Frank O’Connor of Bungie Studios has routinely treated us to his unique and often humorous depictions of “Mister Chief” (his personal version of our favorite Spartan superhero) for the past handful of years. What started on 01.16.04 in Frankie’s first Weekly Update (back when Halo 2 was still a tightly guarded secret) has since turned into something loyal Bungie readers look forward to every Friday. The first image of Mister Chief had him wielding a light saber because, as Frankie said, “guns are hard to draw”.

Four years later brings us Mister Chief still sans weapon but this time on a different medium. Just once Frankie lovingly painted our beloved Mister Chief on the more tangible form of canvas. This original painting recently fetched an astounding $6,100.00 on eBay, the proceeds of which will go to the Brian Morden Foundation to help fund Ewing’s Sarcoma and childhood cancer research (you can read more about Brian, who was a passionate Halo fan but more importantly an amazing person, here). This canvas painting was officially titled “Here Lies the Last Sip of the Bourgeoisie Malaise Consommé”.

Frankie took some time out of his busy day to answer a few questions about this painting as asked by Luke recently on bungie.net.
Q: You chose pastels on canvas, why?
I think that the frangible, crumbling nature of soft pastels perfectly reinforces the reflection of capitalism’s decay under the onslaught of the corrosive commercialization. As the chalks fracture and turn to dust on the canvas, so too does the very act of rendering the image. The artist tumbles into the piece, just as the piece surges up into the artist. The sheer dirt of it is ironically cleansing.
Q: There’s a void swirling the Chief here, it’s as if he’s fought through some challenge in order to grace viewers with his presence? A metaphor for the artistic condition?
It’s a literalism of the abyss looking into you. Here the abyss isn’t mystery or darkness. It is dead eyes, rictus grin and all the decay of the real abyss – death and its penetrating gaze. It’s a gaze any true artist must become familiar with if he is to become familiar with himself. Zen buddhists grasped this notion – a Samurai must accept death before he fights. In a real sense, he’s already dead when he rides into battle. Like a samurai, I’ve accepted those cold arms and I ride into a new piece like a war, clutching a soft pastel in place of a sword.
Q: You chose a broad color palette for your work. Explain some of these choices.
The piece is black. The colors are illusion. Black is the absorption of every color in the spectrum – it steals light from the universe. Mister Chief steals color and worth from the universe. He is the black of talent.
Q: The Mister Chief has some asymmetrical qualities, clearly this is a statement. What are you trying to present, here.
In a sense it’s a surfeit of balance. When your ability, your art reaches a perfect internal symmetry, something else has to give. As my abilities as an artist reached their zenith, I started to sacrifice balance from other areas of my being. Friendships, manners, hygiene. Sacrifice all of those things in pursuit of your art and you will find loneliness is the perfect palette.
Underneath all of that artistic knowledge and beyond that sharp sense of humor lies a heart of gold. Frankie, you did good.











Posted by the light show on February 18, 2008 at 8:58 am
i really didn’t think anybody could be so insightful about all aspects of life and death… what he lacks in true artistic skill he makes up in unparalleled proportions of artistic knowledge and creativity. this man… no, man is not enough… this mastermind of all things will be in history books and only scholars will have the understanding to inform all men of his greatness. he is creating history folks…
Posted by Jim 028 on February 18, 2008 at 10:42 am
I find myself without words after reading Frankie’s comments. Literally how do I respond to that?
Plus blimey! That’s a fair old wedge of cash for the charity. Nicely done Mr O’Connor.
Posted by Cayote on February 18, 2008 at 1:21 pm
Beautiful.
Posted by Xor1an on February 19, 2008 at 10:58 am
I was actually considering bidding on it earlier in the auction. I mean hey, tax-deuctible recon armor, right? And I’ve been making other cancer-related charitable donations for a while, as I have a step-father with Leukemia. (I brought my 360 with me over Christmas to play some Halo 1 co-op with him.)
I had just about convinced myself to do it, but when I went back to the auction page it had jumped up over $4,000, and that was more than I was prepared to donate. I’m really impressed that the winning bid was as high as it was. Everyone who was involved (let’s not forget Mr. Luis Wu from h.b.o who ran the auction) deserves to be commended.