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David
Dees began his airbrush art career in the fast paced world of corporate
advertising. Begging his way onto a staff position at an Atlanta
sweatshop, GraphicsGroup studios, Dees was soon dealing with cutthroat art
directors from New York to Chicago, creating the eye catching visuals that
sold everything from cartoon package designs on kids cereal boxes, to
billboards of dazzling electronics, to the newest soft drink ads.
In the eighties, setting up freelance shop in Los Angeles, Dees had
success with the movie industry, painting hundreds of video covers, movie
ad campaigns, and store displays for his clients Paramount, Hanna-Barbera,
and Walt Disney Studios.
Then, an interest in childrens book illustrations led to a long standing
association with Sesame Street, where his colorful and wacky illustrations
of Cookie Monster, Big Bird, and the muppets were featured in Sesame
Street Magazine nearly every month for the last 15 years, including seven
covers, and recently, four Sesame Street children books for Random House
and Readers Digest Publishing.
These days, long since replacing the liquid airbrushed acrylic paint with
photoshop
digital art, high technology has revitalized the look and feel of his
artwork.
Then, in 2006, Dees came up with an original style of political art
commentary inspired by the 9/11 truth movement and a passion to fight the
New World Order agenda. David began creating and releasing an endless
barrage of aggressive, and sometimes disturbing, photo-illustration images
throughout the internet in an attempt to wake others up about the
onslaught of the elite's power hungry world government plan of domination.
Sarcastic to the extreme, funny in the approach, most times visually
horrifying, this wild new style of illustration screams out our serious
world crisis situation in a visual instant.
Patriot heros like Hollywood film producer Aaron Russo who produced
"America: Freedom to Fascism", radio talk show legend Jeff Rense, and the
world renowned David Icke have all commented on this socially conscious
illustration and were not shy in throwing around the term 'political art
genius'.
What irony that all of David Dees' years of designing for big corporations
trained an art monster who would now turn his creative power back against
that very corrupt mainstream media.
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