HOW I BECAME A WIZARD (LEVEL 23, CHAOTIC GOOD) OR TO DEATH AND BACK AGAIN

Originally performed at The Unfamiliars scratch lab in Colchester 2018

 

Monster Rave unit: Rev Wright DJ & Seeds MC

Here I am, djing on the club night I hosted back in 2012, Skank Sabbath. This was the year of smashing the dancefloor with Seeds as MC, and a set of Nu Jungle and 140bpm breakbeat. I had been a DJ since 1989, playing major London clubs, UK festivals and European parties. The year kicked off with my 40th birthday event, in February, little did I know what would follow over the next 6 years. Skank Sabbath, Monster Rave and 2013 will get a blog post of its own, for now here’s a taste.

Three of Swords, Free Art magazine issue One cover

In April I collaborated with some like minded folk on putting free art into the hands of the general public. The ‘3 of Swords’ was born as a way to promote local artists across a range of mediums, to connect with an audience. The magazines were distributed in clubs, shops and cafes, all independent outlets, to encourage better foot fall.

The first issue cover featured a collage of the Colchester Town Hall and a pagan fire ceremony.

A veiled act of magick, dubbed the tarot card the 3 of swords, it was two fingers at the mediocre and banal atmosphere that had settled in Essex. A cultural Molotov, that burnt brightly, lit some fires, and opened some minds.

Halloween. or preferably Samhain (31st Oct - 2nd Nov) 2012 became a focus of several magickal acts and rituals. A conscious desire to push the envelope, mixing performance art with the occult. An endeavour to reclaim my imagination and become an artist proper. I’d secretly always been a frustrated sculptor and this energy drove me to filmmaking. This photo shows me in my guise of Rev. Wright of the Worldwide church of Agnostics, Hyperstitional Hex Historian, a persona with Discordian tendencies. Rev Wright would host a screening of The Exorcist at St. Martins church, privately open a magick circle at home with a friend and conduct divination. Hope is received.

Mr Bill Drummond as The Street Sweeper holding a copy of 3 of Swords

The third act over Samhain was to attend Bill Drummond’s performance at the Minories gallery, Colchester. The talk was entitled ‘How I became a Superhero’, which intrigued me. What if superheroes are the new gods of today? Then if Mr Drummond considered himself a god, and as a hero of mine, he deserved an offering. I duly attended the evening as Rev. Wright along with a doctor’s case containing 20 or so issues of the 3 of Swords.

After his talk I joined the back of the book signing queue. The person in front of me left the table, I stepped towards Bill, my god.

The performance took place as described below

Rev Wright gains eye contact with Mr Drummond, whilst placing his case onto the table between the two men. Mr Drummond, looks slightly puzzled but game.

Mr Drummond, would you accept the contents of this case, for a copy of your book?’ asked Rev Wright

Mr Drummond - ‘Yes

Bill then deftly opened the bag, withdrew the previously unseen magazines, and replaced them with a copy of his book. closing the case

Taking him by the hand, Rev Wright thanked Mr Drummond and walked away from the table.

The book I received through this act, was ‘100’, one hundred questions that Bill had answered over the years. The first use of it for bibliomancy (divination by book) revealed a question about the nature of art. Bill’s in depth answer caused me to reflect on my own participation in the art world. Why do I promote others above myself? What was I scared of?

A week later, whilst sat at the dining table, I became aware that I could see a classic lions cage around me. In my minds eye the vertical bars present and I could sense the confinement. I engaged with the vision, as a spontaneous act of magick, acting out opening the cage door, and stepping outside.

The Fool and the key

Gathering my myself, the apparition still present, I recalled there being an old key knocking around the house and thought I should lock the cage, so I could never re-enter. I knew, without consideration, that this sign was a representation of my self imposed limiting thoughts, manifest. That this immediate act of sorcery was true liberation, the result of previous rituals and acts. The magick was working. Thanks Bill

The genius Arthur Rackham’s Freya

I began a more overt magickal operation again, something that I had been slowly getting back into as a regular practice, building an altar and using it daily. The initial invocations of the ‘universe’, began to lead to an appreciation of the Northern Pantheon. I had bought a lovely bronze Mjölnir (Thor’s hammer) and runes were still a core symbol system for my magick, especially charms and candles. Through this practice I began to identify the need to connect with the divine feminine, and I built a bedside shrine to Freya, using art by Arthur Rackham, to achieve this.

Shortly afterwards Claire came into my life on the Winter Solstice, through a series of synchronicities, my Freya manifest. We have been together ever since the transition of the 2012 Mayan epoch. She would be vital to this tale.

The Reverend goes to church in the new year of 2013 with a show on the web based Four Aces Radio, every Sunday for 2 hours or more. Oh boy, what did I just commit to, a weekly music show as Rev Wright. It will receive a post in greater detail in the near future. The show gave me a voice, a form of expression, a platform, I was putting myself out there. I held interviews, randomly themed shows and let it all hang out. Below is an early example of the show.

Rev Wright’s Sunday Service ran until 27th April 2014, with the final show becoming a call out to a fine collaborator in the midst of chronic injustice. Everything got heavy. This period was intense, with the fall out of denying disordered folk their gain. The power of the word ‘No’ is devastating, it can start wars and it can start freedoms.

Soul Sigil

8th July 2015 is the birth date of the Soul Sigil, an intricate star design made up from runes combined and digitally designed to express a desire for love and compassion. It was a further evolution of my use of Photoshop to manipulate and develop sigil design. The early digital designs was used for a ritual performance at the Waiting Room, Voices in the Dark, a scratch lab by Renegade (Gari Jones) on 12th January 2014. The Soul Sigil design would resurface the following year.

Shrine? check, ritual? check, soul sigil? check and Will Wright proxy? check

April 2016 sees the filming of Servants for the band So Called Humans, the outcome of many pre-production meetings with Ed Sykes, who would work closely with me on the music video. I had shot a previous video for the group, but this was to be something different, Ed and I were keen to make art, to experiment and to put personal magick and esoteric symbology within the piece.

When directors go wild, on location for filming Servants music video

It was around this time that it became clear that my ballooning to 25 stone in weight whilst battling to help my kids, and wrestle with my demons, was having a massive impact on my health. I was in constant pain, struggling to walk and diagnosed with Diabetes.

As pictured, the shoot for Servants was a hugely enjoyable break from the struggles. The creative process brought relief, aided healing and nurturing. It was also the beginning of one of the most transformational acts so far.

It became apparent that the 4K video footage we had shot and multiple effects I was trying to apply, was causing my editing PC to fall over. Render times were ridiculous, slowing the edit process to a crawl. I decided to build a new computer, with all the knowledge and expertise I had developed putting together edit rigs over the years. The custom watercooled behemoth, MIMIR, was born.

MIMIR, custom water cooled super PC

I was fascinated by the role of the headless giant MIMIR, from the Northern Tradition. He was teacher to Odin/Woden who famously lost his head and continued to provide advice and insight. This machine would be a tribute to him, as I required inspiration and support during the edit process.

Editing entered a hiatus at the end of 2016, brought on by the continued health battles and struggles with work. I had lost focus, everything was a blur

MIMIR is Justified and Ancient

Wizards at work, The Killing Joke

3rd November 2017, the So Called Humans support Killing Joke at the Colchester Arts Centre. The gig is sold out and at the last minute Ed arranges a guest list space for me. A powerful night, with the songs Love Like Blood and The Eighties hitting me like a divine force. Something shifted in me, not that I could acknowledge at the time, but this act of magickal sermon, delivered by Jaz Coleman, was doing something. A few days afterwards, whilst struggling to concentrate on my magickal practice a message came through loud and clear.

The secrets of the Universe will be revealed to you in good time.
— Spirit

Ed Sykes helped drag me through the rabbit hole, as 2017 began, both of us falling into the art. Edit sessions resumed, with us working closely together, to discover the video hidden in the footage. Tarot reads, hugs and tears would ensue. The post production process had become a process in mutual healing and discovery. Revealing truth and vulnerability as we navigated the form and structure of the music video, as it emerged.

April Fools Day 2017, Super Weird Happening, a 14 hour Discordian event in Liverpool. Alan Moore would be present, and after seeing a talk of his years before, I was inspired to found Slack Space arts collective, I thought this too good an opportunity to miss so Claire and I drove up from Essex, staying in a dreadful AirBnB.

Oh, and I brought a bag of magic mushrooms with me.

‘One gram of liberty caps will be gentle’ I said, ‘Giggly and spacey would be the effects’ I said. Nope, it turns out that it was a lot stronger than that, and led the pair of us on a Don Juanesque journey of self discovery. Mine was acknowledgement of Social Anxiety. People freaked me out. I also got to shake hands with and meet Alan Moore. It felt like an important act, one might consider magickal. Yet another hero.

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A bunch of weirdos, my kind of people.

Youth (member of The Killing Joke), pictured above, was to interview Mr Moore, just as our dose was beginning to wear off. It was everything I expected, inspiring, a call to magickal creative arms. To boldly go over the top and fight the good cause. Not to desire anything from the work, the work was all that was needed. I took this back to Colchester with me. Below is a recording of that interview

The night after our return, I had a very powerful and disturbing phenomenon take place. I entered a form of trance, my mind raced, being shown hidden childhood abuse, whilst my body shook and tremored. It felt as if I was physically processing trauma, that I had been finally allowed to remember. Like every gasp and held breath was allowed to be released. I took this to be Seidh, the trance practice recorded in the Eddas. Deeply profound.

The video to Servants was completed and posted to the web on the Summer Solstice of 2017, over 18 months since its inception. The Magus Opus, the great work of magick that Ed and I had promised ourselves. But the spell had still yet to take its true effect. My magickal practice had begun to point the way to a psychedelic truth within the Northern Tradition, that Odin/Woden was a title, rather than a name, that the tree he hung from was the nervous system, and the death he undertook, was that of the ego. I knew what I had to do, The Heroic Dose, but when?

I sought advice in a solitary ritual in the woods, loud and clear came the message, it would be the 22nd August 2017. The day after the Eclipse and the day before the return of the KLF, at their happening.

Saint Mckenna

The artist’s task is to save the soul of mankind; and anything less is a dithering while Rome burns. Because of the artists, who are self-selected, for being able to journey into the Other, if the artists cannot find the way, then the way cannot be found.
— Terence Mckenna

I felt like I was walking to the electric chair, into an unknown far more terrifying than I had ever thought. Claire was my support, helping to set the scene and frame the act in ritual, to build a hand rail on which I could guide my journey and make sense of what I as about to do. Candles were lit, affirmations sounded, circle opened and I was smudged. I had completed a PhD’s worth of reading to prepare myself, hours spent listening to the words of Terence Mckenna, advocate and pyschonaut of the fungal experience.

The shaman is not merely a sick man, or a madman; he is a sick man who has healed himself.
— Terence Mckenna

Instantly my life long suicidal ideation was gone, I had traveled to where our ancestors had been, met non local intelligences we had long forgotten and received information that still pours into my work. I had been initiated into the Northern Mysteries. Much of what I had struggled to understand within books on magick became clear, although all the reading had not truly prepared me for what I would experience. Those writers that do not know, are easily identified, now.

I had become a wizard. Everything Terence Mckenna said is true.

It’s best not to sugarcoat this: the most effective route to becoming invincible is to take a high dose of psychedelics in a suitable ritual environment.
— Gordon White, The Chaos Protocols

In the years since the initiation I have been even more conspicuous with my practice, leading ceremonies with friends, forwarding a career as an artist and further developing techniques within my practice. Looking back on events leading up to it, it’s clear how everything fits unconsciously together. while I was stumbling at the time. Now, I see how crammed Servants was with iconography and symbols of what would happen. Led by the Soul Sigil, guided through a portal into another dimension. Facing ego death. Follow the Crow.

A Wyrd year

Most can agree that 2021 was one hell of an ‘annus horribilis’ and when things get strange esoteric folk get Wyrd. As outlined in the previous blog post, Claire and I undertook the goal of documenting our spiritual and artistic practice, and a zine was born.

Four issues later we had published a range of contemporary art and articles covering a broad range of topics concerning magick. The books are to be considered a programme or schedule for initiation upon the path to enlightenment with each cover pertaining to a phase of the Great Work.

Black - The soil of the soul that needs to be reconciled, death is accepted and initiation has begun. We must know ourselves and through this resolve the lingering issues of our Earthly identity.

White - This is the light of awareness and a sense of presence in the here and now enters our consciousness.

Red - The brilliance of awareness and presence becomes a permanent state of consciousness.

Gold - Love abounds


A5 zine, 48 pages, perfect bound and printed on recycled paper

100 copies of 3rd printing of Spring Equinox issue

Out for Birthday of Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa 14th Sept 2021

Featuring..

Wyrd - insight into contemporary shamanism

Handrunes - an Elder Futhark rune technique using your digits

Yggdrasil: The Universe Inside- exploring modern visionary art of the world tree

Mr Punch - toy photography of the Lord of Misrule

Trance Visions - exclusive art and insight into a modern Seidh practice

Banishings and the Northern Perspective - use of this ritual within the Northern Mysteries

Wyrd Basics - a guide to meditation

AND LOTS OF FULL COLOUR ART


A5 zine, 68 pages, full colour printing on recycled silk paper, perfect bound.

Publishing art and articles of contemporary shamanism, occult and high strangeness.

Release date February 2021

Featuring:

Futhark font by Will Wright. A Graffiti inspired rune font for the Elder Futhark.

Handrunes pt2 by Magnus Stokoe. More ideas and techniques for this finger magick.

Rave & Ritual by Will Wright. Dance, trance and the occult, explorations of past experiences and ideas for the future.

Visonary art of Tefnut by Claire Wyldheart. Devotional doll photography of the custom Barbie depicting the lioness headed deity encounter in trance.

Mr Punch & Friends. Further adventures of the Lord of Misrule and his folklore companions

Wyrd Basics: Exercise of Will

and more


A5 zine, 68 pages, full colour printing on recycled silk paper, perfect bound.

Publishing art and articles of contemporary shamanism, occult and high strangeness.

Release date New Moon 6th October 2021

Contents -

Will Wright - Inside Out: delving into the concept of boundaries, shamanism and the Elder Futhark. Illustrated by Brad Robert Benford

Magnus Stokoe - provides insight into his magickal practice over the last 18 months.

Will Wright - Talks about the meaning of his art toys the Grebo Gods, 21st century idolatry.

Claire Wyldheart - presents her doll photography of Hel and her encounter with the goddess.

Art by Christian Hauth

Mr Punch & Friends

Wyrd basics - Imagination as perception.

All slathered with art and more


A5 zine, 76 pages, full colour printing on recycled silk paper, perfect bound. MATURE CONTENT

Publishing art and articles of contemporary shamanism, occult and high strangeness.

Release date February 2022

Featuring:

MIMIR by Will Wright. Explores the relationship between Jotun and Neanderthals

Becoming a Sacred Smith by Magnus Stokoe. Sharing his spiritual practice surrounding smithing and jewellery making.

Seidh: Freya's secret by Wyldheart & Wright. Looking at the role of female orgasm and trance work. Illustrated by Brad Robert Benford.

Trance Visions by Claire Wyldheart. The mushroom god appears.

Mr Punch & Friends

The Lucky Star: Claire Wyldheart.

Wyrd basics: Love

Vinyl Hunter: Record Stores

beginning in 2015 Vinyl Hunter in Bury St Edmunds has established itself up as a formidable independent record store, that has gained much acclaim and grown to occupy three locations. Vinyl Hunter Essex near Colchester and Vinyl Hunter at the Avalon Cafe in Bermondsey London.

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Known regionally for serving coffee and dope on wax, Will set up the business to provide a quality selection of new tunes across a broad range of genres, as well as an extensive catalogue of secondhand records. Over the last decade there has been a continuous rise in the production and sale of vinyl records, whilst conversely there has been a decrease in retail outlets. Although, like myself, its been progressed by online retailers, there is something special about visiting a record store and being hit by the cover art on display.

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Vinyl Hunter has become an outlet for my art work, where they have been displaying framed prints across all the stores. Below are examples of what is currently available to buy.

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Get ya arse down to a store, grab a coffee, some tunes and some great art. Check out Vinyl Hunter’s website by clicking the pic below.

Bind Runes

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The Bluetooth logo is a fine example of a bind rune, used as a signature, common among Anglo Saxon artisans.

Bind runes are a type of magick created using a combination of two runes to form a single symbol. The meaning of each rune unite to create a specific intent.

For my bind runes I use my own futhark font, designed to resist the connotations of the far right and 20th century distortions. My combinations of runes and colour create powerful designs that embody a 21st century aesthetic

 

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This bind rune is a combination of Gyfu (Gebo) and Wynn (Wunjo) and represents a loving relationship.

Gyfu means gift and we still use the cross as kisses in a greeting card or message. Whilst Wynn represent joy and happiness. Through a combination of these two runes we can ascribe the gift of love.


This bind rune evokes Shielding, using a combination of Elhaz (Algiz) and Aethal (Odal).

Elhaz is often attributed the meaning of protection and evoked for this, whilst Aethal is connected to the boundaries of the homestead.

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Tiw (Tir) and Mann (Mannaz) are combined in this bind rune to create Justice.

Tiw connotes Tiw (Tyr) the sky god, main deity of the Western Germanic peoples. The symbol of the upright arrow is evoked to call upon him. In folklore he loses his hand binding Fenris, the giant wolf, as an honourable act of courage and justice. Mann symbolises people, humankind, and their relations.


Here is a unique combination creating a bind rune that offers freedom using Thorn (Thurisaz) and Cen (Kenaz).

Thorn is linked to penetration, opening barriers and boundaries, whilst Cen is linked to fire and knowledge, where its light illuminates in darkness. Combined I create an intent of mental and physical freedom and liberty.

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The final bind rune is made from Gera (Jera) and Daeg (Dagaz), both runes about the time, thus a symbol of progression.

Gera means year and follows the seasons involved with farming, the growth of crops and the time of harvest, whilst Daeg means day and refers to the cycles of the sun and moon. These runes to me represent the progress of time and positive aspects of this.


 

I’ve made these designs available on t-shirts so that you can bring their power into your life.

 

Folk Graff: an explanation

Folk Graff is a term I've applied to the majority of my art that features spray paint, stenciling, animal totems, runes and psychedelic tribal patterning. In my mind it is an amalgamation of Neolithic cave art, Bronze age motifs and Iron Age runes, combined with a modern urban aesthetic of aerosol, paint pen, stencil, drip paint and airbrush. It is bridging a cultural gap, stitching the knowledge of my ancestors and ancient past into a contemporary form of expression.

My interest in Iron Age cultures, such as the Celts, Anglo Saxons and Norse stems from Junior School, being taught about Boudica's uprising and raising of Colchester, my home town. I've continued, on and off, my own research and study since then, recently tracing Northern European spirituality back through Bronze Age Hittite culture and as far back as Gobekli Tepe, 12000 BCE. It is now my desire to express these discoveries through the creation of modern artifacts, for the continuation of tradition broken by the influence of organised religion.

MIMIR: lino print

MIMIR: lino print

My experience of working with and engaging in an active spiritual practice based on my findings has led to a philosophy more akin to Buddhism and Shamanism, than the aggressive and bloody heathen rites often presented in the media and practiced by the bravado. What is discovered is a primal narrative of altered consciousness, discourses with a living universe, evidence of cultural exchange with our hominid cousins and a path of enlightenment that unites all ancient peoples.

Subway Art

Subway Art

1984 sees the release of the book Subway Art, filled with photographs documenting the aerosol paintings on the New York City trains, an emerging graffiti movement that took fire in our child minds. It became the most thumbed book in the school library. This led to a couple of years of designing, painting and running, until girls became more important. Like much of what would become known as Hip Hop culture, it never left my heart and like 80s comics it would influence my visual style across a range of mediums.

Folk Graff NYC Subway trains

Folk Graff NYC Subway trains

In more recent years my obsession with graffiti would be inspired by the cave art produced by Neanderthals in Europe, 40,000 years ago. Pouring over images of hands stencilled with pigment, blown from the mouth, amazing drawings of beasts and complex designs of psychedelic patterning. This inspired my to start stenciling runes designs, using an atomiser and transforming Anglo Saxon symbols and runecharms into tags and slaps (stickers) up in the town.

Junior Tomlin: Rave Art Master

I first became aware of Junior Tomlin, the Salvador Dali of Rave, when I stumbled across the Depth Charge - Dead by Dawn 12” in my local record shop. I was transfixed by the sleeve art, a clear reference to Sam Raimi’s Evil Dead film, and purchased it immediately. I was so glad I did. As my vinyl collection increased, so did my collection of Junior Tomlin art on records by artists such as Renegade Soundwave and Messiah.

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So it was a great day when I received a DM on my Instagram account from the man himself, saying he loved my work. During the ensuing dialogue I took the opportunity to request an interview as the basis for this article.

(c) Velocity Press

(c) Velocity Press

In his youth Junior Tomlin was gripped by the sci-fi covers on Isaac Asimov novels. These epic images depicting fantastic space scenes were the work of talented airbursh artists such as Chris Foss. It was their choice of tool, that inspired Junior to want to work with one himself. The opportunity to learn how would happen once he was studying Graphic Design at Goldsmiths.

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Other early inspirations came in the form of comic books, with Junior first picking up a copy of Mighty Thor, due to his interest in Norse mythology. From here he was exposed to a plethora of other silver age Marvel titles and artists; Jack Kirby, Jim Steranko, Gene Colan, Steve Ditko and Rich Buckler. The comic book art of this time was known for its use of cinematic framing, stylised detailing and the influence of surrealism, all of which can be seen in Junior's work.

2000AD artists such as Carlos Esquarez and Simon Bisley were admired alongside European artists such as Moebius and Enki Bilal, which added to his ideas on composition and use of colour. I find Junior uses a dramatic tonal range with cold and warm palettes worked closely with one another. Creating a vivid dynamic range within his work, almost psychedelic in nature and reminiscent of surrealist art.

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50s and 60s sci-fi cinema played a big role in Junior's narrative ideas, creating pictures that portray 'out there' concepts. This is most notable in his work on rave flyers, helping to signal the key aspects of what would become rave culture. Films like This Island Earth, The Day the Earth Stood Still and 2001, a Space Odyssey greatly influenced the subject matter of his work.

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It's great to know that Junior shares my love of the 70s TV show Blake's 7. Known for its high sci-fi aspirations, made with an effects budget of almost nothing, it was the scriptwriting and performances that kept us viewing. Later episodes would also feature a prominent black cast member Dayna, a kick ass female space warrior, played by Josette Simon, which may have had a influence on Junior's AfroFuturism.

He admits his love of the scratch built space craft in the series. Hair dryers morphed into space fighters, dressed with an assortment of bits from Airfix model kits. It was this affection that would lead junior to working in special effects at Pinewood in the 1980s, delivering concept sketches and designs for films such as Clive Barker's Nightbreed. But this would not last long as his work on record sleeves and flyers would soon take off.

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Junior explains the process of his classic airbrush art. Starting the work from sketches and reference images pulled from glossy Sunday supplements, he would first design the landscape, setting the environment and lighting. Then by applying between seven or eight masking layers, build up the composition, ensuring his tight stencilling work with a sharp scalpel blade and much patience.

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Originally working with gouache, he moved into using acrylic paint for its durability, painting on hardpressed CS10 line board. Back in the 80s and 90s the art would be imported using a drum scanner, with the painted surface stripped away from the backing board so that it would be wrapped around the device. A torturous act to commit any art to, he has luckily been able to keep over 90% of his original art. Decrying the abuse artists had got in the comic industry where their art was kept by the companies, and often destroyed.

One of his personal highlights was painting the cover for the French edition of V for Vendetta comic, taking notes from the original artist David Lloyd.

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In the 1990s Junior transitioned into the digital arts, teaching himself how to work with pixels instead of paint. He explains that although the techniques are different, he still follows a similar process. Working from sketches and keeping an end plan in mind. He says its always been about the journey to this goal and the discoveries made along the way. Nowadays he can scan his sketch in and work directly from that reference to build up the picture.

In over 35 years of painting and creating Junior has never had an agent, instead finding the bulk of his work himself. He has recently had a collection of work released by Velocity Press. It collects together his most iconic record sleeves and rave flyers in one place. It comprises of an outstanding body of work, which he hopes will inspire future generations. Since publication he has seen an increased interest in himself and his work, leading to further commissions. It's one hell of a business card.

CLICK IMAGE TO BUY

CLICK IMAGE TO BUY