Posts Tagged Show & Tell

Show & Tell: Holli & Alex Alvarado’s Children’s Book Illustrations

Hallie and the Spirit of San Clemente cover imageHolli Alvarado is a former Zoic intern, who currently works for the Culver City studio as a matte painter, roto artist and receptionist. Her husband, Alex Alvarado, is a concept artist and a current Zoic intern.

Together they created the illustrations for a children’s book, Hallie and the Spirit of San Clemente, authored by Sandra Marquez Stathis. A former journalist, Stathis was inspired to write the book by a statue of a yellow Labrador retriever located outside a restaurant in San Clemente. The book tells the story of two children who are led on a tour of the history of the Orange County, California coastal town by a magical dog statue.

The Alvarados worked for two months on the project; Alex sketched the illustrations and scanned them into the computer, and then Holli painted them.  They produced 32 illustrations together, and Alex created the cover image on his own.

Images from Hallie and the Spirit of San Clemente with text removed.

More info: “Son’s love of dog statue inspires book” on Orange County Register; Hallie the Dog web site.

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Show & Tell: Leslie Ekker’s Drum Circle

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“Show & Tell” is a series presenting the personal art, crafts, projects and creative endeavors of people in the Zoic Studios community. If you’re a Zoic artist, freelancer or staffer, and want to share your creativity with the IDYE community, let me know!

On the last Saturday of each month, Zoic Studios’ commercial creative director Leslie Ekker organizes the Culver City Drum Circle at Media Park in Culver City.

lesekkerdrum_300x400Ekker explains how he came to create the event:

“I really enjoy hand drumming, and I only normally get to do it when we visit our friends up in Santa Barbara. And so one day I said ‘@#%& it, I’m starting my own drum circle, here in LA,’ in Culver City in fact.

“So I did a quick search online and found there weren’t any [drum circles locally]. There’s the Venice drum circle, and there’s one in Pasadena, maybe one in Long Beach occasionally. They’re either too far, or too weird – the Venice drum circle can get really crazy, and it’s not liked by a lot of drummers, I’m finding out now.

“I found a web site called meetup.com, and I started the drum circle [in May 2008]. The first month I had three people, which is barely enough, and it was freezing cold. The next month I had 10 people, and the next month I had 15, and it’s now averaging about 20 to 25 people. It’s great because I have well over a hundred members and lots of active, regular attendees.

“The location I found for it is really ideal. It’s a park in Culver City that’s one of our oldest parks, with beautiful old trees.” Media Park is located at The Ivy Substation, a 99-seat theatre facility located in the heart of Culver City’s historic downtown. Tim Robbins’ The Actors’ Gang is the resident company. The Ivy Substation was built in 1907 by the Los Angeles Pacific Railway Company, which operated the city’s famous Red Cars. The Ivy was part of the electrical generation and distribution system for the Red Cars.

Ekker collaborates with the businesses surrounding the park, and with the Culver City Redevelopment Agency that operates the park. “They are actually very excited about the event and they support it,” he says.

“Every time we play, someone will drive by on Venice or Culver and hear it, and pull over and walk towards the sound, and find us and sit down and start drumming and join the group. I’ve got several regulars who found us that way. Very interesting people, from every nationality, too – a lot of international people.

“Most of us play the djembe, which is the African hand drum. It’s the most popular hand drum in the world. I have five drums; three djembes, and a dumbek, and a drum that I made as a project. It’s a homemade drum made of cast-off materials — a piece of scrap PVC sewer pipe from my neighborhood, a metal hoop that I bent and welded, a piece of truck tarp for the drum head, and then just some parachute cord for tightening lines. I wanted to develop a drum that could be built by high school students, very cheaply or for free or with donated materials. I’d like to develop a program where high school kids build drums, and then come and join the drum circle with their own drums. There would be no real expenditure; and this gets kids into the community, and gets them to experience group music and some of the African culture that we talk about and practice.

“We also get people who show up to dance, and even sing. People have brought other instruments. It’s all been a wonderfully surprising and connecting community event. It’s becoming something that people actually look forward to. I’ve had people walk by and say ‘oh yeah we come every month.’ In the summertime you see families come and stay in the park and have a picnic with their kids, who will come over and ring bells and shake shakers and drum drums.

“It’s something that’s so rewarding, because people appreciate it so much. And they really want it –they need it in their lives. It’s a way of building community, something that we don’t have a lot of in LA.”

The next Culver City Drum Circle will take place this Saturday, December 26th, at noon, and will last for 3 or 4 hours. For more information about this and future meetings, visit meetup.com.

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Show & Tell: Brooke Brigham’s Custom Bike

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This is the first in a series presenting the personal art, crafts, projects and creative endeavors of people in the Zoic Studios community. If you’re a Zoic artist, freelancer or staffer, and want to share your creativity with the IDYE community, let me know!

Brooke Brigham, Zoic’s Scheduler, has built her first bicycle, from basic parts. She’s been tinkering with bikes for a while.

I built it from the ground up myself, so all the parts came from different places; the frame’s from Santa Cruz; the front rim is from Colorado; the seat and the handlebars are from New York via Japan. I built the whole thing myself so I’m just really proud of it. That’s what makes it cool – I used my hands.

It has no brakes, and Brooke uses the bike to commute to work. She says this isn’t a problem:

You usually skid — you use your feet and your legs to put pressure down on the pedals, and that‘ll usually lock up the back wheel a bit, because you’re locking up the crank and the cog. But I haven’t had any run-ins where I have to stop on a dime yet.

Brooke is particularly fond of “Bob’s” (that’s the bike’s name) color scheme (red, yellow and green), which is intentionally “Rasta,” although her friends call it the “Christmas Bike.”

Bicycles are extremely popular at Zoic. Many employees bike to work — Creative Director Jeff Suhy is an avid cyclist, and Executive Producer Erik Press participates in the Fireflies West charity ride from San Francisco to Los Angeles.

More info: Brooke at Halloween on Flickr.

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