
Scott Brundage’s ebook, "The Waking Prince," was six months in the making. Here’s a sample of some of Scott’s favorite pieces from this gorgeous project; the full book is now available for purchase on iTunes ebook store. (more)
Scott Brundage rocked the November cover of The Deal magazine with an intimidating group power portrait of the biggest wheels in the business. (more)
Scott Brundage created this fun image of an octopus in a library for Tor.com recently, to illustrate "Ch-Ch-Changes" a story written by science fiction author Michael Bishop. (more)
Scott Brundage’s quick black and white painting for an article from the Milken Institute re-revisits the whole Obama birth certificate debacle by joking that even though the document is real, it's irrelevant since Hawaii was under French rule when he was born… (more)
Just when Scott Brundage thought he could relax and settle into a nice, two-week deadline for a lovely cover of Library Journal, the phone started ringing… “With two days left to work up the final, I had to throw my relaxed pace out the window to jump into an overnighter for the Wall Street Journal,” says Scott. (more)
Scott Brundage’s grayscale skills breathe beautiful life into a series of characters he created for The Story Elves, a website for aspiring young writers. (more)
Scott Brundage is thrilled to be the recipient of a Spectrum Silver- NOT the geriatric vitamin; the Silver Medal in the Unpublished category for this year's Spectrum Fantastic Art annual competition. Congratulations, Scotty! (more)
Scott Brundage created the March cover for American School Board Journal, finding common ground in rising educational standards. (more)
Scott Brundage was contacted by Sagoma Editore to do the front and back cover for their upcoming book "The Silence of Eggs" or "Il Silenzio Dell'uovo," a fictional biography of a 19th century poet obsessed with the silence of things. (more)
Scott Brundage rose happily to the challenge of illustrating the unsteady financial future of colleges and universities for The Deal magazine. The art director encouraged Scott to push the "unsteady" aspect of the piece and have fun with it... (more)