Patrick's work in RAWVISION Magazine Oct 2020: https://rawvision.com/blogs/articles/articles-titanic-talent
See Patrick's Work in:
-2020- Titanic Talent, RAWVISION Magazine
-2017- Patrick Hackleman with Bruce Burris, Disparate Minds Magazine
-2015- The Artwork of Patrick Hackleman By Kaitlyn Wittig Menguc, Brut Force Magazine
-2015- Artist Patrick Hackleman By Patrick Fancher Corvallis Gazette-Times
-2017- Patrick Hackleman with Bruce Burris, Disparate Minds Magazine
-2015- The Artwork of Patrick Hackleman By Kaitlyn Wittig Menguc, Brut Force Magazine
-2015- Artist Patrick Hackleman By Patrick Fancher Corvallis Gazette-Times
Artist : Patrick Hackleman
By Patrick Fancher
The Corvallis Gazette-Times 12/15/15
Patrick Hackleman's freehand drawings of old warships are so finely detailed they could easily be mistaken for blueprints.
The 34-year-old Corvallis native, who was diagnosed as in the spectrum of autism at a young age, is receiving attention from galleries and art enthusiasts all over the country for his models and drawings, which are done to scale.
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"I started getting into them [ships] in the third grade, when we were studying the Titanic," Hackleman said.
As Hackleman talked, he worked on a drawing of the American Turtle (the first submersible used in combat) on his drafting-style table with a pencil and three-sided ruler. A model he built of the U.S.S. Monitor, an ironclad steam ship from the Civil War, rested near the top of his table.
Guided by photographs or his own drawings, he makes boat and warship models from scratch using plastic, wood and other materials. When he was younger he built the pirate ship from the movie "The Goonies," which won a blue ribbon at the Benton County Fair. He's made another one since that he displays atop a bookshelf near his work space.
By Patrick Fancher
The Corvallis Gazette-Times 12/15/15
Patrick Hackleman's freehand drawings of old warships are so finely detailed they could easily be mistaken for blueprints.
The 34-year-old Corvallis native, who was diagnosed as in the spectrum of autism at a young age, is receiving attention from galleries and art enthusiasts all over the country for his models and drawings, which are done to scale.
-
"I started getting into them [ships] in the third grade, when we were studying the Titanic," Hackleman said.
As Hackleman talked, he worked on a drawing of the American Turtle (the first submersible used in combat) on his drafting-style table with a pencil and three-sided ruler. A model he built of the U.S.S. Monitor, an ironclad steam ship from the Civil War, rested near the top of his table.
Guided by photographs or his own drawings, he makes boat and warship models from scratch using plastic, wood and other materials. When he was younger he built the pirate ship from the movie "The Goonies," which won a blue ribbon at the Benton County Fair. He's made another one since that he displays atop a bookshelf near his work space.