Getting the lead out
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Paul Saitowitz
His works are as mysterious as their image.
In fact, the mystery behind his art may just be the crux of its
image. Tool, the seminal art-rock band fronted by Maynard James
Keenan -- a man few of his fans can even recognize -- has always
remained under the radar despite platinum album sales.
Better recognized for their semi-demonic and occult images than
their physical appearances, Tool has sponsored a zeitgeist for
disillusioned music and art nerds to cling to.
Enter Cam de Leon, better known as Happy Pencil, the man with the
peppy nickname behind several of the band’s most powerful and
enduring images, including the “smoke box” on the cover of the
critically heralded and commercially successful “Aenima” album.
De Leon, who exhibited last weekend in Costa Mesa at the Third Eye
Gathering Music, Art and Philosophy Festival, first began drawing
after an adolescent injury.
“I started drawing at about 15,” he said. “I was riding my
skateboard and broke some bones, which made me unable to practice
playing drums. I have a fanatical aversion to watching TV, so I
started drawing.”
An innate ability to draw and render figures, coupled with an
uncanny drive to use his art to make a living, helped him land jobs
creating graphics and renderings for local architects and newspapers
a year later.
After high school, he moved from his native Northern California to
Los Angeles with hopes of attending the Pasadena Art Center. Although
his skills afforded him advanced standing in the school, his bank
book allowed him no standing.
“I realized that there was no way I could have afforded to go
there, so I got a job at KABC-TV doing news graphics,” he said.
After about a year there, de Leon went through a litany of
advertising art jobs until he got fed up with the lack of creativity
and moved in a different direction.
“I was really disillusioned and just found no satisfaction in
drawing things like nachos on a cloud,” he said.
He was back at the bottom of the barrel and got himself an
entry-level position at the Creature Shop, a makeup house, where he
worked on movie makeup effects and costumes for films like
“Ghostbusters” and “Jacob’s Ladder.”
It was there that he met another artist named Adam Jones. The two
became fast friends, and when Jones’ band Tool eventually started
putting out albums, de Leon was a natural to be involved.
“We worked on a lot of albums, T-shirt designs and videos
together,” de Leon said. “My thing is that even if something is
disturbing, and it freaks people out, it should still encompass
something beautiful. That was what we were going for on those
projects.”
While working on ideas for videos for the band, he suggested that
the members stay out of any film projects and keep it mysterious --
something Tool has continuously adhered to.
“We wanted to make mini-films, not commercials for the band,” he
said.
De Leon went on to start https://www.happypencil.com, a site
artfully constructed with an ethereal soundtrack to display his
artwork. The site is listed as a link on Tool’s site and gets between
50,000 and 70,000 hits a day. It is the home for his latest drawings,
posters, sculptures and various other works.
While the site does bring in an income, de Leon -- a father of two
-- still does animation work in the film industry.
“Everything I’ve worked on and done has helped to get where I am
today, but I am ready to fully dedicate my time to working on my own
art,” he said. “That is all I want to do.”
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