Oct 192011
“52 Reasons to Love PDX!!” ~ Willamette Week
Illustrated Playing Cards are
COPYRIGHT AARON TROTTER 2011
One Year Ago, I started an online fundraising campaign with Kickstarter.com to bring my vision to reality. It worked.
Illustrated Playing Cards are
COPYRIGHT AARON TROTTER 2011
One Year Ago, I started an online fundraising campaign with Kickstarter.com to bring my vision to reality. It worked.
Oct 192011
52 Illustrated Playing Cards
Also available at:
Frye Art Museum
Elliott Bay Books
Seattle Art Museum
and Bellevue Art Museum
During 2 week-long visits to sketch 52 places in Seattle, I studied tourist maps and guide books, talked to locals, wandered around and discovered places. Not every drawing is a well known icon of the city; some of the places found me while others were intentionally scouted out.
The drawings were made on location in my sketchbook, often in the rain.
I do hope that people will use these cards, but it’s not really about playing games. It’s about Art, and the places that make this city special.
Sep 202011
First Printing, Limited to 100 : NOW Available
In May of 2011 I visited Vancouver, BC and sketched 52 places to comprise my FOURTH deck of Illustrated Playing Cards featuring Pacific Northwest Cities. Arriving by train from Portland, I stayed at a noisy backpacker hostel in Gastown and explored the city as best I could with limited time.
The last few days of my visit included the Stanley Cup fan riots which were a really impressive display of national pride. That’s when I drew Granville street empty of traffic.
If you have a retail business in VAN and would like to sell decks at your store, please contact me for wholesale orders : aarontrotter@live.com
Sep 182011
Astoria cards are SOLD OUT.
Six months ago I decided to create a special birthday gift for a 200 year old city. During 3 visits I composed enough sketches of Astoria to make a deck of 52 Illustrated Playing Cards. It is part of my Pacific Northwest series which includes Portland, Seattle, and Vancouver, B.C. Each deck features famous landmarks and neighborhood places. To find the places that are included in this exhibition, I studied the tourist maps, talked to locals at Ft. George, and got advice from a barista for the main targets.
But sometimes the places just found me as I walked around exploring. Some buildings spoke louder than others, like the abandoned Flavel house. Along the Riverwalk, I was surprised by the wildness of the Columbia as a dramatic contrast to the tranquility of the river near Portland.
Jan 252010








