




CLIENT: Royal Court Theatre
CREATIVE DIRECTOR: Gail Anderson
PHOTOGRAPHY: Johan Persson
Posters
CLICK IMAGE TO SEE THE POSTER FLIPPED————
This is the poster I made from a desire to just draw some type without sketching first. (See post below) I did this diptych first because I am a mountain person and my wife is a beach person. Now the poster is complete with type and the ability to turn it to which ever side you like better.











Creating the art for the revival of Pal Joey on Broadway was a very fun and challenging project. This was the first key art that I created at SpotCo. I documented the progress of the project from thumbnail sketches to pictures of the art around NYC.
Click the image to see the progression of how this art was created. I am in the middle of several other posters so stay tuned for updates!
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CLIENT: Roundabout Theatre Company
DATE: July 2008
CREATIVE DIRECTOR: Gail Anderson
PHOTOGRAPHY: Len Prince
ILLUSTRATION: Robert Kolb


My good friend, Dylan Sneed, bids his farewell to Texas at the end of August in pursuit of his personal legend. He will be moving to Hartsville, South Carolina making music and becoming even awesomer than he already is. My congratulations to Dylan as he makes this bold move. He is commemorating the move with an eastern US tour called TEXODUS. I was happy to do the poster for this event.


Is it a tiny car or a huge ant? That is the question that is evoked from the imagery on this concert poster. The songwriter seeks to find new ways of looking at things in life and he expresses these ideas in his songs. This poster promoted his cd release concert for the fresh ep, No Worse For The Wear.


CLIENT: The Labyrinth Theatre
DATE: July 2005
This powerful, two person play was an account of actual events experienced by the playwright, Ann Nelson. In speaking with her about the concept that the poster should communicate, she said that doing this show now, several years after 9/11, is meant to express the beauty of moving through tragedy. This touching account of a fire captain visiting a writer to help him write eulogies for the men he lost in the 9/11 tragedy, shows the audience just how personal this event was. The two actors act out a beautiful metaphor in the middle of the show by doing a tango, which was the main inspiration for the imagery of the poster.




