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Written by Nate Hooper
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Tuesday, 04 September 2007, 4:22am
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 Recently Nate Hooper had the pleasure of visiting the Amsterdam studio of Dutch graphic designer, illustrator, artist, art director, clothing company owner Parra.
Recently my friend Lili and I had the pleasure of visiting the Amsterdam studio of Dutch graphic designer, illustrator, artist, art director, clothing company owner Parra. For a guy as mellow as he is, he definitely gets a lot done. He is currently art directing for several companies such as Colorblind Skateboards and Ben G as well as his own cut and sew clothing brand Rockwell Clothing. His client list for illustration and design work includes companies like Nike, Etnies, Zoo York and Heineken. In the last few months he has had a sold out show at the Reed Space in New York and another at HVW8 in Los Angeles. He also plays in a couple of bands (the names of which I have forgotten). Oh, and he used to skate for Think and Venture in the '90s. Not bad for a guy who wakes up at noon everyday.

Parra
After spending a bit of time in Amsterdam, you start to notice that this guy's work is everywhere. On any given day, you'll see kids wearing his shirts or shoes, ads and fliers he's graced and his paintings/prints hanging at shops all over the place. Its pretty rad to see how much support he gets out there.
We did an interview that turned into more of a loose conversation about commercial illustration that had far too many "likes" and "ums" and "dudes" in it to really do anyone justice, so instead of posting the entire thing, I'll just put up a few of the better sections from it. -Nate
Also, make sure to check out his website for many, many more photos of his work...
http://www.rockwellclothing.com/parra/
N – So it seems like you've done tons of product stuff. I had no idea. So how long have you been at it?
P – Oh wow. Like quite a while. Umm I'm 31 now and think I started working in Amsterdam like 10 years ago.
N – Oh, you're not from Amsterdam. Where're you from?
P – I'm from the south.
N – Dirty.
P – Haha. Deep deep south. I was born there but never lived there. It was Nijmegen I think I lived last.
N – Awe dude. I went to Nijmegen.
P – Neimeg is really a place I hardly ever visit now.
N – There were tons of thugs there with huge gelled mullets. Next level mullets.
P – That's crazy. Yeah. Ha ha...


L – So did you go to Art school here in the Netherlands or did you just start designing and stuff?
P – Ah no. Well of course I wanted to go to art school, 'cause my father's a painter and I wanted to follow in his footsteps, but then I was too young. I wanted to enroll when I was like 17, not the Rietveld, but in Arnhem, and they said well you're too young, come back next year, your works not good enough... which it wasn't. So I was like really pissed off. I was like fuck you. I'll do it myself. But then I had to learn quickly. I had to figure a way 'cause I had to do something. Cause if your 17 you can't really work.
N - Oh that's right. In Holland there's weird laws.
P – Yeah the only thing you can do is like work in a grocery store or something.
L – Weird.
P – Yeah so then umm what'd I do? I went to some stupid school where they taught drawing to be a teacher. Drawing teacher. Did that for like one year and then switched the course to free art, and then basically did nothing for 2 years. I just skated. I never visited the place. And then they said well you have to intern now, well cool, so I called a lot of people from skateboarding and eventually got work at a web place in the center of Amsterdam.



L – Nice.
P – Early internet stages. And then they let me intern there for 3 months and then they kept me there and I never went back.
N – Really? Where was this?
P – It was an internet company. But an ex-skater, an older guy who worked there. It was funny. He brought me there and I couldn't even switch on a computer.
N – Yeah.
P – I was like uh oh. But the guy taught me Illustrator and I kind of went from there.
N – Yeah, that's the story that goes down a lot...
P – Yeah, you have to kind of do it yourself man.
----------------------------
N– Is this is an Illustration for the New Yorker?
P – No that's not the New Yorker. It's a crap magazine I think. 'Cause in the end there are all these ads to buy condos for 6 million. If I knew this... It's my agent you know. He's like oh yeah it's a good magazine and I'm like OK. It's like some crappy free thing.
Colorblind boards
I'm sure this photo will soon be all over the internet.
New board graphics for Rockwell, Patta and Ben G.
N – So you have like an agent that like gets you jobs and everything?
P – Yeah, without that I'd be... I wouldn't have this house. Nothing. He saved my, basically my life. I didn't know what to do and then he like, he made me an Illustrator. I thought I was a graphic designer and he said "Oh you're and Illustrator" and I said "OK cool". We shook hands and then a week later I arrived home and he's got my first client and it just went on and on and never stopped for two years. They're called Big Active. They're in London. They print big. This guy is with them as well. Jody Barton. I bought that peice from him.
N – Penis god meets scrotum.
P – It's called Cock versus Balls.
N – Haha
L – So does he have mostly Illustrator and designers?
P – Just Illustrators and he's pretty high end because he only has 11 Illustrators and they usually have like a bunch.
N – Does he take like a ridiculous fee?
P – No. Not really. No. 25% and I called around and that's pretty usual.
L – Well if your at a gallery they take like 50.
P – Yeah. This is the Big Active site. I'll show you this 'cause it's basically what I live off of. It kind of boosted me into the commercial illustration culture.
L – So did he come to you or...?
P – Yeah he came to me. That's the dope part. He found out. I had a solo show in London, my first ever. I had cheap prints. They were like 2 bucks to make and I sold them for 20 pounds and the whole city had a laugh about it. You serious? 20 pounds? Ok I'll take 5. But it sold out because it was so cheap. He heard about this idea prior and he wanted to have a private view the day before.
N – So did he buy tons of stuff too?
The collabo logo for the three brands.
P – Yeah. He was like "Wow. How long does it take because you hand paint all this stuff?" I'm like "No Dude." He's quick. His eyes lit up because he was like "Damn he can work fast too". He's got a lot of people and they all have like different styles. I was really honoured to be a part of that 'cause it's like a family. So every artist he has is like a complete different style. So he has no doubles.
L – Yeah.
P – So that really helps the work. In a week I'd say 50% is on commercial work, nice stuff like book covers and stuff.
N – That's awesome.
P - And the other 50% is just making drawings.
L – So do you have like a set schedule like you wake up and treat it like a regular job?
P – Yeah I try too. Yeah. Definitely. The day's a bit shit for me... I cannot get up that early. I do not function you know. So I said Ok I'll go to sleep late and I'll work late. That's the whole deal. But usually I work at 12 and I stop at 6. I do half days!
N – Ha!! ha!!
P – Because I had a bit of a pain in my wrist from drawing all day...
N – Well even sitting in front of the computer all day is like...
P – It's horrible man.
-------------
P –My father is a really big inspiration to me in the beginning but like now he's copying me.
N – Oh yeah?
L – This is your dad's work? It's awesome!
P – Yeah this is my dads stuff. He sends me things in the mail. He makes copies and "Look, I draw them" Its sick like a morph. This one I did a version of. He sent me this and I made this. So that's like, really nice. I call him every week to see what he's doing and tell him what I'm doing.



N – That's cool you work off one another...
P – Well he's really productive. You know I'm productive but he's like insane. He can draw a whole book in a day. He'll fill it up, one of those dummies. These are copies from that. Basically what I want, what I made for the Jeff Staple show, is a little movie where you see me actually hand drawing something. But they didn't use it.
N – Oh really?
P – 'Cause I think a lot of people think I just draw it straight on the computer, which is impossible.
Rockwell sheets.
Some of his dad's drawings.
Dad's paintings! What the?
Check out this giant leather pillow he made!
make sure to check out his website for much much more photos of his work...
http://www.rockwellclothing.com/parra/
{moscomment}
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Comments

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Poo's chillin' watching Tora Tora Tora tonight. -as of 10pm

| Your SF Photos
Last week we did our first themed Photo of the Day asking you to email in your quintessential San Francisco photos. We got so many great entries and couldn't squeeze them all in. So, here's a bit of overflow from the images emailed in.
 |

 |
| Hola from Tequisquiapan Mexico
Hey there, I just got back from a short residency down in a small town two hours north of Mexico City called Tequisquiapan. I was asked to come down there to meet some of the crew of the Clipperton Project, which basically is going to be a crazy boat trip in March with scientists and artists going out to a very remote atoll in the Pacific called Clipperton Island. Anyways, I thought you might like to see some photos of the town and the graffiti that I was surprised to find there.
 |

 |
| FFDG's Permanent Home
We can finally shut up about FFDG's fire, about FFDG's temp space, about all the transitions, because we signed a 2 year lease on a new space in the heart of the Mission District last night!
 |

 |
| Real Etheral by Evan Mann
Real Ethereal embraces our mysterious relationship with life. It blends the physical with the metaphysical on a journey through an ever-transitioning space where common interactions become extraordinary and perception ventures into the otherworldly. Real Ethereal examines possibilities of unseen realities and metaphorically represents the winding path that reveals before us and conceals behind us; the future remains a mystery while the past fades quickly into the recesses of our mind. We are left with the present: the mysterious reality of our existence; the hair of time difficult to grasp.
 |

 |
| High 5s: As The World Turns
... we look forward to the new year.
 |

 |
| Josh Peters Interview
Josh Peters is a La based painter/ curator/ cool guy/ I chatted with him recently about his work, here it is.
 |

 |
| Scanner Photography by Sean Vranizan
Recent UC Santa Cruz photography graduate Sean Vranizan emailed over this series of images he creates by using a scanner as a camera, upon which found and collected objects, both two-dimensional and three, were used in collage format.
 |

 |
| Interview w/ Alex Ziv & Quinn Arneson
SF based artists Alex Ziv & Quinn Arneson are in their final year at the San Francisco Art Institute and open the two person show UNIBROW: BRIDGING THE GAP Thursday, Dec 8th at Gallery Heist.
 |

 |
| Post War Years - All Eyes
Great new video by Philadelphia based director Tobias Stretch whose videos feature his puppet work - If you have some time, browse his other great bizarre dreamlike videos.
 |

 |
| Double Breaks @Double Break
A few November weekends back, I headed down with Travis Millard and Jim Dirschberger for o Breaks, a group show curated by Jay Howell and Louis Schmidt, which opened 11.11.11 at Double Break store and gallery in San Diego, CA.
 |

 |
| Dream Team in Sao Paulo - Part 2
Before the show it was pretty much just me and Pacolli painting the whole gallery and doing all the instalations and hanging all the work. lots of shit to be done. I also painted the front of Choque the week after the opening. And we had a little concert at Choque in which I played keyboard and two other folks played guitar and sang. Ephameron went there the day before the opening and did a tape installation as well. During the month we also had a zine/print/shirt sale at Choque as well. It all went very well and we had a blast! -Mildred
 |

 |
| Pseudo-Advertising by Alexandros Vasmoulakis
I am dealing with a new series called "Pseudo-Advertising", where I focus upon the relationship between today’s muralism and the contemporary outdoor advertising.
 |

 |
| Nick Howard
Got an email from Minneapolis, MN based artist Nick Howard with some works attached. Love the pieces.
 |

 |
| Charles Martin for 11.11.11
Charles participated in the group show 11.11.11 at FFDG in Nov/ Dec 2011. He studies at Cooper Union NYC.
 |

 |
| A Visit w/ Strange Bird
Last week, after swinging by Rebel 8 clothing's HQ in San Francisco, we swung by the HQ of Strange Bird Distribution distributors of Low Card, Think Skateboards, Hubba Wheels, etc...
 |

 |
| A Visit w/ Rebel 8
Stopped through Rebel 8 clothing HQ last week to see what their up to. We've known Joshy D. 10 plus years back when he was doing the SF graffiti site, HiFiArt.com in the early days of the internet when Fecal Face was just getting its start. Nice to see Mike Giant, whose designs adjorn many of Rebel 8's clothing, and Josh doing so well.
 |

 |
| Steven Riddle @Water McBeer
Water McBeer Gallery is proud to announce its curent solo exhibition "Dinner Guest" featuring work by Steven Riddle
 |

 |
| Nathan Brown for 11.11.11
Nathan is curently showing in the group show 11.11.11 up now @FFDG here in San Francisco through Dec 17th.
 |

 |
| Sage Vaughn @Fifty24SF
Los Angeles based Sage Vaughn opened up Runaways at SF's Fifty24SF last Saturday.
 |

 |
| BIG DEATH SPANK
Photos from Check Your Ponytail tour featuring Spank Rock, Big Freedia and the Death Set.
 |

 |
| Chicago's Andrew Mongenas
Chicago based artist/ craftsman and Chicago Art Institue graduate Andrew Mongenas' sculpture works.
 |

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