
A Letter From Markus - Pierson
First of all, I'd like to give you all a very sincere "Thank
You" for your support and interest in my work. Thanks to
people like you, it has been an amazing career, by anyone's
standards. You know, I wasn't always an artist. In fact, I was
a journeyman bookkeeper when I almost kicked the bucket from
Crohn's disease back about fifteen years ago. Thankfully I didn't,
and when I woke up in the hospital I told everyone I know that
the bookkeeper was dead after all - but in his place was a man
who was going to become a successful artist. They thought I
was nuts, I wasn't Two years later, in June 1986, I started
the Coyote Series. I was living in Jackson Michigan, a town
perennially voted the worst place to live in America. My inspiration
was a Joni Mitchell song "Coyote". A friend of mine
put it on a tape and I listened. At the time I was 26, a dirt
poor billboard painter living in a tiny one-room apartment.
In fact, I couldn't even afford a shower curtain to serve as
a wedding present for two good friends who were getting married
in the Southwest. I figured they might like one of my Coyote
drawings so I did a romantic one and took it there - the people
at the wedding went nuts! Well, you know how these things go
- somebody knew somebody who knew somebody in the art business,
and within a year my art was being sold in galleries across
the country.
That was 15 years ago. Since then I have had 32 one-man exhibitions
across the country. I have created 33 different sculpture editions,
and 24 print editions, most of which sold out at a frenzied
pace. The price of my first original was $100.00. One recently
sold for $30,000. Crazy. The Coyotes have been collected by
dozens of famous celebrities, Captains of Industry, and Heads
of State. From Oliver Stone to Ozzie Osborne, from N.B.C. president
Warren Littlefield to Kevin Costner, from the C.E.O. of Exxon
to John Cleese, from billionaire Sam Zell to Sylvester Stallone,
from Tommie Lee to the American Ambassador to Argentina, the
coyotes do get around. They have been featured on numerous movies
and television shows, and have been the subject of several newspaper
and magazine articles.
They hang on the walls of mansions and great villas around
the world. But most importantly, they hang on the walls of everyday
people and bring joy into their lives. Many years ago someone
asked me my favorite thing about the coyotes, and I said, "They
celebrate life. Sometimes life kicks them around, but they embrace
it just the same. Heartaches, bad breaks, job problems, job
triumphs, true love, rotten luck, vast fortune. Good or bad,
they celebrate," I like that. As for my great fortune and
success as a painter, no one is more amazed than me. A simple
twist of fate transformed my life, and I can only thank God
for the good luck and tremendous blessings I have received.
The coyote's are now into their second decade. The first was
a hard, fun, nutty decade of dogs in suits, and the second promises
to be that and more. For any budding artists out there seeking
my advice I would simply say this: never give up, outwork everyone
else, and don't be afraid to take risks. My work has improved
each year because I test my abilities every day. I hang on to
the elements I believe in and toss the rest, continually developing
and growing. In this way I feel I follow the paths of the greats,
even if I am painting Coyotes in suits. Your vehicle may be
the Oscar Meyer Weinermobile, it doesn't mean your destination
can't be a great one. I look forward to continuing this wonderful
journey together. Indeed there is so much to be thankful for,
and so much to celebrate.
Markus