Showing posts with label unkle pigor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label unkle pigor. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

The Halloween Questionnaire: Eric Pigors

The first in a series of blog entries where I'll ask the same four Halloween-related questions to each person featured.




The King of Old School Halloween is a great place to start. He's artist, and Haunter, Eric Pigors. Eric has worked in the animation industry for over 18 years. The Lion King, The Little Mermaid, Aladdin, Tarzan, Hercules, and The Princess and the Frog are some of the films in which his work can be seen. In 1999, he started his own company ToxicToons.





Eric's amazing (and immense) collection of bizarre and macabre works can be seen on his site ToxicToons.com. His shop features his original art, prints, magnets, stickers, t-shirts, buttons, and an absolutely brilliant dvd featuring his alter ego Unkle Pigors.

Click above to watch a teaser.

Trick or Treat Studios has recently produced the first of three masks designed by Eric. Gruesome is a full over-the-head mask with amazing detail and style.

Click above for more information.

His love of Halloween is obvious in his work - grinning pumpkins with Traditional cuts, creepy trick-or-treaters, long-fingered ghouls with extra-long fangs, curvy Vamps, and uneven-limbed creatures abound. And it overflows into his Haunt. I can remember the first time I saw a photo of his Halloween display. It was years ago and I was flipping through images of his art on his site, and I found a very small photo of a skull-faced ghost, and I just stared at it. Leaning in to study and process what I was seeing.


It was the first time I thought of Old School as a Haunt style. It was beautiful. I once described Old School as the watercolor of Halloween, with its washed-out pigments and crude arrangements. With old rubber masks and bright white sheets and plastic skulls hanging from strings. Eric's displays have it all. They capture all the feelings that I had as a Halloween-worshiping kid.




To the Questions:

When you opened your trick-or-treat bag at the end of Halloween night, what candy was the one that would excite you most?
Well there was one house that gave out little bags with Halloween art and candy and other stuff in them. It's funny though, there was an old man & wife who would sit outside their front door with a tv dinner tray. They had lots of stacks of 5 pennies each, and a few silver dollars for the best costumes. For some reason, getting 5 cents seemed like so much money back then! I remember always being excited to get those 5 cents. I think because I could buy more candy at the 7-11 at the end of our neighborhood. Nowadays when I give out candy, I have a couple of bags with stuff like rubber skeletons, spooky sound fx cds, spiders, and lots of candy in case I see a kid all decked out in something really spooky. Like I know this kid gets Halloween, and looks forward to it!


What's your earliest Halloween memory?
Well my mom tells me when I was around 5 or 6, it was my first Halloween, and I saw a kid come to our door dressed as a bunny rabbit. My mom said I ran to my room crying! I like to think this is why I love to draw creepy monsters! hahaha
But I remember seeing hundreds of kids running through the streets all dressed up. And being really afraid to go to the doors of houses that looked like what you and I both do to our houses at Halloween. But now I remember those houses fondly.


How would you define "Old School" Halloween?
Orange, White, Black, and Spooky!!!
I really keep thinking when I go out shopping around Halloween nowadays I will find more stuff like this. But it's all so bland and cute and boring now. I rarely buy anything anymore. That's why when I sell my own merchandise at Halloween, I try to do what I want to buy at stores. Like my TRICK OR TREAT BAG specials, they come full of my Toxictoons merch you only get with the bag. Like a cd of old spooky songs mixed with horror sound bites, window displays of my art, a signed poster, magnet, pins, my Spooky activity book to color and do other stuff in. And this year you can win my art I drew for this year's bag!

About 10 years ago, I was at a grocery store shopping with my wife and there was a box display for Halloween candy. It was just orange with a black tree and a ghost, and it made me bust out a pen and draw on my hand it inspired me so much.
Also Old School Halloween to me is watching the Charlie Brown special, listening to the Disney sound fx record, and watching Disney's Sleepy Hollow cartoon. It's cardboard skeleton displays, the smell of rubber monster masks, black lights, and ghost stories. Halloween is my favorite time of year and it's what I love to draw mostly.


How do you spend Halloween nights?
Well I try to watch as many Halloween-themed shows as possible, and see as many haunted houses as I can go to. I still do a lil spookhouse in my mom's garage to give the kids something to remember, like when I trick or treated in her neighborhood as a kid. There are a few other people there who do it also. When I was maybe 13, I built my 1st haunted house in my mom's garage with my younger brother. We decked it all out with boogie boards as gravestones (lame) but it's all we had. We also had a dummy with my first skeleton mask sitting in a chair with a jack o'lantern. And I sat up in the rafters and would pull ghosts up and down with strings and let them slide down fishing lines like in that Brady Bunch episode. My brother led them around in an executioner outfit with a hatchet that we used to cut firewood. Then at the end, I would scream and drop a dummy down out of the rafters right in front of them. I remember one poor kid started crying and his mom was laughing hysterically.


But the year before this is the one Halloween I remember fondly,when my friend and I went trick or treating. We were determined to go to every house in my mom's neighborhood and get as much candy as we could. I was dressed as a hobo with a pillow in my shirt, nose and glasses, and smudged dirt on my face. That's the year I saw a few houses that had grown-ups dressed as monsters, fog machines, colored lights, and I was petrified to go to their doorways to get my candy. But the one house I remember to this day was playing my favorite Disney sound fx record in their garage. It was the heartbeat or alien part as I walked up their driveway to the house. It was dark and I had to go through a gate and 15 feet to a pitch black doorway with only a jack o'lantern lit for light. I went really slow, looking behind the bushes waiting for something to jump out at me. Then I got to the door and knocked, then I knocked again. And no one answered, so I ran out of their doorway through the gates as fast as I could to the next house and kept filling my pillow case. But just the scary sounds and darkness and my imagination of what was there scared the crap out of me!


toxictoons.com

Sunday, March 28, 2010

The Spookhouse

Was digging around for more Halloween photos from Unkle Pigors' annual Spookhouse.


More images here.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Old School

Main Entry: old school
Function: adjective
Date: 1803
1 : adhering to traditional policies or practices
2 : characteristic or evocative of an earlier or original style, manner, or form
3 : Halloween decorations/displays that make you long for cold October evenings and a pillowcase loaded with candy.

4 :


I go on and on about Old School Halloween decorations and yard haunts. Was thinking about it some more today after I clicked on one of my "old school" tags in an earlier blog post. It seems Old School is all about white sheets and thick rubber masks and primary colors and ill-shapen figures. It's about traditional pumpkin faces and plastic decorations and headless dummies in chairs.

I practically worship the ways of Old School. It reminds me of my distant trick-or-treating days. The style is almost hasty and last-minute. It's often cluttered and overloaded. And it's beautiful. It's the watercolor of Halloween, with washed-out pigments and crude arrangements. Old School is about spook houses in garages and sound effects from bushes. It's about making Halloween fun. And making it spooky.


The Patron Saint of Old School,
the previously-featured Unkle Pigor.


Friday, January 15, 2010

Unkle Pigor's Spookhouse

Been checking out Toxictoons some more.
Found these amazing images on his myspace page.
This guy gets the award for Old-School Halloween charm.

Dang.






More images here.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Old School Colors


Was thinking about how neat it'd be to do a yard haunt in old-school fashion. A love-letter to all the things I loved as a kid. But with a darker twist so it would still have a nice creepy feeling to it.

A rubber-masked dummy in a chair looking more like a dead body than a stuffed pile of clothes, pumpkin-headed ghosts, tree ghosts with skeletal torsos, a yard of cross gravemarkers, spider webs, hanging skulls, and a few strings of flashing lights.
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Every year I decide on a particular flood light color for my display. Last year it was amber. It was blue for the Hollowmen, and green for the Ghost Dead. I'm thinking the perfect color combination for an old school haunt would be blue and red.
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I think this amazing photo from Toxictoons.com sums it up perfectly.
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