Portland, in brief

Remembering Gabrielle Bouliane

Gabrielle Bou­liane was a video­g­ra­pher and poet, who I met nearly a decade ago, back when I was very much involved in Slam Poetry.
She recently lost her bat­tle with can­cer.
She was a vision­ary, a friend, and a force of nature.
I wish I had known her better.

I did this illus­tra­tion of her because most of the pic­tures I’ve been see­ing of her in other posts of this sort didn’t really cap­ture her the way I knew her.
To me, Gabrielle will always be in bunny ears–or a cow­boy hat.
She is peer­ing at me from behind a cam­era, or through a Live­Jour­nal icon.
She is cap­tur­ing something–when every­one else is too busy watching.

I am post­ing this poem of hers, because I think all of you should read it, whether you knew her or not.

When you hear that I have died, think of this.

Think of cool nights breezes while you walk to meet your friends for a beer on a Thurs­day. Think of wak­ing up in flan­nel sheets on a snowy morn­ing and kiss­ing some­one you love. Think of hung-over diner break­fasts and the best cup of cof­fee in the world. Think of the sound of tires on seamed high­ways while you travel, think of French kiss­ing and leather jack­ets and push-up bras and bour­bon, think of the joy of hard work with friends. Then think of me.

Not sad, not the melan­choly soli­tude of empty skies, but the full days and crowded bars and signed con­tracts, a smile too big for my face, remem­ber I said I stay busy enough to fit three lives into one. When you hear that I have died, know that I want laugh­ter, and danc­ing, real danc­ing, to music that makes you move with­out think­ing, you’re wear­ing boots and jeans and a great t-shirt and won­der­ing if the girl at the edge thinks you’re cute. And you moth­er­fuck­ers had best DANCE, none of this bull­shit rock-nod hands-in-the-pockets shoegazer non­sense, no, make an ass out of your­self, feel your hips, kick off the high heels and sway on the shoul­der of a stranger, when I die, you’d bet­ter be laugh­ing your ass off on side­walks, eat­ing deli­ciously unhealthy food, drink­ing shots and tip­ping your bar­tender well no mat­ter how much money you make.

And Adam has to read the poem he wrote, and Laura, and June, and Scott Car­pen­ter has to play “Don’t Go Away, Chloe”, no fuck that, every musi­cian I’ve ever made out with or video­taped or road-tripped with has to play, so drink some cof­fee, baby, it’s gonna be a long night. When you hear that I have died, the best thing you can do is to get laid that night with a com­fort­able stranger, use my story to get their sym­pa­thy, and when you kiss them for the first time, think of me then.

When you hear that I have died, and you will, remem­ber your best revenge is to live well, take risks, save up money and chase your per­fect hap­pi­ness. Beat the sys­tem and learn to make your art really sup­port you, craft into some­thing your audi­ence can’t live with­out. Then make the world an even slightly bet­ter place — stop throw­ing your cig­a­rettes on the ground, vote in the next elec­tion, graf­fiti your life on the eyes of the hungry.

Then just do me one last favor. Please. Love some­thing. Any­thing. Start with your­self, but find pas­sion in every­thing, from an apple pie to a novel, make a fam­ily, get a degree, walk what­ever path is yours with your chin up and feet planted firmly. Have the best sto­ries to tell in the old folk’s home, about life­long friend­ships and epic love affairs, about the time you lost every­thing and yet found your­self hap­pier than when you began.. and remem­ber that time we got in SO much trouble…

Poets.. remem­ber. This is the story that never ends. When one of us leaves, another walks through the door. The pages turn, the sun keeps ris­ing. All you can do in the mean­while.. is to speak for your­self. Raise your voice high, tell your story, join hands against the dark and sing our souls to the sky. Know the best in me comes from the best in you, that as you tell your story, you will be telling mine, and our lives will be linked together for­ever, and every­one who hears you will become a part of the change we make.

So when you hear that I have died..
just ….live.

–Gabrielle Bou­liane

This is her last per­for­mance in public:

Please feel free to re-post any of the con­tents of this post any­where on the inter­net, with attri­bu­tion.
I feel like these last words of hers should be car­ried to as many peo­ple as possible.

Also, if any­body wants the high-res ver­sion of my draw­ing, drop me an e-mail.
If enough peo­ple are inter­ested, I can maybe make some prints.

Rest in peace, Gabrielle.
And to the rest of you, bunny up!

ThisIsStar Relaunch!

Oh my god!

After months and months of draw­ing and cod­ing, This Is Star has a new look!

I’ve been doing a lot of code and design on other people’s web­sites for the past cou­ple months, and it occurred to me that a new look on my own site was way over­due.
The pre­vi­ous design had been stand­ing strong for just over 2 years, and I knew it was more than time for a change.

The new site has some neat fea­tures that I’ll share with you now.

Cus­tom Cat­e­gory Headers

I designed the site to skin the head­ers of var­i­ous posts, by cat­e­gory.
This way, when I make an audio post, it calls a header illus­tra­tion with a cello bow and a micro­phone.
I have sim­i­lar head­ers for sev­eral dif­fer­ent types of posts, and plan on adding more as my col­lec­tion of post top­ics grows.

DefaultHeader
AudioHeader
PhotoHeader
IlloHeader

I was inspired by the man­ner in which sites like Tum­blr aut­o­for­mat your posts by type, and I wanted to do some­thing sim­i­lar on my site, which is word­press based.
Chang­ing the header back­ground dynam­i­cally by cat­e­gory seemed like the sim­plest way for me to get this feel with­out going overboard.

Fun with JavaScript

See­ing as I’ve grown a lot as a devel­oper in the time that has gone by since I did my last site design, I thought I should show off some of my newer skills.
One of those skills is using JavaScript, which has become much more sim­ple and dynamic in recent years thanks to the rise of libraries like JQuery and YUI.

I used JQuery on my site to make a few neat effects that I’ll show you here:

adexpand

If you click on one of the “Adver­tise Here” but­tons on the right hand side, you’ll notice that the infor­ma­tion on pur­chas­ing ad space on the site expands below the ads.
This allows me to dis­play the infor­ma­tion with­out adding an unnec­es­sary extra page, or allow­ing the user to nav­i­gate away from the main content.

Tis_hover

If you hover over my logo on the top left, you’ll see that it ani­mates slightly.
The lovely logo is, of course, designed by the equally lovely Nubby Twiglet.

collapsingArchives

You’ll also notice that all my archive pages and cat­e­gories will expand using a col­laps­ing menu.
This is pow­ered by Col­laps­ing Archives, and Col­laps­ing Cat­e­gories plu­g­ins, respectively.

Dynamic Footer

sweetFooter

A web design trend I’ve seen pop­ping up a whole lot lately is putting lots of dynamic con­tent for social net­work­ing in your footer.
I really like the look of these big foot­ers anchor­ing everyone’s pages, so I decided to do my own ver­sion, inte­grat­ing design ele­ments from my cat­e­gory head­ers, as well as the site header.

I hope all of you like the new site design as much as I do!

November 12th, 2009 | Announcements, Design, Illustration, Web | 13 Comments

I recently was asked to con­tribute an illus­tra­tion of Har­vey Pekar to Smith Mag­a­zine. They asked a group of 70 artists draw his por­trait, as a sur­prise for his 70th birth­day.
Ladies and gen­tle­man, I give you Har­vey Pekar:
Harvey Pekar

Please check out the rest of the pieces in the project over at Smith­Mag.
There are lots of other amaz­ing ren­di­tions of Mr. Pekar for you to feast your eyes on, and I’m quite sure you’ll be glad you did.

October 14th, 2009 | Comics, Illustration | 6 Comments

Page 12

Page 12 of the 24hour comic I did with Miss Mary Bee!

Writing/Modeling by her,
Illustration/layout by me.

Sorry I’ve been a bit lax on post­ing these! We’re halfway done!

A tornado disguised as a girl.

Love & Not Trouble.
Illustration & Animation.
Web Design, Cello, & World Domination.


Mad, Bad, Dangerous to know.
UV Ray

A deft eye for color and palate.
Chris Arrant, Newsarama

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ThisIsStar.com is the blog and portfolio of Star St.Germain, an illustrator, designer, developer and musician.
If you are interested in advertising with me, please contact me directly at thisisstar@gmail.com.
Ads can be run on a weekly or monthly basis and there is a discount if larger blocks of time are purchased in bulk.
Ads will be displayed on all pages of the site, in the right sidebar.
Please contact me at thisisstar@gmail.com with any further inquiries.

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