Inspired: Rachel J. Cox

Back when we began, Philthy Art’s first convoview conquest was Rachel J. Cox. The very same week that we sat down with her and videotaped a three-hour conversation, she was asked to do the cover of the 2007 Philadelphia Film Festival guide.

Shortly after, our camera, well, stopped showing images and playing sound, and so the full, multimedia convoview was never really posted. However, it is time to return our attention to Rachel J. Cox.

Why? Because something amazing is happening.

A few weeks ago, Rachel was working on the album art for a friend from high school who had been signed to Maverick records but had decided to be bought out of his contract. He used the money to create his own album and has been selling them himself. Needless to say, if you know the independent music world, things were going slow.

It all seemed like the same situation Philthy Art finds many talented people in: making art, doing what they believe in, but struggling on the sidelines. I didn’t even think to ask her for a copy of his music.

Then, an infamous blogger named Perez Hilton (who we read religiously and then feel the need to purge through confession) discovered the music of Eric Hutchinson and decided to write about it on his blog.

His blog gets about 3,000,000 unique hits a day.

Within days, Eric Hutchinson’s album “Sounds Like This” became #6 on the iTunes charts and his myspace now has over 22,000 friends.

So, a local Philly girl, with immense talent, just made the album art for an album that is hitting the top of the charts. And all because she did something beautiful to help a friend and kept moving toward what she believed in.

Much more to come. But in the meantime, check out Rachel J. Cox Illustrations on myspace, and of course, the music of Eric Hutchinson.

Rachel Cox’s Illustration Just Got Even Prettier

Click the image below to check out the lovely Dermot Mulroney standing in front of Rachel’s cover illustration for the Philadelphia Film Festival. To quote Cox: “It’s like I am standing there.” 

final-cover-pff-2007-no-spine.jpg

I Can’t Get Enough Cox

Where will her talents cease? The same week that saw Rachel’s cover illustration for the Philadelphia Film Festival spread through the city like the blooms of spring, also sees her wry wit and quirky connections applied to the “illustration” of classic movies in the new TLA blog.

“(1974, 105 min) Last week I watched Zardoz, the latest in a long series of post-apocalyptic movies from the ’70s that I have enjoyed. Why are they so great? More specifically, why are they so much greater than the post-apocalyptic movies from oh, say… every other decade? Were those ten years really so bleak and full of despair? Disco was dying, and perhaps in the hearts and minds of an entire generation the earth was, too”….read more

Rachel J. Cox Covers Philadelphia

final-cover-pff-2007-no-spine.jpgAmazing timing, mon amis. Just as I discover Rachel J. Cox, the city of Philadelphia will also discover her work on the cover of the 2007 Philadelphia Film Festival catalog as it is strewn about and dropped from helicopters all up and down Broad Street this coming week.

Just one more reason to worship Cox.

(I may have made up the part about the helicopters.)

Want more?

Full convoview coming soon.

Rachel J. Cox on Parade

final-cover-pff-2007-no-spine.jpg

View slide show of Rachel’s work.

Coming Soon! Convoview with Rachel Cox

philthyartlogo1.gif

murakami.jpg

The last week of March, I get to peruse Philly artist Rachel Cox’s studio, enjoy warm beverages, and get down and dirty with her about art, process, and whatever else comes up. This will be quickly fashioned into FCA’s first official convoview, complete with  multi-media, links, and images from Rachel Cox’s collection.

Upcoming interviews:

Anders Hansen…

Michael Guinn…

Syd Torchio

…and more

Want to be notified when each new interview goes live? Join the mailing list by sending me an email:

alvarez.nina@gmail.com