Artist Spotlight: Unique Paintings Featuring Star Wars, DC, Marvel, And Other Pop Culture Characters From Artist Mike Maydak
Check out these unique paintings featuring various pop culture characters, all from the mind of artist Mike Maydak.
Northern Kentucky artist Mike Maydak brings a unique style to his paintings that blends fine art with comic books and pop culture. The characters featured in his paintings cross a wide range of popular movies, television, and comic book properties that includes Star Wars, Dr. Who, Marvel, DC, He-man, Mad Max, and many more. Check out his bio, several interview questions and more images below. You can visit his website and Etsy to check out more of his work or purchase original paintings and prints.

"Baby:
As a kid Mike Maydak dreamed of working with big cats like lions and tigers. He failed miserable, and instead settled on being an artist.
Momma:
Artist Mike Maydak fuses an impasto impressionism with a graphic comic flair, creating new interpretations of pop culture icons and classic subject matter. Maydak’s work has been published and featured in a variety of avenues, including comic books, magazines, art books, and television.
Poppa:
Artist Mike Maydak started in the sequential art industry. Creator of 1782: The Year of Blood, an historical adaptation of frontier life, and Slimbone, a nationally distributed comic strip, Maydak also illustrated a run of Blackbeard Legacy. Turning his skills to “fine art”, Maydak fused an impasto impressionism with a graphic comic flair, focusing on architectural structures and pop culture icons. His work has been recently featured in 2012 Artist’s & Graphic Designer’s Market and on public television stations across the world via his appearance on Bluegrass & Backroads and Arts Bridge via PBS. He has published two collection of his works, MAYDAK Volume 1 and MAYDAK Volume 2. Maydak was the recipient of the Al Smith award in 2007.
"
TMS: What are your artistic influences?
MM: Heavy Metal Magazine, Alfonso Azpiri, Van Gogh,
Cassegrain, Fabio Moon, Gabriel Ba, Winsor
McCay.
MM: It’s been a long time ago and they weren't very
good. So I kinda don't want to say. I'm sure it’s really easy to Google if you
wanted to.
TMS: What made you transition from comics to
creating and selling paintings and canvas reproductions?
MM: Making paintings is way easier then comics. Creating
comics is an interdisciplinary craft that requires an intuitive sense for
design if you want to do them well. Painting, not so much. Painting is not
easy, but a lot of what makes a painting appealing is trusting in happy accidents
that natural occur with your material, least for me. Painting has really taught
me that the less there is a narrative, the more likely the viewer will create their
own narrative, making it more appealing to them. A principal that transcend all
kinds of mediums. I probably could make a better comic from simply what I
learned that makes a painting sell.

MM: There really has to be a nostalgic connection for
me. At 34, I could give a !$#% about Dragon Ball Z, Pokemon, Power Rangers, or
whatever is hot for the next three months. I need that connection. So if you’re
talking Star Wars, Thundercats, He-Man, it has my attention. I also love doing
the real obscure stuff too. There is just less pressure to "get it right"
and make your own mark when you paint, say, Ponda Boba over Han Solo.
MM: Too many. Cutting back. Yeah, I think it’s the best
way to build your brand. I feel that the internet can be good, but just not
solid. Can be very fleeting and disposable as far as exposure. People will
remember you way more if you meet them in person.
MM: I guess the worst part about convention is the
constant disruption to creating something new. It’s a routine killer. In fact, it’s
real easy to get in a routine of traveling and doing the shows. That transition
back to the creating art routine can be a bit... heart breaking. It’s like
shifting gears and the clutch drops out. Any momentum you had on a project
before is dead and you have to find a way to jump start it.
MM: Conan. He was my first. I was like, "Conan, he
is awesome. I want to be more like Conan. But I don't look nothing like
Conan." Started me doing pushups that day.
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