INSIGHT Magazine August 2016 | Page 13

Dan Seymour’s been everywhere, man. The Anniston-based artist spent 20 years in the Army as a Casualty and Mortuary Affairs Specialist, helping tend to wartime casualties and return them home for burial. He joined a special unit that scoured for soldiers gone missing in action in foreign wars, sometimes searching for missing service members gone two or three decades. The job took him around the world, from Thailand and Baghdad to Hawaii and Virginia. He used art to decompress and get outside his own head during his free time. “It was a release of not thinking of what we were dealing with every day,” said Seymour. “Take your brain off something that stresses you and put it on something that makes you feel better.” reproduction tattoos, but Seymour’s are spot-on; a Jimi Hendrix tattoo that took him seven hours to apply is a perfect representation of Hendrix. For now, Seymour plans to work on a bigger scale. A current project has him applying a big Batman logo mural to a wall for the family of a late friend, and he’s interested in more large-scale work. “I’d like to step it up a bit,” said Seymour. Check out more of Dan’s work on Instagram, where he can be messaged for commissions or for more information. He also founded Anniston Arts Community on Facebook, where artists can promote their work and events. ✻ It’s reasonable to expect gloomy art to come from serious circumstances, but Seymour’s watercolors run between dark and light equally. One of his paintings of Johnny Cash has the country singer wreathed in fire, bright red and orange bordering a grayscale version of Cash’s face. Another painting features a woman with tears running through mascara, but it’s like the rest of her drips off the page, too. Seymour also tattoos, taking his work off the page and applying it to friends and clients. Everyone has seen bad photo INSIGHT August 2016 13