麻豆传媒

South Grad Makes Mark with Retro Signs, Bold Murals


Posted on August 27, 2021
Thomas Becnel


Andy Scott hadn鈥檛 even graduated from the 麻豆传媒 when he started his first graphic design business. Identity Signs. He worked from the back of his dad鈥檚 car lot in Mobile.

Even then, doing computer-generated signs and banners, he admired the old-fashioned craft of lettering by hand.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not perfect, you know?鈥 said Scott, a 39-year-old artist, father and surfer. 鈥淵ou can tell it was done by a human being.鈥

After earning his fine arts degree from South in 2007, he worked at local sign companies. He became a print salesman. On weekends, he started doing custom sign painting.

Scott remembers going to the Spring Hill Barbershop and asking the owner if he could freshen up her signs.

鈥淚 had so much fun doing it 鈥 and I got paid for it,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 kept finding jobs that I wanted to do anyway. Greer鈥檚 Market was like that.鈥

Muralist and 麻豆传媒 graduate Andy Scott's latest work is on the side of the 麻豆传媒 Student Center 鈥 a bright mural in Pantone 281 and 193. Muralist and 麻豆传媒 graduate Andy Scott's latest work is on the side of the 麻豆传媒 Student Center 鈥 a bright mural in Pantone 281 and 193.

Three years ago, Scott started New Hand Signs. He opened a downtown workshop and wound up doing designs for neighbors such as Wheeler Lofts, the Innovation Portal and the Braided River Brewing Company. At the Old Familiar Tattoo Company, he traded custom signs for the colorful art on his arms.

On Dauphin Street, he does signs for restaurants and coffee shops. For the City of Mobile, he restores fading historical markers. For the Mobile Arts Council and Downtown Mobile Alliance, he did a four-story mural on the rear wall of the Athelstan Club.

Scott鈥檚 company has been featured in local newspapers and magazines. Business is brisk. He鈥檚 had to hire an assistant.

He recently returned to South with a commission for a mural outside the Student Center. It takes about a week to paint a wall that is 69 feet wide and 12 feet tall. The red-and-blue design features the Moulton Bell Tower and a bold rendering of 鈥淪OUTH.鈥

Diane Gibbs, an associate professor of art, isn鈥檛 surprised that Scott came back to campus as a Mobile muralist. She was his teacher and adviser. She remembers him as a quiet student, inventive artist and budding entrepreneur.

鈥淚t was hard to get him out of his shell, but he worked hard, started his own business, and he was always in a band,鈥 Gibbs said. 鈥淗e always loved signs and working with people. He always pushed himself, too.鈥

In January, for the Mobile Arts Council and Downtown Mobile Alliance, he did a four-story mural on the rear wall of the Athelstan Club. The design features giant ants and a drawing of E.O. Wilson, the legendary biologist and naturalist who spent some of his childhood in the countryside around Mobile. The whole thing took three weeks to complete.

鈥淚鈥檇 never painted anything that big,鈥 Scott said. 鈥淚t was like, well, you caught the big fish, now you have to reel it in.鈥

Elizabeth Stevens, president of the Mobile Alliance, said zoning changes and grant programs have helped encourage distinctive signs and murals downtown. She鈥檚 a fan of Scott鈥檚 work. His art adds character and originality to city streets.

鈥淲e started seeing his signs downtown and it was so different from the mass-produced stuff,鈥 Stevens. 鈥淗e鈥檚 so talented and he鈥檚 so great with people. He does what he says he鈥檚 going to do and he does it well.鈥

Art and Music in Mobile

Scott grew up in West Mobile. Art was his favorite subject at Murphy High School. He loved music.

His mother and grandmother were classic rock-and-roll fans. His great uncle was Ray Sawyer, lead singer for Dr. Hook, who sang lead on the band鈥檚 biggest hit, 鈥淭he Cover of Rolling Stone.鈥

Scott played the drums for several punk rock bands in Mobile. He surfed whenever he could. He skateboarded to class and enjoyed his time in college.

Scott started dating his wife, Laura, at South. They have two children. She teaches art at Mary B. Austin Elementary School.

Most of the graphic artists in Mobile seem to know one another. They had the same classes and professors. They did the same jobs at the same companies.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a nice community,鈥 Scott said. 鈥淎 lot of the people went to South and I still work with them.鈥

His downtown studio is an old auto garage with a big ceiling fan to help beat the heat. There鈥檚 air-conditioning in the old Airstream-style trailer that serves as his office. The shop walls are lined with surfboards and old signs that say things like 鈥淪hrimp Boats A-Comin鈥 Here.鈥

One of his signs was autographed by Henry Nunn Jr., a sign painter from Mobile in the late 20th century. He tagged all of his work as 鈥淒unn By Nunn.鈥 Scott met his daughter, who gave him a picture of the man who had signs all over town.

The latest Mobile sign man studied vintage books to practice some of the basic techniques and finer points of sign painting by hand. One day an old man with a cigar stopped by his shop.

鈥淗e goes, 鈥業 hear you鈥檙e a sign painter,鈥欌 Scott said. 鈥溾業 had to come by and see if you鈥檙e legit. Let me see your brushes.鈥欌

Most of his work is in Mobile, though he鈥檚 done signs in Pensacola, Florida, and Jackson, Mississippi. He鈥檚 got a restaurant job coming up in Tuscaloosa, Alabama.

There鈥檚 money to be made in custom designs and downtown murals, but Scott isn鈥檛 interested in becoming the sign king of the Gulf Coast.

鈥淚鈥檇 need a team of people to do that kind of thing,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檓 very happy with the jobs I鈥檓 doing and the money I鈥檓 making. If I can keep that rolling, I鈥檒l be happy.鈥

The print company Scott started as a student, Identity Signs, has been sold several times during the last 20 years. Yet it remains open for business. The latest owners have a store in Daphne on the Eastern Shore.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 kind of crazy,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 still around, with the original logo.鈥

In coming years, when his signs fade and murals peel, Scott hopes he鈥檒l be around to repaint them.


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