![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi88AvLhn7YmbYg59MctZlalouH_YoxdrwwP8nqpnDVrJo_aTEr58Y4-rma4U-_6G7ww-tGpPmqAxucxuuj3F4YcoEeQjygjgnhRMbh65EQoMkP1Sg9fomPSHx1L4tpTl-_U0TuKPu4o-Gf/s320/IMG_5328.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhC-DeQgtLI1XwKVAxBRZ-j8QaHXw4DJsbeOCYiwg_TlUq0xnckWKKWTTp51OJFsqoNIM264zS-wFFv9wZnLLnj36R_6BYMpcZYbi-QtaEKrojEa3vGCK2wlgpXNtvcCTQCdqQiQ_6XGmrP/s320/morningcall.jpg)
The whole brain/trees thing has been a running theme for a few years now. I guess I didn't realize the true distance between my pieces. These paintings were from a show in 2005. The Rooster piece was a test from 2002 I'm guessing when Adobe Illustrator started integrating the Gradient Mesh tool, or when I decided I needed to fool with it. Can't believe it's been that long... man.
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