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Michael Sloan's Portfolios
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CHARACTERS & PLACES
(18 images)
Illustrations featuring my cast of characters (including Professor Nimbus), often in unusual locations. Published by The New York Times, The San Francisco Chronicle, The New Yorker, The Village Voice, and others. Here you'll find artwork illustrating "Cars of the Future", "Notorious Brooklyn Criminals", "Wagner's Ring Cycle", and my version of The New Yorker icon Eustace Tilley playing the lute. |
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EDITORIAL ILLUSTRATION
(20 images)
Illustrations with an emphasis on concepts and a variety of topics. Published by Forbes, NYC Outward Bound, Fortune, U.S. News & World Report, The New Yorker and others. Whether it's a cover or a spot, I love the variety of editorial work. I never know what will cross my plate next. |
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BLACK & WHITE / NY TIMES OP-ED LETTERS
(20 images)
Illustrations published by The New York Times Op-Ed letters column unless otherwise indicated. I love working in black and white so much that I feel these illustrations need their own portfolio. My Op-Ed letters illustrations are created under same-day deadlines, which often brings out the best in my work. |
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PROFESSOR NIMBUS
(12 images)
Selections from my three graphic novels featuring Professor Nimbus. |
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CHILDREN
(10 images)
Illustrations for children's books, CD's and various publications. |
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EWAN MACLEISH PAINTINGS
(17 images)
The secret is out: I've been working on this portfolio of oil and watercolor paintings for several years, using the pseudonym Ewan MacLeish. |
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TRAVEL SKETCHBOOK
(15 images)
Watercolor paintings from my travels in Italy, Hong Kong and mainland China, and the U.S. I love to paint outdoors, and take my sketchbook and paints with me whenever I travel. I create these paintings according to two self-imposed rules: I don't spend more than two hours on any of them, and I never tear them out of my sketchbook. |
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About
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I spent several years working as a printmaker in Paris, France and Venice, Italy. It was during my time in Paris at Atelier 17, the intaglio printmaking shop run by the late Bill Hayter, that I... |
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