook.

4. What kind of promotion piece would you like to receive in the mail (hint: it's not a printed postcard from modern postcard) ? What would you put up on your wall? Look up on your wall, and make something like what you see there. Make a handful of hand-made promotions, put them in beautiful envelopes with a hand-written notes to the folks you'd like to work with.

5. Look at something new. Do an art date - all by yourself - at a gallery or museum. Go for a long, random walk in a part of town you've never been to before.

6. Get interested in other people's work and let it inspire you. Check out Drawn! and Illustration Mundo, two sites which consistently show amazing work.

7. Start a dream journal. Yes, I know, it's hokey. These images make for great illustrations.

8. Start a blog. Just like Penelope Trunk says: if you're interested in your field, your clients will like you more. One of my favorites: Rama's Portrait Party.

9. Do the opposite of reaching out: reach in. Unhook the internets, put the tv remote away, and draw and draw and draw. Don't leave the house until you have 15 new drawings. Remember to wash.

10. Chill out, man. Been working like a crazy person from 6 months straight without a weekend? How about a short road trip? As my friend Pete says, "As soon as you plan a vacation or turn up the stereo to dance around your apartment, the phone will start ringing again."

It's hard to realize that sometimes the reason that the phone isn't ringing has nothing to do with you. Companies that used to hire illustrators are going away fast. Remember that, and make work that will make you happy and interested in your work again. A by-product of this is that you will make potential clients interested.

Here's a list of 100 art ideas by Keri Smith, who inspires me greatly. Here's another list by Sister Corita.

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doris fish silk screens!

hey there, ladies. today jim winters and i spent a bunch of time spray painting and silkscreening these prints of notorious drag sub-lebrity doris fish. doris fish is most famous for her film "vegas in space", and, for those of you who have never seen it, it's a goody goody. go rent it.

now. the screens. daniel, a friend of jim's found them on the street. we're pretty sure that doris herself made them. so we decided (with the blessing of phillip r. ford and miss x) to make prints from the screens to sell at sugar valley this year. half the proceeds (and the screens themselves) will go to the doris fish archive.

this is the first in a series. we made a few of these gals, and they look good, if i do say so! there's a few more silkscreens left for us to do - we'll be doing those next saturday.

doris fish

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X

i ran across this video on the youtubes and thought i'd share. it is because of this band that my boyfriend and i connected* - 18 years later we're still under the wicked charm of this amazing band. x broke the rules in an interesting way. x made me want to write and draw and be an interesting/interested person. x made me feel like there was a world - an interesting one, filled with interesting people - outside of the town where i lived. exene published her own zines filled with her writing and images and collage. this was fascinating and new. she terrified me. she did a crazy doll-house dance on stage. i followed them around and wrote them letters and wore a variety of x buttons on my cardigans. when i saw them play (for one of their reunion tours) it was as if i had put on a really comfortable sweater that i thought i had lost. there was a sadness there, too. they sounded great, and they should have made it really big.

there was a show of punk rock memorabilia that exene organized, and she asked me to contribute something. here's what i put in the show. i was sandwiched between mark mothersbaugh and phranc and was over the moon. i made this image ten years ago, mind you.

exene

*i had a bootleg cassette of X playing that i loaned to andy. he used the cassette as an excuse to come visit me, and linger, and talk for a while. on our first date we agreed that john doe was foxy.

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because i do,

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liza portrait

hi ladies, february 22 was the 20th anniversary of andy warhola kicking it. this is a portrait of liza with a z in honor of mister wig. it's based on one of his photographs.

monoprint on rives bfk. i'm experimenting with getting rid of the lines altogether.

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to answer your question...

so, this high school kid emails me out of nowhere. this happens about 2 times a year, usualy because they have an art teacher who tasks them with conducting an interview via email. so, i obliged:

***

First of all, a clarification. You're probably already aware of the difference between illustration and design, but in case you aren't, here goes. Simply put, an Illustrator creates the pictures that end up in a Designer's layout. Sometimes an Illustration has strong Graphic elements, so that Illustration and Design mix together, but usually (at least with editorial illustration) they are separate.

Q: What initially attracted you to art and how has it kept your attention?

My entire family is artistically inclined. I have an older brother and an older sister who do Design. My great uncle was a sign painter. He made a living going from store to store, doing the beautifully lettered paintings you typically see around Xmastime on store windows. I never saw his work, but I'd like to think that it was sensitive and beautiful. You've gotta have a pretty steady hand to do that kind of work.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Painter_and_decorator

How has art kept my attention? Let me tell you, it's not the paychecks. Not so far, anyway. I love being an illustrator because I get to express myself for a living. Often the artwork I do is collaborative, but the clients who choose my work are choosing my particular style of expression, and that feels good. I love seeing my work in print. It's fun, and incredibly challenging. I like the challenge.

When I see a screen print by Andy Warhol, I swoon and nearly fall on the floor. I love that feeling and my job is to create that feeling in my own work.

Q: How would you explain and describe your work to a blind man?

What a great question, and a difficult one. My work has a lot to do with color. I'm in love with flat color. I would say that my work is simple, and direct. Not to sound too pretentious, but I think my work is sort of like a haiku poem: very simple and direct, yet expressive. I'll refrain from writing an illustrative haiku in order to avoid further embarrassing myself.

Q: What do you see as the purpose of the artist in contemporary society?

We're living in a pretty grey time: We have an idiot for a "President", we're stuck in a war that is costing thousands of lives and billions of dollars, the ice caps are melting. It's a grim time. Our job as artist is to replace the color that has been covered over by miles of asphalt.

Q: What is a normal workday like for you?

I don't have a normal workday. My only constant is drawing. i draw nearly every day, even if it's a small scribble in my sketchbook.

Depending on what work I have on the table, I might spend a day:

*sketching in my sketchbook.

http://www.wertzateria.com/extras.html ---> click on "sketchbook"

*preparing and burning silkscreens, and printing with the same

*ripping images out of magazines for scrap

*pawing through my archived images for the right image to use in an illustration

*reading artforum, make magazine, or readymade magazine

*looking at Drawn!

*negotiating contracts with clients

*sending sketch ideas (as jpeg files) back and forth to clients

*having a face-to-face meeting with a client

*listening to the poetry of william s. burroughs

*watching the movie "Harold and Maude"

*entering my work in design competitions

*working on my colossal collection of images on the bulletin board (inspiration). millions of images.

*working with a new media. ink brush, gocco print, screen print, rubbings, monoprints, colored pencil, watercolor. collage.

*learning something new.

*taking screenprinting classes.

*paying attention.

*taking photographs.

Q: What tools do you use to do your art? What are the techniques or steps you use to create your works.

The majority of my works are collages, created in Photoshop. On separate layers you might find drawings from my sketchbook, flat color, and areas of screen print masked away to reveal portions of the print and hiding the rest. All of my illustration works start as a simple pencil drawing.

Q: What do you hope to convey through your illustrations?

Beautiful, deliberate roughness. Exquisite storytelling in side-show colors. Human beings living, breathing, creating, dying, growing, rejoicing. Animals and how they are close to humans in lots of ways. The truth. Details that catch and delight the eyes, which are always moving. The trash and rubbish of human existence transformed into something new and shiny. Surprise. Strange elegance. Love and war treated with equal candor. Understanding.

Q: Could you discuss the ….. (a work of art)

??

This question is unclear, so I'll write bit about my favorite artist, Andy Warhol.

Warhol's work is so deceptively simple - if you blink, you'll miss it. Take a look at the Marilyn screenprints. The message here is in the shades of color: they're *so* ugly, even though she was a beautiful woman. What does this tell us? What comment on Marilyn was Andy trying to make? I look at these prints and I think "This woman was a construction. She, like Judy Garland, was a creation of Hollywood, and yet she is held up as a model of perfection. She never had a chance to live her own life. Her own life was tragic - filled with addiction." Look beyond the surface of Andy Warhol's prints, and you've got levels of quiet social commentary.

Ok. I hope that answered the question.

Q: What influences and inspires you? Why?

*Dogs. They like to play.

*My mom. She's sweet and smart as a whip.

*My partner Andy, who never stops encouraging me.

*My friend Isabel, who is funny.

*My friend Flower, who taught me how to get sh*t done.

*My ex-teacher Bud Peen, who taught me to stay busy and efficient.

*My buddy Marcos, who has the most fun in the studio out of all of my artist friends. He's got the most visually stimulating workspace I've ever been in!

*My garden. Great colors and shapes.

*All kinds of music.

Q: Would you consider yourself an optimist or a pessimist?

I'm an optimist. This is a hard way to be right now, but I'm hard-wired like that.

Q: Do you have any bad habits?

I procrastinate a bit too much. I like to drink coffee and that makes my mind busy but less focused. I surf the web when i should be working. Email is a HUGE distraction.

Q: How do you translate your work from computer to gallery wall?

Screen printing. Check here for a pdf of how to make silkscreens in your basement. It's fun.

Q: Do you try to convey specific themes in your work?

Let's see. Going through my portfolio, I'd say the themes were (in order of appearance):

Animals and Nature. Hearts/Love. Cities. Musicians. Glamorous Women. Johnny Cash. Cowboys. Psychedelia. XXX. Space. Saul Bass and the Design of the 1950's. Monsters. Dogs. Men.

Q: What role does environment (i.e. urban vs. rural, indoor vs.outdoor, etc.) play in your creative process?

Great question. I do most of my work indoors, but I like to walk around in the garden before I sit down to draw. I have a few plants growing in pots near my work table to remind me of the outside.

Q: What projects are you currently working on?

I'm working on a series of screen prints for a weekly paper here in Marin, a cover for a publishing company out of NYC called Farrar Strauss Giroux, a business system for a friend of mine who needs a drawn logo and some lettering, and my dog blog - 100 dog drawings in 365 days (see link below).

Q: You've shown your work in many galleries and group shows. What experiences were your most memorable?

Tickle Me Fickle (held at National Product in SF) was a nice show - it was a show I did with my friend Flower. It was on valentine's day, we had tons of food at the opening, and we both created a lot of work to hang on the wall. Lots of friends and family showed up as well, which was very gratifying.

See pix and movies here.

Q: Where do you see yourself in 10 years?

Right here, but with 3,650 more pieces of art completed. And more grey hairs.

Best, Michael

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one hundred dog drawings in one year

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