Just finished recycling a bunch of “free” metal frames I have been moving around my office for two years by filing them with matted gicleé. Never again. Them things just aren’t designed for mats. Even though the results appear quite nice it was a lot of work, cleaning them up and then cramming the mats and prints into them. My fingers are pretty chewed up now. Hopefully some of them will sell at the SunnySlope artwalk on Saturday — the Artwalk is between Butler and Dunlop on the East Side of Central Avenue in Phoenix AZ USA April 10, 2010. I just realized he Flights of Fancy show at the Sundust gallery opens tomorrow. Busy busy busy.
I am working on two more sketches, but I have been too busy this week to get any painting done. Next week doesn’t look good either as April 15th approaches and taxes are my day job, and I actually have an artisan market that day.
Anyway, here is the blog on the last piece I finished.
Long before the invention of the World Wide Web, there were loose sets of conventions for communicating over networks. Most had to do with multi-posting, cross posting, off-topic posting, electronic signatures, whether or not to use abbreviations, hijacking a discussion thread, in addition to basic professionalism, courtesy, a distaste for spam, prohibitions against writing in ALL CAPS (which is the cyber-equivalent of yelling) and bans against flame wars. An unwritten idea behind netiquette is that all these communications forms: email, forums, chats, and other networks are not really private and messages conveyed over them should reflect this fact. If you would not want to see something you said on the front page of the NY Times, you probably should not convey it in cyberspace.
In this installment of Social Media Birds, I return to my Tweety. Them bright yellow canaries are just so happy looking.

Netiquette, by Jake Beckman. A singing yellow canary is perched atop his grumpy flaming cat monster.
I struggled with sketching this painting for quite a while. The concept came quickly enough: flaming monster, social media tweety — high concept. My original drawing with a canary operating a “blue“berry device, while sitting on his vaguely Chuck Jones’-esque flaming monster was very unsatisfying. It was too literal and did not lay out well. I went through several iterations until I realized my monster was looking a lot more like a cat than anything else. Suddenly it dawned — few things look more disdainful than a punch-face Persian cat. When my monster took on feline elements the rest just came together. The binary swirling out of the background reads “Netiquette” of course.
For more information about Netiquette, please refer to its art page at AKAJake.com.
What are your thoughts on Netiquette?
Jake
Artist, AKAJake.com Come Experience the Art!
The art work in this blog is federally copyrighted. All reproduction and publishing copyrights are retained by the artist. Images are not to be copied, re-distributed, imitated, derived OR otherwise used in any form without the explicit written permission of the artist.




