You can see his work HERE
Originally from a
suburb of Holland Landing, farmland area near Barrie, Andrew came to Thunder
Bay to study business at Lakehead University. He got his
business/administration degree, then worked briefly in a tattoo shop in
Toronto, became a stock broker and then headed back into his art. Back in T.
Bay he does some bookkeeping to pay the bills.
Andrew sees a good
deal of irony in that his father wouldn’t allow him to study art at university;
for the biggest influence on Andrew’s artistic bent came from his father.
Although a pilot by trade, Andrew’s father was also a part time painter, taking
on the occasional commission to paint airplanes when he wasn’t painting
landscapes as a hobby. He taught Andrew perspective tricks, like drawing the
typical train tracks receding towards the horizon line.


Scarabs is a 22 page
comic. It takes Andrew about twelve to sixteen hours to draw a page which
produces a comic in just over two months. Once the artwork is done a entirely
new workload takes over involving the layout, design and publishing that
follows.
“I’ve illustrated children’s
books in the past and it’s nice to just hand over the illustrations and be done
with it,” he says. “That said, I’ve got a large oil painting that seems to be
taking me forever.”
Andrew is realistic
about what success is. “Success is having the money and time to create the
things you want too create. I believe everyone has a drive to create in their
own way and being able too do that full time is success.”
“I'm currently finishing up the next few
issues of the Scarabs Comic, but as far as projects goes I'm working on a
number of pitches for comic publishers including an Irish Mythology themed
story that I'm sure people who like fantasy stories will like. It will be my
largest challenge too date as I'm painting each page.”

Andrew also acknowledges that trying to
win over an audience with the pizzaz of detail, dramatic settings and violent
action, like special effects in a movie, does nothing compared to how
interesting characters can grip the reader. Referring to his Irish mythological
tale Andrew says, “Having a true understanding of what these characters would
do and what drives them is the most important thing.”
Andrew has some big ambitions, hoping to work with a large publisher who takes an interest in Andrew’s story ideas. Being realist he says he’s trying not to get attached to his ambitions. He’s aware of the old adage of keeping expectations low, but he’s certainly not going to avoid doing his best to make a go of it.
Andrew has some big ambitions, hoping to work with a large publisher who takes an interest in Andrew’s story ideas. Being realist he says he’s trying not to get attached to his ambitions. He’s aware of the old adage of keeping expectations low, but he’s certainly not going to avoid doing his best to make a go of it.
No comments:
Post a Comment