Filed under: Artst Interviews, Events | Tags: Drawing for Life, Logan Zawacki, Logans Heroes
1. Hi Logan. Thanks for taking the time to do an interview. I am very interested in learning about the charity work you are involved in, especially Drawing for Life, but first I was wondering if you would give us some background information. How did Jacksonville get lucky enough for you to end up here? How’s it been treating you thus far? (laughter) Well, Jacksonville was lucky enough to have my Mom & Dad give birth to me here in Jacksonville and I liked the place so much I’ve just never left. I think Jacksonville is an amazing city and I’ve actually grown to appreciate it more as I’ve gotten older. The art scene is thriving, despite the overall lack of financial support, and there’s a huge movement being organized by all the 20-30 something artists in our city. When I graduated college back in 2003 I had the dream of making it big and being a professional photographer working on $20,000 photo shoots in New York, California, Paris, etc. The reality is that you don’t get those kind of jobs with zero experience and a 4-year degree, and after getting a peak into the commercial photography world by doing weddings and family portraits I realized that I don’t have any desire to actually do those jobs for the rest of my life. I was extremely fortunate to land a job working in UNF’s Photo Department a couple years after graduating and it helped me realize my calling is to become an instructor and share my knowledge with others. Working for UNF and staying in Jacksonville has provided me with so many opportunities to work with other local artists and get involved in our Arts scene. I am proud to say that Jacksonville has been very good to me in retrospect.
2. I have to say that you are one of the biggest kids I’ve met in the fact that your imagination clearly fuels your work. How would you describe yourself and your art exactly? Would you say you are an illustration artist? I think the best word to describe me as an artist would be revisionist. A lot of the projects I’ve worked on recently involve taking something pre-existing from my past and applying a new twist to the subject. For instance, in my book, The Excavation of Mushroom Island, I recreate the Super Mario world from an archaeological standpoint. I provide the scientific explanations for “how” these characters existed in our reality. In my newest series, The 200X Product Catalog, I’m creating blueprints of various Mega Man characters and providing factual prices of the equipment and employees they’d replace as a social commentary on the American job market and how multi-functional machines are replacing real people.
Now, both of those examples use digital montages and classic photographic processes to create my art, so does that make me a Graphic Designer, a Photographer, or a Fine Artist? I honestly don’t think I fit into any particular niche of art. I don’t work exclusively in one medium so I would be perfectly happy if people just referred to me as an Artist.
3. Tell me your thoughts on the term “Lowbrow” and how you think it pertains to working artists in Jacksonville right now. Any predictions….?? Have you looked up the definition of “lowbrow” lately? I hear that term used a lot around Jacksonville for several of the illustrators and the definition is “a person who is uninterested, uninvolved, and uneducated in intellectual activities or pursuits.” Isn’t creating art an intellectual activity? If that term is in reference to the fact that Jacksonville has a large underground culture of artists who aren’t willing to put on a suit and kiss somebody’s ass in order to sell a $1,000 painting at an art show…then “Yes” we do have a large community of Lowbrow artists. (laughter) My prediction is that Lowbrow art will continue to thrive and flood all the local shows and eventually galleries will have to change their interpretation of Art to include more of the contemporary work being produced by local artists. Galleries prefer to display safe, unconceptual paintings of a pretty landscape or a serene beach scene, showing off an artist’s technical abilities over his/hers creativity.
4. What is Logan’s Heroes? How can people get involved? Logan’s Heroes is the name of my Relay for Life team. The name was inspired by the headline used by Owen Holmes in an article he wrote about my toy photography in Folioweekly several years back. The name also refers to all the people in my life who I considered “heroes” that I lost to cancer-related deaths. My involvement with the American Cancer Society’s Relay for Life event is a way for me to honor all those “heroes” in my life, and a way for me to pick up their torch and continue to find a cure for cancer so that no more unnecessary deaths have to occur because of this horrible disease.
5. Thanks for your time Logan. Before you go, please give us all the details about the 3rd Annual Drawing for Life Marathon. Absolutely! The 3rd Annual Drawing for Life Marathon takes place this Saturday, March 6th, from 10am-10pm inside The Art Center II (111 E. Bay St., Jacksonville, FL 32202: located above the Ivey Bar). This is a Drawing Marathon where myself and 13 other local artists will draw for 12-hours straight and all the artwork we create during the day will be sold with all the proceeds benefitting the American Cancer Society. Some of the things you can expect to see is new Art projects throughout the day by each artist involved, Door Prizes will be randomly distributed over the 12 hours, Silent Auctions and Raffles, and (4) Power Hours!!! For those of you who don’t know, a “Power Hour” is an entire hour dedicated to working on one theme where the artists have to create a new sketch every 5-minutes. The final result is 12 different sketches by each artist and it really shows off each of the artists’ abilities to produce excellent work in a short amount of time. Not to mention, it is fun to watch them get stressed out because they have to work in a hurry. (laughter)
Please come out to the 3rd Annual Drawing for Life Marathon and help us raise the funds needed to find a cure for every form of cancer!
Filed under: Events, Gallery Happenings, Openings | Tags: Super Wonderful
The line-up:
Matt Allison
Clay Doran
Barrett Fiser
Dustin Harewood
Tonya Lee
Kyle Lemstrom
Jen Morgan
If you haven’t met Justin Netti, then you’re about to have your last chance. I highly recommend it.
Riverside Avondale Preservation hosts an inaugural social for a new young professionals group called RAP180.
RAP180 aims to encourage involvement from young professionals in the Riverside Avondale neighborhoods and to progressively nurture the arts, culture and history of the area. It will be strengthening the communities where we live and work through monthly collaborations.
For more information, go to: Riverside Avondale Preservation
Filed under: Artst Interviews, Events, Openings | Tags: AIGA, Designers in Toyland, Karen Kurycki
It was my pleasure to interview Karen Kurycki this week who is Vice President of AIGA.
1. Hi Karen. I am very excited to learn about what you have been up to these days. Let’s start with an introduction. Please tell me a little about yourself and how you are connected to Jacksonville. Hi, Shea! I have lived in Jacksonville for five and a half years now and I really love the city. I grew up in Rochester, NY and attended Kent State University in Ohio to earn my BFA in Visual Communication Design. In 2004, after graduating from Kent, I realized the world was pretty much wide open and what I wanted to do next and where I wanted to live was up to me. I chose Jacksonville because I love a warmer climate. (I can’t take the blizzards like I could growing up) and I had a couple ties to Jacksonville who were family friends. My mom was born in St. Augustine so we had been back to Florida for vacation once or twice a year since I was born, and I had done my internship down here the summer before I graduated. It seemed like a good fit for me.
As far as what I have been up to lately—it’s kind of crazy because there have been quite some changes over the past few months! After working as an art director at The Kurtis Group in Jacksonville Beach for five and a half years, I decided to take a position as Senior Art Director at BroadBased Communications this month. So I will be starting there in December.
I have also been doing a lot of collaborating with friends on projects as well. One of my good friends Ashley Hazen and I have been working on some illustrations; we both participated in the past two atomic sketches (live painting and drawing) at Art Walk that AIGA Jacksonville hosted and we contributed to the book Things Drunk People Say that can be found on sale at Urban Outfitters. I think our styles work well together because we like to work both loose but in a controlled manner—she draws and I paint and we are both trained as designers but love the fine art side of illustration, so it seems to work for us.
I’ve also collaborated with Dog and Pony Showprints on a couple of posters this year, contributed illustrations to the Jacksonville Public Library card campaign and contributed to the book 1000 Tips by 100 Graphic Designers, which comes out this month.
And, of course, being Vice President of AIGA takes up a big chunk of my time, but I love that it keeps me busy because I believe in the organization and what it offers to designers like me. Right now I’m pretty busy planning a toy show that AIGA is hosting for the December Art Walk called “Designers in Toyland;” it will be up at 229 Hogan Street.
2. How would you describe AIGA and what have you gained by being part of that organization? AIGA is the professional association for design. It’s a national organization of designers (mainly focused in the field of graphic design/illustration) whose purpose is to maintain the standards within the field. The mission of the organization is to advance designing as a professional craft, strategic tool and vital cultural force. We work together to address current cultural/social issues, promote and educate people on how design impacts their life and how powerful good design can be in conveying information; it also provides a community of like-minded individuals who can discuss issues within our own field, such as spec work, pricing, etc.
I have been a member of AIGA since I was a student member in college and when I moved down here, my boss Kurtis Loftus was very involved in the organization in Jacksonville so it was easy for me to get involved. I met a lot of the members through the social events they held every month. I started volunteering at events with my best friend Sarah Butsch and then eventually became volunteer chair, next moved to community outreach chair and now am Vice President of the Jacksonville chapter.
AIGA has provided me with a network of friends and colleagues who are a great resource when I have an issue with a program or a question about a font, need a printer review or a recommendation for a freelance designer, etc. I have used this network to my advantage for the five plus years I’ve lived down here. I often tell people when they join: “AIGA is like…instant friends!” Which is true in a way—we are all very supportive of each other, and I’m sure there are people out there who think we are this pretentious, exclusive club, but we are pretty much the opposite.
3. Your profile describes you as “a strong proponent of volunteerism”, and as “Community Outreach Chair for AIGA Jacksonville”, can you elaborate on that? What projects are you working on right now such as Discover Design? I have actually taken on the role of Vice President this year but have a strong hand in the outreach branch of our chapter because it means so much to me. I believe any professional organization is what you make of it and what you give to it. If you’re just paying your membership fee and not attending any of the events, not volunteering at any of the outreach events we organize, not participating in discussions about current issues, then you’re probably not going to get as much out of the organization as someone who is doing those things.
We welcome everyone, member or non-member to a majority of our events and are really trying to get as involved in the Jacksonville community as much as possible this year through hands-on outreach projects. So far we’ve volunteered at the Jacksonville Arboretum & Gardens, the Jacksonville Zoo Spooktacular, City Rescue Mission’s Bed race, and are hosting the toy show to raise money for The Big Fun Box. We are looking forward to several more outreach projects throughout the year and are very open to collaborating with other organizations like Hands-On Jacksonville to give back to the city.
The outreach branch of our chapter started with the Discover Design mentoring program that Florence Haridan and I started in 2008; it gives high school students a chance to work one-on-one with a professional graphic designer to finish a project that addresses an issue within our community. That started with the Get out the Vote poster campaign and last year we did a project that promoted library cards for the public library system here in Jacksonville. Starting in January, we’ll be doing a project called “Create Don’t Hate” in which mentors and mentees will work together on the design of a billboard that addresses the theme of tolerance.
4. I see that your professional career has strong ties to Jacksonville’s Urban Arts Movement. What are your thoughts on “Graphic Designer” vs. “Fine Artist”? I love what I’ve been seeing with Jacksonville’s Urban Arts movement. I like that the fine art/design lines are being blurred and that you see a more graphic approach to the arts which, in my opinion, are just beautiful to look at, whether they are leaning more toward the fine art side of things or the graphic side of things—and when those two are combined into one piece and done well, you can’t really beat it, in my opinion. I know a lot of fine artists will disagree with me on this one but my roots are in design and illustration; that’s what I know, so that’s what I’m going to say.
I also know that I’m loving the stuff that I’m seeing on some of the buildings downtown. And the fact that Jacksonville has been mentioned on Wooster Collective a couple of times now is HUGE. I think things like that give our city life—and take away the depressing factor of that building that’s been sitting there for 5 years, abandoned.
I know there are blogs in Jacksonville dedicated to the topic of design vs. fine art, but I’m not sure I’m the right person to talk about it, considering I have a hard time defining my own style! Am I considered a fine artist? I guess I have a hard time considering myself one. It’s hard for me to think that way, because I was trained in design and illustration, so that’s what I call myself. I guess it’s like…I can take pictures but I would never call myself a photographer. I guess the truth of the whole thing is that I think labeling it kind takes away from the fact that it’s a creation. To me, whether it was done solely on canvas, or done with a combination of mediums, one of those including a computer, if it’s done well, that doesn’t really matter.
Do I think some fine artists look down on designers or think they’re sell-outs because they get paid on a regular basis for their craft? Sure. Do I get annoyed when a fine artist tells me that they don’t think you need to go to school for design and then I see a postcard with bad typography that they’ve laid out for one of their shows? Yeah, I do. In that sense, I think there is a division, because good typography isn’t easy and I think a lot of fine artists don’t really appreciate that as a craft of its own.
But like I said, I’m probably not the one to comment on this. I love a lot of fine artists in this town and I love a lot of designers here, and I think what they do is different, but in the end it’s a creation, and whether I respond to it viscerally, intellectually or neither, it is what it is.
5. Thanks for your time Karen. Before you go, please tell us about the upcoming show: DESIGNERS IN TOYLAND. Designers in Toyland is a custom toy show being put on by AIGA Jacksonville and the artists of 229 Hogan. Over 80 artists will be exhibiting toys built from scratch or evolved from existing toys—the point of the show is to come up with your own unique toy creation, whether that’s building a toy from scratch, working off of a blank toy, like a Munny doll or a Mighty Mugg, or combining toys to make something new. If an artist chooses to sell his or her toy at the show, 25% of the profits will go to The Big Fun Box, an organization that provides activity kits to children who are hospitalized frequently and for extended periods. So come join us at December Art Walk at 229 Hogan Street, between 5 and 9 pm. It should be quite a sight to see over 85 unique toys in one space!
Thanks Shea!
Filed under: Events
The block-wide bakesale is to benefit the 5 Points Beautification Project. There will be live music by local favorite Airport Factory and special sales and events to look forward to. The real treat is that at 8:30 there is a cupcake eating contest.
It’s only $4 to enter and there is a cash prize for the winner. E-mail stuffyourfacewithcupcakes@gmail.com to register.















