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My web site is http://www.markpoole.net/



Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Shows are over...back to painting.

   Been a blur with all the shows this summer, but now its time to get work and painting done.  Above is a piece called Deception. It's been awhile since I did some sci fi imagery.... think I will do more.
  Thought I would post another new painting while I get my act together and start posting here more. I am sketching in my sketchbooks daily now as I get things up and running in the mornings. I think for the next few months I will just draw portraits and see how that goes.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

New art and getting ready for Dragon Con


   Here is a new piece of art entitled "The Concert". It and a few new others will be hanging in the Dragon Con Art Show in Atlanta this weekend. It is painted in oils on masonite and measures 22" x 36".
   Well back to matting and framing......

Friday, August 13, 2010

Another new painting!

Last Race

   This is a new painting I just finished up. It was painted in oil and measures 20" x 30". It heralds a new color shift for me from the blues I used the last 2 years to more of a moody grey. I have several others in the early stages along similiar color and feel that are in the sketch stage. So it looks grey and partly cloudy for me and my color palatte in the upcomming months. I want to stay with a limited color palatte like I used to use way back in the early 90's before the bombardment of the busy card illustration days where I used color to help the very tiny images pop on the card.
  That small art mindset somehow channeled me down a path that I wandered for a long time without really questioning where it was leading me. So now lost in the woods somewhere I am not seeing any paths, so I am going back to the beginning from where I stand in the woods now. No back tracking. Just starting out again with more experience as to why and what I will paint. Early on I really liked a more limited palette so I am picking up kinda where I left off 17 years ago. Tho this time around I do have a GPS device so it should make navigating a tad easier. Who knows, but at least I feel revived and freshened and have a desire to paint
more now than ever! I already have 15 sketches ready to put on board and paint.

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

New art and Fun at Gen Con

 Just finished up Gen Con 2010 and as always such a fun show. I get a chance to see old friends and meet new ones. The Art show this year was wonderful with such amazing and inspiring art to have gazed upon.

I wanted to post this new art that I finished up right before the show. The piece is called "Judgement" and it is part of a new series I am working on. It is painted in oils and is 22 x 30.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Republic of Rome Characters




Here are some of the small paintings I did for a board game called Republic of Rome, published by Valley Games.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

working away

Well I have been a tad quiet, not do to laziness but to an assigment. When I get the go ahead and the company uses the images, I will post them here.

On another note, the art book being produce by Barnes and Nobles and Sterling Publishing, looks to finally be on track and we are keeping our fingers crossed for an October release. The book is titled " The Book of Knights" and has all kinds of knight history and fiction included. It's mainly a reason to paint knights. Allen Williams is the writer and lead on the book with myself, Donato and Ruth Thompson contributing art. It will be a hardbound coffee table kind of book.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Professor Okazaki painting commissions




Here are 2 private commissions of Professor Okazaki. Professor Seishiro Okazaki is the founder of Dan Zan Ryu Jusjitsu and the "Okazaki Restorative Massage"




Both are done only using white, burnt umber, yellow oxide and mars black paint on canvas.




Below is a history of "Henry" Okazaki.




Professor H. Seishiro Okazaki was born January 28, 1890 in the town of Kakeda, Fukushima prefecture of Japan. His father was Hanyeimon Okazaki, and his mother was Fuka Suenaga. In 1906, Professor Okazaki moved from Japan to the big island of Hawaii and settled in Hilo. In 1909 he was examined by a doctor who diagnosed him with incurable tuberculosis.
In 1910, Professor Okazaki started training with Master Yosimatsu (Kichimatsu) Tanaka at his Shinyu Kai Dojo in Hilo. In Professor Okazaki's own words " he started to practice Jujitsu in earnest and in defiance of death".



Whether or not it was due to to his frantic devotion to Jujitsu, Professor Okazaki's tuberculosis healed and he developed a strong iron like body. He believed that he owed his life to Jujitsu and devoted the rest of his life to teaching and promoting the art.



While in Hilo, Professor Okazaki mastered various Jujitsu techniques being taught at the Namba-Yoshin-Ryu, Kodokan Judo, Iwaga-Ryu, and Kosogahe-Ryu schools. He then combined these systems with karate techniques from the Ryukyu Island (Okinawa) and the knife fighting techniques of the Philippines to form Danzan-Ryu in the Hawaiian School of Jujitsu.
According to the late Professor Sig Kufferath, one of Professor Okazaki's most influential instructors, Wo Chung, called Hawaii "Danzan", as did most Chinese people at that time, so Professor Okazaki dedicated part of the system to Chung's memory. Chung taught Professor Okazaki Mushi-Jutsu, which is the art of boxing with intent to kill, as Professor Okazaki translated it.



In 1917, he also studied the Hawaiian secret killing art of Lua under the tutelage of David Kainhee, a native Hawaiian. The training took place in the district of Puna, on the island of Hawaii. He also studied western boxing and wrestling and learned dirk throwing from a Spaniard. Professor Okazaki incorporated all of these arts into his system.



In September 1922, a Heavyweight American boxer by the name of K. O. Morris visited the islands and began to challenge Judo and other martial arts. His claim was his boxing was far superior to any Japanese martial art. When the challenge was answered in the Hilo area by several Japanese martial artists, they were defeated by Morris, causing them to lose face. According to the late Professor Sig Kufferath, Professor Okazaki then challenged Morris to a match. Professor Okazaki reportedly suffered a broken nose in the first round. He then retaliated with a reverse arm lock which broke Morris's arm and causing him to faint from the excessive pain. Professor Okazaki later said, "I enhanced the reputation of Japanese Jujitsu by defeating him with much splendor". Professor Okazaki received a gold watch from the Japanese community for restoring their honor.



In September 1924, Professor Okazaki returned temporarily to Japan. He traveled extensively, visiting more than fifty dojos scattered between Morioka City in the north and Kagoshima in the south. He mastered some six hundred seventy five techniques of Jujitsu, all the while improving his own Danzan Ryu. During this time also he worked out at the famous Kodokan and received a Black Belt in Judo directly from Dr. Jigaro Kano, the founder of Judo. He then returned from Japan in February of 1925 and started to teach his Jujitsu style on the island of Maui.
In 1929, Professor Okazaki moved to Honolulu on the island of Oahu. It was here that he opened the "Okazaki Seifukujutsu", or "Okazaki Adjustment and Restoration Clinic", which would eventually be called the "Nikko Restoration Sanitarium". At the same time he also opened his Kodenkan Dojo to teach his Danzan Ryu Jujitsu while still testing and improving his Jujitsu system.



Professor Okazaki was one of the first teachers to break from tradition and teach Japanese martial arts to the non-Japanese. Professor Okazaki was ostracized by other Japanese for doing this. Professor Okazaki firmly believed that everyone should have the opportunity to learn the art of Jujitsu, regardless of their ethnic heritage.



His first class in Honolulu consisted of six students: his son, Hachiro, Kiyoshi Kawashima, Benjamin Marks, George Harbottle, William Simao, and Y. S. Kim. In 1932, Richard Rickerts, Curly Friedman, Charles Wagner, Harold McLean, Bob Glover and Tantro Muggey enrolled in the Kodenkan. In 1936, they graduated with instructor diplomas. Professor Okazaki also formed an organization originally called the "American Jujitsu Guild", and later renamed the "American Jujitsu Institute" AJI.



Professor Okazaki felt that his Jujitsu system was now the most comprehensive form of Jujitsu because it took what he believed were the optimum approaches to self defense and combined them into one school. Professor Okazaki was also an avid promoter of sport Judo and Sumo competition in Hawaii.



Then on December 7, 1941, forces from the Imperial Japanese Navy executed a surprise, unprovoked attack on the U. S. Military bases on Oahu, thus entering the United States into war against Japan. What followed for island residents was martial law where many Japanese were arrested and detained at the military base on Sand Island.



Many reports have indicated that Professor Okazaki was detained as well. Recent official documents released by the United States Department of Justice under the "Freedom of Information Act" do not show that Professor Okazaki was detained. Eyewitnesses such as Steven J. Byzek, a Black Belt under Professor Okazaki, says that Professor Okazaki was taken in for questioning by authorities, but that he was not detained.



Probably the best account comes from the children of Professor Okazaki. His youngest daughter, Imi (now Professor Imi Okazaki-Mullins) recalls that she visited him on at least two occasions in a prison camp. This was a clear recollection of hers since she had to make a long bus trip to get to the location. Some accounts of this time do indicate that the "Kodenkan Dojo" was closed for a time, but was later reopened.



Ironically, it was during World War II that Professor Okazaki help to develop the United States Army's field manual on "hand-to-hand" combat and also taught many U. S. servicemen the art of Danzan Ryu Jujitsu.



It should be noted that Professor Okazaki was extremely proud of his acquired American citizenship and openly displayed the American flag in his dojo, and in all official dojo photographs of him. This point was heavily emphasized by his daughter, Professor Imi Okazkai-Mullins.
One of Professor Okazaki's dreams was to have a Danzan Ryu school in every state in the union, which is becoming a reality as documented by the extensive Danzan Ryu website today.


In July of 1948, Professor Okazaki suffered a stroke that left him partially paralyzed. This severely reduced his teaching ability and much of the teaching then was done by the instructors he had trained. His students would come and apply his own restorative massage techniques on him. Slowly, the paralyzed side of his was brought back to vitality. Although he was able to return to teaching, his disability continued to haunt him.



A second stroke occurred in September of 1950 that put him in the hospital, and another massive stroke in June of 1951, which left him totally disabled, and then finally at 4:00pm on July, 12, 1951, Professor Henry Seishiro Okazaki died from the effects of the third stroke.