Friday, May 15, 2026

Artist of the Day, May 15, 2026 : FAILE, an American collage, painting and multimedia collaboration (#2527)

FAILE (Pronounced "fail") is a Brooklyn-based artistic collaboration between Patrick McNeil (1975) and Patrick Miller (1976). Since its inception in 1999, FAILE has been known for a wide-ranging multimedia practice recognizable for its explorations of duality through a fragmented style of appropriation and collage.

While painting and printmaking remain central to their approach, over the past decade FAILE has adapted its signature mass culture-driven iconography to an array of materials and techniques, from wooden boxes and window pallets to more traditional canvas, prints, sculptures, stencils, installation, and prayer wheels. FAILE's work is constructed from found visual imagery, and blurs the line between "high" and "low" culture, but recent exhibitions demonstrate an emphasis on audience participation, a critique of consumerism, and the incorporation of religious media, architecture, and site-specific/archival research into their work.

McNeil was born in Edmonton, Alberta; Miller was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota. McNeil and Miller met during their youth in Arizona. Separated in 1996 when Miller remained in art school in Minneapolis and McNeil continued to New York, by the end of the decade, the duo reconnected and, with the addition of then artist Aiko Nakagawa, "A Life" was conceived. By early 2000, the trio contributed to the emergence of a nascent street art culture by circulating their screenprinted and painted work on city streets, usually using the subversive processes of wheatpasting and stenciling. During the ensuing years McNeil, Miller, and Nakagawa solidified both their omnivorous style of pop-cultural collage, and changed their name to FAILE (an anagram of A Life). Nakagawa left FAILE in 2006, gaining success in her own right, while McNeil and Miller continued on to increased commercial and institutional visibility.

© 2026. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by FAILE, Patrick McNeil, Patrick Miller or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only

Patrick McNeil and Patrick Miller
1986
Lady Macbeth, 2006
2006
Happens Every Day: Olive/Purple/Black, 2007
Stories Of Love In Blue, 2007
Strange Encounters (Sepia), 2007
2008
Tender Forever, 2008
2010
Nuthin's Sacred, 2010
2012
Naughty Angels, 2012
 150 Series, 2012-16
A call to adventure, 2013
Surgere Supra Bestias, 2013
The Right One, Happens Everyday, 2014
Turf Wars: Green, 2014
Sweet Sins Brooklyn, 2015
Almost Rapture, 2016
Bad Seeds, 2016
Loves Me, Loves Me Not..., 2016
Pearl Jam Wrigley Field, 2016
The Size of the Fight 2nd, 2017
Visions Victoire, 2017
Modern Living, 2018
2018
Thrills, 2019
2020
Hollywood Nights, 2021
Walk on the Wild Side (Hand Finished), 2023
2025
 

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Artist of the Day, May 14, 2026 : Eric Drooker, an American painter, graphic novelist, cover artist (#2526)

Eric Drooker is an American painter, graphic novelist, and frequent cover artist for The New Yorker. He conceived and designed the animation for the film Howl.

Drooker grew up in Manhattan's Stuyvesant Town, adjacent to the Lower East Side, which was then a working-class immigrant neighborhood with a tradition of left-wing political activism. He attended the Downtown Community School in Manhattan's East Village. Drooker developed an early interest in graphic arts and cartoons, particularly the woodcut novels of Frans Masereel and Lynd Ward and the underground comics of Robert Crumb.

After studying sculpture at Cooper Union, Drooker turned to poster art, creating flyers on local political issues while working as a tenant organizer. His images, done in a striking black-and-white style reminiscent of Masereel and other 1930s expressionist illustrators, were widely copied and reused by others—sometimes for unrelated purposes such as advertising concerts—and were popular enough that he could make a small income selling artwork on the street. During the 1980s, Drooker was further radicalized by his experiences with the police, due to their actions against squatters in the rapidly gentrifying Tompkins Square Park area and their increasing intolerance of unlicensed street artists and musicians.

His first published work appeared in leftist magazines such as The Nation, The Progressive, and various underground publications such as Screw. His work would later be seen in such mainstream publications as The New York Times, Newsweek, and The Wall Street Journal; and his paintings would appear on dozens of covers of The New Yorker. When World War 3 Illustrated was founded by Seth Tobocman and Peter Kuper, who shared Drooker's political beliefs and graphic approach, Drooker became one of the magazine's co-editors and frequent contributors. Eventually he began to sell illustrations to more mainstream publications.

He became more widely known as a cartoonist when his short story "L" appeared in Heavy Metal. "L", along with two other stories, made up his first graphic novel, 

In the 1990s, Drooker broadened his scope from graphic arts to painting, creating several covers for The New Yorker and a book of illustrations of Allen Ginsberg's poetry, Illuminated Poems. His third book, Street Posters & Ballads, is a compilation of graphics, poems and songs about the Lower East Side. The book won the 1999 Firecracker Alternative Book Award for Outstanding Graphic Novel.

He designed the animation for the 2010 film, Howl, a movie based on the epic poem by Allen Ginsberg, who collaborated with Drooker on the book Illuminated Poems. His best-selling book, Howl: A Graphic Novel, visualizes the poem with animation art Drooker designed for the film. 

© 2026. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Eric Drooker or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only 

Eric Drooker
blood song, book cover
Crucifixion
Dante
Gears
Naked City, Cover
People vs Military
cover
cover
September 1994
June 1995
September 2001
September 2008
May 2009
October 2009
September 2011
October 2011
December 2011
May 2014
July 2015
December 2015
July 2016
February 2017
September 2017
November 2018
March 2020
November 2021
June 2022
October 2022
October 2024
December 2024