In the second pass at the Orlando Shakespeare Theater poster for Henry VI Part 2: She Wolf of France, I removed the mail hood that made her had look cylindrical. If I wanted to make it clear this warrior was a woman, I needed to let her hair flow. The armor was changed to me nor angular and chiseled in look. Putting a sharp edge across the chest made it clear that a woman’s anatomy would fit and it also added a hint of pride.
I wanted to go in and start cleaning up and adding detail to the face and hair, but I had all the other poster changes to make as well. Sometimes I have a second sense about leaving well enough alone. In this approval meeting I learned that the lead actress who would be playing the part of Queen Margaret would be Roberta Emerson, who looked nothing like the woman I was depicting. Luckily she had performed in other Shakespeare productions and I was given some reference photos which were rather good. There was even one where she was shouting in the way I was depicting in this version of the poster.
Everything else was working. I had changed all aspects of the armor making it much shinier. I was glad I didn’t get caught up in the details of the face and hair. All that Information was on one layer in my digital painting program and I could just turn it off without affecting any other aspect of the painting. If I was working traditionally, I would have to start the whole painting over again.
In these versions of the poster I am showing I just flip on new layers and flip off old layers that needed changing. If a choice is made to go back to an older version, I always have that choice. I often borrow elements from rejected layers and incorporate them into the upper layer that is working better. This allows me to keep the painting constantly evolving and the best always rises to the surface.
I just needed to go back to the drawing board and put in Robeta Emerson as the Queen Margaret. I had abandoned the crown but started to feet that it was needed again.
Orlando Shakes performed “Bare Bard: Henry VI Part 2 – She Wolf of France” from January 8-19, 2025, at the Lowndes Shakespeare Center in Orlando. This “Bare Bard” production featured the, original-practices used in Shakespeare’s day with limited rehearsals and no director. Each actor would walk through the costume shop in turn and pick out their costume for the show.


The final version of the Orlando Shakespeare Theater poster for Becoming Othello focused on the actress, Debra Ann Byrd playing the male lead in the Shakespeare play. The poster became all about the bright white tunic against the dark background. I added gothic architecture in the background. Since the play is about the “Black Girl’s Journey”, I felt the need to show the actress as a woman, so an inset was added.
I have been moving from AirBnB to AirBnB in downtown Orlando to get a feel for where I might set up my art studio again. I have been living out of my backpack ever since returning from Europe. I loved Thornton Park. I stayed in two places in Thornton Park, and my favorite was above a barber shop a few blocks from Lake Eola and right across the street from the Falcon Bar. From the studio window I could look over Lake Eola toward the skyline in the west to see gorgeous sunsets.
The sketch is from a duplex on Lake Formosa that I visited yesterday. It is just 700 square feet with a bedroom and living room which would be my studio. The view out of the sliding glass doors looks out over Lake Formosa. The car port is a plus. I drew a floor plan to see if my studio flat files and Disney desk could fit. It is tight but I can fit in the space. The duplex neighbor has a fiberglass Lizard in the front lawn which I rather like.
The first pass at creating a poster for Becoming Othello for the Orlando Shakespeare Theater involved a simple split screen portrait. On the left the actress smiles in a warm inviting portrait and on the right she is depicted in a severe cold portrait as the murderous Othello. Debra Ann Byrd is a female actress who embraces playing the male lead in Shakespeare’s Othello. This play is about that journey. Debra wrote and performed this solo show.
Yesterday was the first time I heard of the Hantavirus. Passengers on a cruise ship off the western coast of Africa are becoming infected. This triggers flashbacks to the early days of the
For my second pass at the Venus in Fur poster, I decided to focus on the tight shiny leather glove as the dominatrix raised a finger to her lips to insist on silence. I imagined her saying Shhhh. I was thinking of a woman who might say, “Hey, I’m up here.” Meaning the guy is not looking where he should. Anyway, she is scolding the director.
With the first pass at a poster for Venus in Fur by David Ives, for the Orlando Shakes, I was intrigued by the intricate detail of fish net stockings. Much of the image features hills and valleys of flesh covered in fishnet. I decided that was too abstract an idea to dominate so much of the poster, so I added the legs and whip to make it clear fishnet stockings are found on shapely legs. Then I added the reclined female odalisque whose outline is defined by the flow of the whip. Then of course plenty of black fur was needed. It was a strange combination of thoughts, but it has the visual feeling that I wanted.