Save the date(s) The Art of Politics is back for its 5th year, September 26, 2025. More information available.
Nestled in the Factory Arts District in the Schweitzer Gallery, 1125 Brookside Avenue, 60 posters will be on display and up for an auction to support non-profit organizations. Music (DJ Rusty Redenbacher), beer, wine, and Shapiro’s deli desserts.
Wether you like art or an artist, this is always an interesting show. It’s not too late to participate, email lars@timberjackgoods.com
Based on an email (See below) sent today, it’s time to part ways with a printing vendor, Sticker Mule. I assume everyone in their privacy supports whomever they want to, but to use their email platform about hate is wrong – I didn’t sign up for political opinions, it was for product information. I thought companies knew that CUSTOMERS have relationships based on the promises of interaction of BUSINESS, not politics. I even thought it was graphically odd for the company with a mule to be supporting trump. I made Sticker Mule two new logos and a new name that might benefit their new and transparent political alignment. Just when you think it might be an above-board discussion and respectful allegiance, there was a crazy tweet (see below) When does stop the hate meaning calling someone an a$$hole? Really Anthony? Check yourself! You’re too deep in your own hate.
– – – – – Email from Anthony Constantino – – – – – – Hi Jerry,
Donald Trump was shot.
I don’t care what your political views are but the hate for Trump and his supporters has gone too far. People are terrified to admit they support Trump. I’ve been scared myself.Americans shouldn’t live in fear. I support Trump. Many at Sticker Mule do. Many at Sticker Mule also support Biden. The political hate needs to stop. Hopefully this email helps.
I suggest buying one that shows you support Trump. The more people realize that millions of kind-hearted, compassionate people support Trump, the sooner the hate will end. Awesome people, all over the world, love Trump. Don’t limit your friendships and diminish your happiness by indulging in political hate.
OVERALL: Not the actual name of the card, but towards the end of the AI Imagery section, it became clear the name should have been something besides Syr Velasco, Waypoint Advisor. This card is from the UX Design series called ‘UX Directionals’. This is the non-spicy kinda moppy me version. No sexy armor, just a dude in a hood peddling his credentials. I didn’t note this earlier, but the ‘leave behind’ series also is differentiated by my logo where magic ‘faction’ watermark resides on normal Magic cards. My logo on a green background is on the back (see image below).
(NEW) AI IMAGERY: When the AI tool first showed me this image, I was totally thinking it was not selling point to show some dude in a rain-poncho with a sign. Something stuck about how plain and lackluster the image was. This was the very lowest G version of all the imagery – no fashionable sexy combat armor – no boob-armor adorned warlock characters at all. – Just a dude in a hand-made unadorned rain poncho holding a QR code sign pointing with an arrow at his sorry self in the middle of dark and dank forest. If any image represented me visually in my quest for employment, it would be this image. The AI put another X in UX which I found kinda cute and stupid at the same time – like my current situation…cute and stupid. In hindsight, that should have been the name of the card….’Cute and Stupid’ … lol. There is a UXX which is the User Experience Experience which focuses on UX practitioners and how there life and experience is viewed.
In any art show where works are displayed, it’s essential to provide background information about the piece you’re viewing. A statement adds depth to the viewer’s understanding, enabling them to suspend or support their judgment more effectively.
Before you form judgments based on the media frenzy surrounding AI and AI generative imagery (AIGI) creation, I urge you to hear me out. I’ve thoroughly considered the subject and its role in my work and have taken great care to explain it below. I meant for this post to be a short post, but its gotten longer and I can’t seem to disconnect all the logic and writing without removing deep meaning to it all.
BEFORE MY PIECE: I had judged AIGI as negative and damaging to the arts and looked away and ignored AIGI. I also believed algorithms could NOT create imagery that competes with human artwork.
RESEARCH & INPUTS: It was clear I was going to need to explore the current status of AIGI. Besides reading a large amount of articles, I joined two opposing Facebook groups on AIGI to see what people in communities are saying.
1) One group was pro-AIGI and its channel is devoted to people who talk less and produce more. A lot of the posts are amazing and beautiful images, “AI Revolution – MidJourney AI, DALL-E 2, Stable Diffusion” – This group has 234k members. There is not any writing as much as showing images created by AIGI.
2) The other group, “Artists Against Generative AI ” which frequently post anti-AIGI content – This group has 98.4k members. I have learned a lot from both groups. One pushes hard and demonstrates work produced by AI and the other group tears down the AI and post real-world damage to artists and art.
HOW DOES AIGI WORK? I didn’t conduct deep research in this area but I’m sure its the image sampling inputs at the heart of controversy. (See image below)
RESEARCHING SOFTWARE: I was going to need to play with AIGI and see what it was all about. How are others making imagery? What software or online platforms do I use? Is it free or does it cost money? How much does it cost. I’m not going to pay for something I don’t understand or can see what it can do. I can’t do explore without a project or parameters and I didn’t want to read about it and regurgitate what I read from other people. This subject will most likely be its own post eventually.
PLANNING: To give my project a personal stake, I had to make it close to home and fun. Being a huge Magic the Gathering nerd, I decided to set the magic card as the format. Each card has art and text – it’s going to perfect. I also have a secret dream to be a magic card creator. (I took a test to become an intern for Wizards of the Coast and didn’t make it in. Out of 2000 test applicants, 2 people had perfect scores – Good bye dream!) To make it personal, I needed a reason for each card. I had some thinking to consider – Should I make one large format card? or should I make several actual cards? After some experimentation and testing, I decided to make cards based on my attributes in life. That went far, but it wasn’t enough since our lives are shaped by other people in our lives. – I began to widen the scope by adding other people as card stories. How many cards make a great story?
MY ROLE: Since I’m not producing the images or the text but I am directing someone/something else to produce work, My role was similar to an Art Director more than a singular artist. I was instructing others what and how to write / illustrate based on my project parameters.
CARD TEXT & STRUCTURE: Each card would be considered a ‘story block’. I first made a listing of 30+ card ideas knowing many of them will not make into the piece. I started with the basics, Title, Color type, Card attributes, flavor text and imagery description. (see Magic Card attributes) I chose the title and asked ChatGPT to write the flavor text. Sometimes the writing didn’t support the title and I re-wrote the title to focus the output text. I learned a lot about ChatGPT. I was really surprised that ChatGPT even knew what flavor-text on a magic card was. I asked for writing several times, once I was satisfied with the text, I moved on to image creation. Below is the text for card #4 or “Jerry, the Grower of Things.”
IMAGE CREATION & TRASH: After researching all the free AIGI applications, I found one that would produce imagery that looked professional, not photographic and somewhat illustrative in nature. This is where I learned about prompting the AIGI software. Prompting is similar to coding but regular English words – I am still not a master but I could get images to be produced to my liking. After producing 50-100 images, I would rank every image based on detail, imagery and composition. Every final image in each card took the making of 60+ images unusable for various odd reasons. Some images didn’t complete due to rules of imagery.
SURPRISE & FASCINATION: While on each prompting expedition, my goal was to be looking for the closest output of my prompts. I was also having fun in some regards to how the software would interpret some of my prompts and show me images that were actually better directions than the one I was pushing for. One day I will share the trash but that is another post or another piece to produce?
GRAPHIC PRODUCTION: Now that I had all the building blocks, I still had to assemble the card (See Attributes) and some details that I didn’t plan for that make a magic card a real magic card. Each card needed to look like a legitimate and playable magic card.
FINAL CARD WORK: Below is the final version of ‘Jerry, Grower of Things’ 4 of 28 cards. Now you have seen 1/28th of the final piece.
LAST THOUGHTS: Not sure how my piece would be accepted by other ‘artists’ at the one piece show. My assumptions were: 1) I expected was other artists at the show to hate my work since it was using AIGI. 2) I also thought some people might feel left out from my story. I only had 28 cards, I definitely have more than 28 people to include in the piece. In the end, I was exploring within a timeline and was probably sloppy and insensitive to leave out people are in my life and should be in the piece. What could go wrong? One person did speak up – my wife. I hurt my wife badly for not having her as a card in my show. It hurt me that she would take to heart and be hurt so deep. I love my wife so much – she is the grounding element of love in my life – It was not my intent to hurt anyone, especially her. I hope to find a way to fix this in both our hearts.
The opening night was well attended by friends and family to see some of the best Indianapolis local work. I was greeted by ‘the’ Dean Johnson (Scott Johnson and Bruce Dean) I conversed with many friends not seen since last years one piece show. Ultimately, the night went well. Thanks goes out to Centerpoint Brewery who donated beverages for the night.
The show was originally scheduled for end of May but due to another showing cancelling, this show will run an additional month, June 30th.
Where is my piece? It’s noted by the red arrow in the above photo. If you come into the CCIC Schwitzer Gallery turn right and follow the wall. I typically don’t reveal my work until the first week running of the show. I will start dropping hints and clues.
ONLY AVAILABLE MAY 3rd: Each year, I expand the range of merchandise available for production. Last year it was direct-to-fabric shirt imagery. This year, in addition to shirts, (Shirt will be shown in its own post) we’re introducing temporary tattoos. While shirts won’t be available at the event, 7 temporary tattoos will be available. We conducted a test run of 10, keeping one for ourselves, gifting one, and reserving another for the Get Lost writer and author. The only rule is that you must apply and wear it tonight at the One Show event.
List of Free Temp Tattoos: (last update 3/3 – 2:35pm) 01 – Test used up a week ago 02 – Given as gift 03 – [saved for Get Lost Indiana] 04 – [Dawn Simpson] 05 – [Dave Scout] 06 – [Bill Clever] 07 – [Carrie Shappe] 08 – [Glen Willington] 03 – [Stephen Aureburro] 03 – [Kate Kembrook]
If you want a temporary tattoo for tonight, send me an email and see me at the beginning of the show tonight.
Last years return of The One Piece Show, after more than a decade on hiatus, was a resounding success in the local art community. We heard one common refrain — “You gotta do this again!”
We heard you. Join us on First Friday, May 3, at Schwitzer Gallery in the CCIC. Bruce Dean and Scott Johnson are hosting this iconic group show featuring works by their artist friends and colleagues. The show will feature one work from each of more than 40 local artists. Artworks will include paintings, prints, photography, ceramics, sculpture, glass art, and more.
The One Piece Show May 3 – 29, 2024 Artist Reception First Friday, May 3, 2024 from 6 – 9 p.m. Schwitzer Gallery at Circle City Industrial Complex (CCIC)
March 7, 2023: The one piece show should be in its first week. Other artists are revealing their work online in social platforms. I guess I’ll jump in and show mine. Below is the full image detail of my work.
Obviously, each artist can only have a single artwork piece for the show. I had created a bit more work which cannot be added to the show. It made sense to place the details of the extra work on my website.
The main piece: Size: 30×30″ Medium: Giclee print (Heartland Printworks) Framed: Black metal, Non-glare glass Price: $450 (No shipping – Piece must remain at the CICC until exhibit is complete) Sold: No Viewable Location: At the Event location, CICC
The mini piece: (see below) Size: 10×10″ Medium: Giclee print (Heartland Printworks) Framed: Black Metal, Non-glare glass Price: $175 (Only available to Indianapolis area – Sorry no mailing) Sold: No Viewable Location: Online here (see image below) (Email with intent to buy at jerryvelasco@gmail.com, first come first serve)
T-shirt Variants (see below) Size: Large Price: $45 for each shirt (Delivery in the US only) Sold: Orange No, Blue No, Black 3: No, Black 4: No Medium: Silk-Screen, short-run (StickerMule.com) Viewable Location: Online here (see image below) (Email with intent to buy at jerryvelasco@gmail.com, first come first serve)