Don’t Let Legal Work Kill Your Creative Side
For all of you lawyer / artist types, here’s an inspiring tale, from the San Francisco Chronicle. Meet José Klein, a recent Harvard Law grad who does plate art on the side. The truly inspiring part of the tale is how Klein found time during law school to make all these “Learned Handmade Plates”!
Klein spends nearly every free minute making magic marker drawings.Not just any magic marker drawings, but drawings that are converted to dinner plates — Make-a-Plates, specifically, that cheap craft store staple where marker drawings are transferred permanently onto melamine dishware. Klein had never been a drawer, but something swept over him. It wasn’t landscapes and still lifes that emerged, but the figures and doctrines that comprise the jurisprudential canon. With a savantlike intensity he began translating law school into odd and remarkably lovely images you can eat off of.
There’s “Planned Parenthood v. American Coalition of Life Activists,” part of the First Amendment series. There’s the Punitive Damages collection. There are six plates commemorating the Interstate Commerce Clause. Then there’s each of the Supreme Court justices, lovingly rendered.
We won’t say Klein has totally uncapped his artistic free spirit. The plates are art, but they’re practical art. You can eat off the final product.
Additional discussion, below the fold.
Klein explains his art here. We like that he calls his plates featuring the SCOTUS justices “fetish objects.” Indeed. He also says his plates “turn the act of eating into an act of civic engagement.”
We’re a little worried about Klein’s attitude toward food. His description of the law school experience sounds eating disorder-esque:
The plates are snapshots from the core of law as it is taught. Most law students have been expected to memorize most of the cases depicted here. They have been evaluated on the basis of how well they can reproduce the information these cases contain. Twice a year, the American Law Student binges on these cases and others like them, ravenously cramming them into their minds, only to purge them out again onto the pages of a final exam.
We admire attorneys who don’t let their artistic sides get subsumed by legal work. But there are limits. Don’t try to pawn your band’s cd off on R. Kelly mid-trial (see Lawyer of the Day: Mike Roman). And don’t insert artistic renderings into your legal filings and call it a “children’s picture book for adults” (see Lawyer of the Day: Jack Thompson).
Now, go out and buy some markers!
Justice is served: A Harvard Law grad develops an odd obsession [San Francisco Chronicle]
Serving Cases On a Plate [Concurring Opinions]




Comments
This stuff is weird.
"In 2008, I graduate from the prestigious, Harvard Law School." (http://www.joseklein.com/jose.html)
This young man has a future with Gallion & Spielvogel. G&S would no doubt require a brief rendezvous with Strunk & White's section on comma usage.
so freeking stupid
ocd anyone? this kid in not an artist but is one of many mentally ill attorneys
Any time a lawyer tries to do something creative or interesting, he/she gets branded as crazy.
These plates are cool and fun. Don't be such haters.
um, he made a plate about an abortion case?
What the heck did the picture look like?????
I think that one was probably in bad taste. (rim-shot)
I'm not being a hater, but this guy clearly has some OCD. See "Klein spends nearly every free minute making magic marker drawings. "
- Not 1:58
Guys in my high school did magic marker drawings all the time. It was no big deal.
I wonder if this misuser of the comma was a Harvard Law Review editor.
1:58 here. obviously, this kid has issues. his (probably perfect) mastery of the subject matter was not good enough for him. he had to take it a step further and doodle themes from cases and transfer these onto hard plates...lunatic?
You should link to the HL Record piece, which was in April: http://media.www.hlrecord.org/media/storage/paper609/news/2008/04/24/Etc/Best-3l.paper.Ever.Learned.Handmade.Plates-3347405.shtml
Dude got his 3L paper credit for this. I tip my hat to him.
I think there are definitely better ways to spend your free time. Also, not to be a pain in the ass but melamine is the toxic stuff that they found in Chinese dog food. Melamine resin is what you make plates out of.
"With a savantlike intensity...."
No one else found that funny? I can't stop giggling...
http://www.jerseytoddshow.com
my escape
2:02 - agreed. the guy has some real talent. i like 'em...not necessarily buying, but still.
2:02 - agreed. the guy has some real talent. i like 'em...not necessarily buying, but still.
his alito and thomas drawings don't even look like alito and thomas. i can at least tell who the other drawings are supposed to represent.
I find that I use my savantlike intensity to do all sorts of cool things, including document review. It's really going to help me make partner.
I keep seeing ads for these things posted all over school, and I just can't get past the terrible pun.
That was an awful, awful pun.
Did nobody else pick up on it?
I went to undergrad with Jose. I lost touch with him long ago and had no idea he was at HLS. He's a really nice guy and very, very funny. So please be nice to him, okay?
what firm?