Tag: news

  • Mural Design for Hollymead Elementary

    Mural Design for Hollymead Elementary

    Inked illustration by Scott DuBar in collaboration with Hollymead Elementary and the Charlottesville Mural Project.

    Here’s some pics of a completed mural I designed in collaboration with Hollymead Elementary and the Charlottesville Mural Project two years ago.


    My role was to combine three winning ideas submitted by students into one design. The solution I came up with was to include likenesses of the three kids daydreaming about the things they each had drawn. I think my favorite detail was including the cat of one of the kids, named Tofu, and making it shaped like a block of tofu! 


    Once my design was approved, volunteers at the Charlottesville Mural Project went to work tracing the line art onto four 8×4 panels. The panels were then brought to Hollymead along with all 14 of the paint colors needed for the students to complete the project.


    Hollymead had some delays in finding the best location to display the mural and in getting it mounted nicely, so it didn’t go up until last August. It now hangs proudly in the school cafeteria. Everyone involved did a great job! 

    Mural design for Hollymead Elementary by Charlottesville illustrator Scott DuBar.


    Thanks to Art Teacher Molly Foster and Alan Groffinski of the Charlottesville Mural Project for reaching out to me. This was my first time doing a project like this and was easily the most fun I’ve had in a long time.

  • Interview With VPM Focal Point

    Interview With VPM Focal Point

    Illustrator Scott DuBar interview with VPM Focal Point

    VPM Focal Point interviewed me recently for a show they did on working artists in Virginia. You can see my segment in the player above. I’ve been so busy lately working on a big project I’m not yet allowed to discuss (more on that later!) that I really had no idea what I had said during the interview. I had to wait until it aired to find out if anything I said was even coherent! Thankfully, the good folks at VPM Focal Point picked a suitable clip. Coherency accomplished.

    They also posted a nice blog article that covered a bit more, including a nice picture of my dad’s old sketchbook which was a major influence on my desire to become a professional illustrator.

    DuBar is literally drawing on his past, saying he learned to love cartoons as a child, inspired by his father Jules DuBar’s depression-era doodling.  

    ”He created his own neighborhood newspaper,” DuBar recalls about his dad. “He would write stories and interview people in the neighborhood and he would do the comic strips as well. He still had a few of those and that was really, when I was a kid, that really blew my mind.” 

    Angie Miles and Samantha Willis | VPM News

    You can see the full article here: https://vpm.org/news/articles/31614/a-promising-future-for-virginias-professional-artists

    A big thank you to Angie Miles, Samantha Willis, and Emanuel Tambakakis for including me and for doing such a great job! It’s not often that artists or illustrators get featured on tv, and I’m grateful to have been a part of that.

    Charlottesville illustrator Scott DuBar interviewed by VPM Focal Point.
    VPM Focal Point | Photo by Emanuel Tambakakis
    Depression-era sketchbook of Jules DuBar | VPM Focal Point
    My dad’s old sketchbook | Photo by Scott DuBar
  • Zippy Buzzy Bee Wins Platinum MarCom Award!

    Zippy Buzzy Bee Wins Platinum MarCom Award!

    Zippy Buzzy Bee, winner of a MarCom Award 2021.

    My third children’s book, Zippy Buzzy Bee, won a Platinum MarCom Award in the Cartoon category of the international 2021 MarCom Awards! Thanks to the MarComs, author Deborah Cross, and to Fabi Preslar at SPARK Publications for entering Zippy Buzzy Bee (and for being so great to work with)!

    Administered by the Association of Marketing and Communication Professionals, the annual MarCom competition is one of the largest for creative professionals and receives submissions from nineteen countries around the world. 

    Order your copy at https://my.epublishyou.com/zippybuzzybeebook

    Kids visiting the zoo. Zippy Buzzy Bee, winner of a MarCom Award 2021.
    Kids visiting the penguin house. Zippy Buzzy Bee, winner of a MarCom Award 2021.
    Kids in the cafeteria. Zippy Buzzy Bee, winner of a MarCom Award 2021.
  • Read Local Bookmark | Client: SCBWI

    Read Local Bookmark | Client: SCBWI

     

    Read Local bookmark 2018 illustration by Scott DuBar

    Here is a bookmark I created for the Read Local Challenge, hosted by the SCBWI MD/DE/WV/VA.  It’s one of several that were created by illustrators whose books are part of the reading challenge. The bookmarks are all black and white so that kids can color them in, but I figured “why should they have all the fun?” and colored one myself.

    If you live in Maryland, Delaware, West Virginia, or Virginia, and are interested in your kids or their school participating, you can learn all about it at the SCBWI MD/DE/WV/VA Read Local Challenge webpage. They have a great selection of fantastic children’s books that range from picture books (Like my very own Short Pump Bump!) to middle grade to young adult.

    If you want to download a printable version of my bookmark or any of the other awesome bookmarks so you can color it yourself, go here.

     

     

  • Short Pump Bump featured on local news

    Short Pump Bump featured on local news

    Short Pump Bump was featured on local news in Richmond when author Angie Miles went to an elementary school for a class reading. It was the first of many school visits to come, I’m sure!

    [video_embed url=”https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9b6vIumC0yM&index=1&list=PLgriZWM-su0MKu6t928S_g67QDHd_VNLM” embed_style=”default”]

     

    In related news, Short Pump Bump was also mentioned in the winter edition of the SCBWI Mid-Atlantic newsletter, The Highlighter.

    Short Pump Bump featured in SCBWI Highlighter

  • Short Pump Bump Featured In Fifty Plus

    Short Pump Bump Featured In Fifty Plus

    Short Pump Bump featured in Fifty Plus (cover) Short Pump Bump featured in Fifty Plus (article)

    Author Angie Miles is featured on the cover of this month’s issue of Fifty Plus for an article on the release of our new children’s book, Short Pump Bump. You can check out the article online at issue.com. Short Pump Bump is currently available online via amazon.com, barnesandnoble.com, and belleislebooks.com. School visits and other events can be arranged at shortpumpbump.com, where you can also purchase copies signed by the author. I am currently working on adding a shop to my site where you can purchase copies signed by me, along with a bookmark and art print of one of the poems from the book, Opportunity Time. Be sure to check back soon for updates!

  • Short Pump Bump! Coming Soon

    Short Pump Bump! Coming Soon

    spb

    I am currently finishing up the last few illustrations for my first picture book! Written by Angie Miles, Short Pump Bump! highlights many of the people and places that make Richmond, Virginia such a great place to live. Preorders are available at www.shortpumpbump.com

    More info soon!

  • Tiger’s Blood In Stores Now!

    Tiger’s Blood In Stores Now!

    Underwater Tiger | Client: Mike's HARDER

    My illustration for Mike’s HARDER is in stores across the country this month! It’s one of three limited edition collectors’ cans for their new seasonal drink Tiger’s Blood. This is of course a very different style than my editorial and children’s work, but I felt it was better in this case to go in a different direction visually. It’s actually very much in line with my sketchbook drawing style, so it wasn’t such a big stretch for me. In any case, I’m really pumped to see my art in stores for such a big brand like Mike’s!

    The Daily Progress, our local paper, even gave me a mention! http://www.dailyprogress.com/neighbors/article_6b9b7f8b-2616-593d-9e21-cf4de6ae662d.html

  • Story Starters With YA Author Lamar Giles

    Story Starters With YA Author Lamar Giles

    Last weekend, I attended a local SCBWI event (Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators) in Richmond, Va. Among the three excellent panelists was YA author, and 2015 Edgar Award Nominee, Lamar Giles.
    Lamar did a super-fun Mad-Lib-style exercise with us called Story Starters, where he and the audience create a unique opening line by committee. Once the line’s created, the writers/illustrators in the audience have 15 minutes to write or sketch whatever that line inspires.
    The sentence we came up with was “Alice never wants to hurt anyone again, but the robots won’t end the experiment.”  Here’s what I came up with in 15 minutes:
    I liked the sketch so much, that I went ahead and did a more finished version at home:
    The cool part was that Lamar was pretty excited to share what everyone did on his blog, so I happily sent him both the sketch and the finished piece. Much to my surprise, not only did he post my images, but wrote up a pretty great review of my work as well. You check it out here: http://www.lrgiles.com/story-starters-scott-dubar-illustrator/ And for everyone interested YA fiction, definately check out Lamar’s books Fake ID, and Endangered.
  • Urban Sketchers Gallery Show at the VCA

    Urban Sketchers Gallery Show at the VCA

    I got to participate in a local Urban Sketchers gallery showing at the Virginia Center for Architecture in Richmond, which marked my first galley showing in a pretty long time. The event was organized by Jessie Chapman, who is a long-time board member of UrbanSketchers.org, an international organization that promotes sketchbook drawing.
    The exhibit features our Urban Sketchers group, along with work from Andrew Moore, Don Gore, and Washington Post news illustrator Richard Johnson.

    Above: Me standing next to my profound thoughts on the value of sketchbook drawing.
    Oddly, none of the sketches pictured are mine. Below: A few of the panels that feature some of my work, along with Stephen Haske, Jessie Chapman, and others.

     

    The show will be up through July 5, so anyone in the RVA area can drop by. Check out www.architectureva.org for more details.