RODNEY PIKE - PHOTO MANIPULATED CARICATURE ILLUSTRATOR Rodney Pike is a Photo-manipulated caricature illustrator who is from Baton Rouge, Louisiana and now resides in Mississippi. I had an opportunity to interview Rodney recently. Mary: “You were born in Baton Rouge. Did you grow up there? How did Louisiana culture influence your art work, if at all?” Rodney: “I was born and raised in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. As a kid I wanted to grow up to be an illustrator like Norman Rockwell. I’ve been an artist as long as I can remember and sold paintings in Junior High and High School. I was a passionate artist as a young man and worked hard at it. I was, and still am, a dreamer and saw myself as a professional artist one day. Well, my dad, the economy, and the negative people that surrounded me convinced me that it was just a dream and wasn’t practical. After 2 years of struggling to make it as an artist in a city that sells no art, I joined the military to get away and make a living. I did my 4 years and when I got out, I stumbled into the car business which led to marriage and kids and life, ultimately setting my art aside for nearly 30 years. Louisiana culture has had absolutely no influence on my life and I think the main reason is when I was a kid showing in galleries, it was the trite swamp scenes that are still around and flowers that won the contests in the shows. I was a young man trying to paint among a sea of old ladies with their flower and swamp paintings. I didn’t have a chance in Louisiana and I couldn’t afford The Art Student’s League in NYC which is where I wanted to study art.” Mary: “You live in Mississippi now. Do you miss the Louisiana culture, and do you still have family here? Do you ever have an opportunity to visit?” Rodney: “Louisiana culture is everywhere here and every bit of it is commercialized. I’ve been exposed to Louisiana culture for 50 years. I never got why people want to visit here. I guess it’s that way no matter where you live. I know what you’re thinking, Mardi Gras right? I’ve grown to appreciate New Orleans and the history behind the city. It’s about a 45 minute drive from my house so we go to the art museum there and the French Quarter once a year or so, mainly gallery hopping. Mardi Gras is a different story. I stay as far away from that insanity as possible. I’ve been several times and have had enough to last me a lifetime. I have blood kin all over Louisiana. I’m one of 6 kids and my siblings live in the Baton Rouge area but my family are my friends from Google+, Facebook, and my other social networks. My blood kin look down on me for what I do for a living and have turned their noses up at me since I started this. It makes no sense, but that’s the way it is so, no, I don’t visit them anymore. I drive an hour every Friday to spend the day with my mom. I did recently fly to New York and met up with about 100 of my friends from Google+. It was a wonderful experience. I’ve found that the people who really care and are there for me every day are my brothers and sisters. I have no room for negativity in my life. I have been given a rare second chance at my dream and I’m making it happen this time, with or without them.” Mary: “I understand you were always interested in art. When did it become a career? When did photo manipulation and caricatures become your primary focus?” Rodney: “October 14th, 2010, after a 20 year bout with depression, I entered my first Photoshop contest. It was fun and I loved working in Photoshop even though at the time, I had a bootleg copy of Photoshop 7 and a mouse. I did several contests and won a couple with small cash prizes so I got fired up about it and did 300 more. Well, it was obvious during this period that I had found the medium in digital art and Photoshop that was my home. I worked in many mediums through the years but I felt fulfilled for the first time with digital art. I dove in head first as that fire that once burned in my gut had returned and I worked 18 hours a day, seven days a week for 2 years. I started experimenting with caricatures after a couple of months and apparently tapped into a new niche, Photo-manipulated Caricature Illustration. I had found my calling and within a very few months, I was contacted by Bauer Media and offered a five piece commission for FHM Magazine. This totally blew me away as I had never even considered selling this work. It was just fun and it got me out of a 20 year funk. I accepted my first commission with confidence and delivered my best work by far and FHM was extremely pleased. This first commission afforded me a new customized jacked up 27” iMac, a 21” Wacom Cintiq, and all new software, oh, and an iPad for my wife. I have since done many jobs for FHM Magazine and many other publications around the world. My present client list includes FHM Magazine, Tennis Magazine,The Village Voice Magazine, Elite Magazine, The Sun, Cater’s News Agency, New Coast Productions and Catchphrase Entertainment in Hollywood, among many other publications and organizations. I will be starting a killer commission soon for a Brazilian Metal Band called Almah. I’ll be doing all promotional material for an orchestrated Metal Tour. I’ll also be joining them for a week.” Mary: “I read somewhere that you served in the US Navy. Many of our readers are veterans and would be interested in your military service and how it might have impacted you in your artwork. Do you have any illustrations from that period in your life?” Rodney: “Yes, I joined the Navy in 1982. I was stationed in Scotland on a small boat command for 2 1/2 years and drove the Admiral’s boat. I really had a cushy job. I traveled a lot while there and saw a lot of the world. I decided to get underway for my last tour and was assigned to the USS Biddle, a guided missile cruiser with a 400 man crew. We made a 7 1/2 month Med-IO cruise. Our intent was to stay near Iran but Gadhafi started his mess so we were pulled back into the Med and sat in the Gulf of Sidra for 6 months ultimately thumping on Gadhafi for the first time in 1986 which was just before I was discharged. I also did a lot of sightseeing on that tour. We actually made it 14,000 miles from home to Penang, Malaysia for Christmas of ‘85. I also went to Rome, Venice, Amsterdam, and many other countries. I was glad to have served under President Reagan. Did the military influence my work? No, I hate gray but it was a good experience. My artwork has been influenced by a wide range of artists and people. Of course, Rockwell was an influence along with Sebastian Kruger, Jason Seiler, Dominic Philibert and Max Sauco to name a few. There are other people who have influenced and inspired me in life: Albert Einstein, Vincent Van Gogh, Leonardo Da Vinci, Michelangelo, Gottfried Helnwein, Istvan Sandorfi, Picasso, Dali, etc.” Mary: “Do you ride a motorcycle; have you associated with any riders, famous or not? Do you have an opinion about bikers or their lifestyle?” Rodney: “I think bikers are awesome. I rode for a few years myself and they were like family--a great bunch of people. I didn’t have the money for the bike I wanted so I rode a Honda 750. I’m between bikes right now because the next time I’m doing it right and getting a Hog. The biker community reminds me a lot of another community I really admire and that’s the tattoo artists and enthusiasts. They have been more accepting of my work than any other group of people. They are also some of the most talented artists I know. They are totally open-minded and accepting of all forms of art. I have a few “tats” myself.” Mary: “Were there any moments you recall as true breakthroughs in your career?” Rodney: “The FHM commission was great but that’s not the only breakthrough. It’s really the culmination of lots of breaks along the way that have added up and taken me on this wild ride. I’ve also grown quite a following in social media. I have 10,000+ friends on Facebook, 12,000 on Twitter and over 250,000 followers on Google+. My following is growing at a rate of about 10,000 per day now which is insane. I also have a blog with 500,000 visits from 202 nations in two years. The future looks bright!” Mary: “What have you learned over your lifetime that you’d like to share with others?” Rodney: “The American dream is still attainable. I’m often asked in interviews what I would say to someone who aspires to do what I am fortunate enough to do for a living. My thinking is really quite simple. I believe that talent is nothing more than the sheer desire to achieve an artistic goal. The only limit to your success in art, or anything you aspire to achieve in life, is the limit that you put upon yourself by your own doubt. I don’t set goals. I believe goals are limits. I try to set milestones, moving from one to another continually striving to improve and getting to the next level. Why put a limit on yourself? Aim to be the best, believe you can be the best and work with passion to be the best,without doubting, and I think if you want it badly enough, you will achieve it. I have a personal belief about my own work. This may or may not be for you. When I finish a piece, it is history. I never revisit old work. I take what I’ve learned and move forward striving to make the next one much better. Why waste your time repairing old work? The best is still inside you. When I’m asked what work of mine is my favorite I tell them,“I haven’t created it yet”. Surround yourself with people and things that inspire you, stay positive and work your ass off. There is a quote that I love: “The question is not how far. The question is, do you possess the constitution, the depth of faith, to go as far as is needed?” ~ Unknown author.” |





