David Lozeau

David Lozeau has a character-driven painting style that is a quirky blend of Day of the Dead iconography, 1950s cartoon cell animation, traditional tattoo imagery, and pure Southern California Lowbrow, revealing his unique perspective on life, death, and all the gory stuff in between.
HisĀ Day of the Dead art highlights classic elements of the annual celebration, but also injects humor into the religious symbolism through the use of bold lines and exaggerated features; his Wild West art is deeply rooted in the American cowboy gunslinger lore from the 1800s where there was only a very fine line between a marshal and an outlaw; his Lowbrow art pays homage to everything from Greek mythology to the kustom kulture scene with flesh-eating horses, skeleton mechanics, and samurai warriors; and his Oceanic art is anything but typical, depicting steampunk divers, tiki-hoarding octopus, and robot invasions.
David Lozeau has shown in dozens of galleries on three continents, won multiple awards at competitive fine art exhibitions, and been rejected from more artist associations than he can count...