Monday, August 11, 2025

Will Francis and the Art of the Family

By Victor Carvellas

Grenada-born Will Francis is an artist whose bright colors, abstracted figures, and playful, dynamic compositions both tell the stories of his past and illuminate the joys of his present.

His beginnings were not promising. Though he confesses to having “always been an artist,” it was a flash of inspiration in 1997 that resulted in three paintings, back-to-back. “Then,” says Will, “I stopped for the next 20 years.” He would have more living to do before his subjects would appear.

In the meantime. Francis started both a family and a transportation business. “We were doing really well,” he says, “we had clients all over the Bay area.” When a New York account wanted him to expand to the East Coast, he realized he was already spending more time away from his family than he cared for. Then COVID struck, business evaporated, and he sold the company. “My wife said, ‘now’s your opportunity; start your art business.’”

“Art is my career now, so it blends in with my regular routine. I drop the kids off at school, go to the gym, then come back and paint for a few hours until I pick them up.” Will is prodigiously productive. “The creative process would come to a halt if I wasn’t painting every day. The ideas just keep flowing, so I’m able to finish four or five paintings a week.”

 

The Paintings

For this article Will chose some recent works representative of the subjects and themes that inspire him:

Do I Love You

Do I Love You: “I visited my mom some time ago and I realized something I hadn’t known before—that she loves dogs. The person holding the dog in her picture is her husband. He had a stroke and has been unable to move for the last 10 years, so the dog, playfully frisking about, compensates for the lost mobility and acts as an intermediary, a sort of vessel that shares and embodies the love they have for each other.”





Chapters of Me
Chapters of Me: “It’s about different phases of my life. Different times. The grids there represent the buildings and streets of New York, an important time in my life. That red represents how I see the world today. So many disparities. The space Is so polarized with people fighting for the wrong thing. The red is the blood; it’s the suffering of people, especially in places like the Ukraine. The blood that is behind the scenes is now up front and represents how front and center that suffering is to me.”




Family Time

Family Time: During the pandemic, we spent so much time together. I was trying to be creative but also focus on the kids. I was the primary caretaker since my wife was working. My business had to shut down. I had to figure out homeschooling, then paint for 20 minutes. It was a lot of time together, going to the park, taking walks. There’s a lot of colors in there. You see, we had just bought the house and there was all this tall grass and wildflowers in the back. They just ran around in it and had so much fun. Those wildflowers are where all the colors came from. For me, the structure of the piece suggests support and strength. The grids at angles suggest order amid the spontaneity.”





Aunties
Aunties: “I grew up in Grenada and across the street from us was this big house. They were very affluent, while we were quite poor. There was a lady there from Venezuela and she used to call me over and give me food. She’d watch us play. The yellow and black line of the painting is the street. Her husband watched us too. They never had kids, so I think watching us meant something. As to the title, I could have used the apostrophe, but the truth is there were two people there, so I dropped the apostrophe as a kind of play on the words, to signify the pair of them.”



Nothing Else Matters

Nothing Else Matters: Is all about family, about what you cherish most, what you think is most important. My first business was as an owner of a car service business.  I spent a lot of time away from home, often coming home just in time to put my daughter (we only had the one child) to bed. Now what happened was that I could have been a subcontractor for this huge company in New York with rights to the entire West Coast. It would have been huge for the business, but I was all over the place at all times of the day and night. My wife said to me, ‘your daughter is only a few months old. What are you going to do?’ I realized how much I was missing, and I let the account go. I didn’t want to miss that time in their young lives. It was just in time, though, because Uber and Lyft came on the scene and that would have been my competition.

 

Will Francis is hoping to have a new show opening in San Jose very soon. You can find out more about him and see some of his work at willfrancisart.com.

Hats Off to these Young Entrepreneurs
By Victor Carvellas

Brothers Jalen and Nyles Madison, 16 and 12, have an idea for building brick hobbyists too good to keep under their hats. Their company, MOC Gear, sells caps and beanies that use LEGO© and mini bricks to create custom wearable creations.

The line of colorful headwear uses two kinds of “build plates” that can be attached to the brim of the caps and to the front of the caps and beanies. There, builders can showcase their own unique build (thus, MOC – My Own Creations, as they’re known.)

“My brother and I love LEGO©. About 3 years ago we went to a convention where we got the inspiration for the hats. We started putting our builds on caps and wherever we wore them, they got a lot of attention. People wanted to know where they could buy them.”

The boys’ mom, Nikitha Madison, sees this as a learning opportunity. “The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree,” says Nikitha. “My mom [Debra Johnson] has owned a real estate company and a consulting company and co-owns a pet product business. I run a real estate consulting company. This is a great introduction to entrepreneurship for Jalen and Nyles while they do something they love.”

The pair are serious about making a success of it. With the help of their grandmother Debra, MOC Gear is a trademarked name. “It was important,” says Debra, “not only to protect the name, but to make sure they weren’t infringing on any existing brands.” MOC Gear has employed a professional design firm to design their website and manage their social media, but the marketing ideas haven’t stopped at the Internet.

“We envision them being sold in vending machines at places where kids hang out,” says Jalen. Nyles sees them as potentially “helping schools fundraise.” There’s also a place on the website, the MOC Gear Club (https://mocgear.club), where kids can safely share their creations, get special discounts, learn about upcoming releases, and ask questions of special guest builders.