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| Craig Drake furthest on right | 
Craig Drake's work has adorned the Hero Complex Gallery twice before in his own solo shows and will again starting this Saturday for a third time. His work has found its way all over the net and on your phones with a very iconic, very 80's style  that makes whatever character he chooses stand out. Craig took some time over the Labor Day weekend to answer the following questions as he finished up the last minute touches to his latest show.
TTDILA: Drake, how often do you have jokes about your name
 like, "Hey Drake, where's Josh?,"  or "Oh, look it's Sir Francis Drake 
over here!" Often? 
Craig Drake: I haven't gotten 
those, but often get Drake the hip hop artist jokes but my favorite is 
the Seinfeld reference, being called "The Drake" 
 Loved
 the Batmobile piece you did for Mondo, did you by chance study it at 
the Peterson Auto Museum up close. From what I recall they just took off
 a jet engine and attached it to a car. Are you even LA based?
Loved
 the Batmobile piece you did for Mondo, did you by chance study it at 
the Peterson Auto Museum up close. From what I recall they just took off
 a jet engine and attached it to a car. Are you even LA based?
Dang
 it. I didn't even know the 89 Batmobile was there... I would have flown
 down from SF just to go study it in person. Growing up outside of 
Detroit, car shows were part of life. Autorama was the big one. They had
 many Hollywood cars including the 66 Batmobile and Mark Hamill's 
Corvette from Corvette summer. (So yeah that was the 70's)
Going
 into capturing the characters or vehicles you present to us, what is 
your process of studying them. An online search, sitting down with some 
popcorn and enjoying the film? 
All 
of the above! The best is drawing right from film. It's the most 
accurate and enjoyable. I've even looked at 3D models however, those 
tend to be inaccurate for final reference but great for sketching and 
blocking composition. 
Is 
there any of your work of your friends or family in your style? Any 
special pieces you've been commissioned to do for a private collector. 
Like someone's family above the mantle of their fireplace? 
Only ones I made for my mom back in the 80's. A pen and ink drawing of a Moose. She loves them. 
Last
 interview we talked about your love of synth music are you listening to
 it while doing your work? Have you done some cover art for music 
albums? 
FAVORITE QUESTION!
I
 listen to records almost exclusively. Soundtracks of all variety, but 
synth soundtracks are my tops. Here are the main ones I listened to for 
solo III:
Clockwork Orange
The Knick
Terminator 1
Ex-Machina
Ghost in the Shell 2
John Carpenter's Lost Themes
Revenge of the Ninja
Shogun Assassin 
Of your previous solo shows, what was one of your favorite pieces and why?
 I keep going back to Buffy as a composition that's satisfying and inspirational. Her likeness came out pretty ok too.
I keep going back to Buffy as a composition that's satisfying and inspirational. Her likeness came out pretty ok too. 
Delorean is my other one I love. But it's more that I love it's design. I'm an 80s kid all the way. 
To
 me, your art can be very touching and remind me of why I love a film, 
because that character is now stuck in my memory, they're part of my 
history and I'll remember them. Other than a great sense of nostalgia 
what do you hope people get from your art?
Aw, thanks for saying so!
I
 tend to do singular minimal portraits. When you love a character or 
even vehicle, you want it all to yourself. Imagine walking into a large 
empty room  with no decorations, no distractions except the thing you 
love. Only you and Buffy... Only you and the Delorean all to yourself. 
That's the feeling I want to capture in many of my pieces. The world is 
too visually noisy. 
Craig Drake Solo III
Opening Reception, Sat, Sept 10
Exhibtion starts at 8pm
Hero Complex Gallery
2020 S Robertson Blvd, Los Angeles, California 90034
Free
One of the co-owners of the gallery has told me that their mixing it up for Craig's third show, so it's not just the same sort of exhibition you usually get from around town. The Craig Drake Lounge is suppose to change up the experience and make it more of an evening out then just a quick stuffy get together to see new work.




 
