TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK: I grew up in a very religious family. There were several ministers in my family. You know, it was a sense of community. It was um filled with beautiful  stories and great music. And those stories are things  that you can just kind of take along in your pocket and  take out whenever you need them. I thought I wanted to be a comic book artist, but over time I became interested  in different kinds of art. But I never lost that love for that  kind of storytelling, you know, this idea of superheroes and  this panel by panel narrative. I like to pick language that  has a certain kind of a cadence and I like to pick words  that have double meanings. Or, if you take a letter away it’ll  be maybe even an opposite word. Sometimes words explode and its  just about each individual letter. TDH: Mounds are these half  human, half plant mutants that came to life about 50,000 years ago when an ape man masturbated in a field of flowers. His human parts are co-mingling  with the plant parts and, like, it’s starting to bubble and boil and  something’s about to sprout out of this mess, and that’s the Mound. The story comes to me as visions. After I realized what Mounds were, I had a lot of questions for myself. So, where do they come from? How tall are they? Do they eat? Like, just all of these types of things. And in asking the question, you can  then almost have like an epiphany and from there you just keep  going and it actually snowballs. And to me, that’s what the vision is all about. This painting here is called “By and By” and this is the last in a series of paintings that are about the life and  death of Mound number one and his name is The Legend. And the skeleton of Mound Number  One has been left in the forest, and all of the forest animals and even  some animals that are not from the forest have come to grieve and to pay their respects. I’ve always like the story of Noah’s Ark and the idea of all of these animals that put their differences aside  to coexist in this one space. And that’s kind of what’s happening here. All the animals from around the  world have gathered together to pay homage to this great creature. When you see black and white or  words within paintings, it’s Loid. And Loid is kind of a father type of an energy. And he’s also all about kind of black and white. There’s no in between. Painter is a spirit energy who is  kind of a mothering type of an energy. Anytime you see colors within the paintings, that’s as a result of Painter’s presence. A lot of it comes back to my mother. She is Painter and she is  Loid wrapped up into one. You know, she is the smiling face of Painter,  she is the color that you get from Painter. But at the same time she was  stern when she spoke her word you had to listen, so she was also Loid. Mom: A lot of his art, I think, is  what he has seen over the years, over his childhood -- some of the hurtful things, I think. And then he wanted to get in  there and do something about it. And I think he has created someone to do that, and that has become his Torpedo person. Torpedo Boy is kind of my alter ego. And I created him when I was, I  would say, in the fourth grade. He can fly, he can lift things. He’s a super hero. And he’s super strong, except  he has an inflated ego. Mom: I think eventually he will really find out who can actually solve it all and that goes right back  to his roots and the Bible. TDH: Painter and Loid, you know,  with their son Torpedo Boy, is a lot like the Holy Trinity. God sent his son down to save the Earth. Torpedo Boy is sent to like  protect these Mound creatures and to do good things. But  Torpedo Boy is terribly flawed. And his pride and all of his other human emotions get in the way of him performing his duties. He looks like me. He is me. I even have a Torpedo Boy outfit  that I wear while I’m painting. In the show ‘It Came from the Studio Floor,’ Torpedo Boy is the protagonist. And we are taken step by step through where he was when Mound Number One was attacked and killed. So, we get to see what, you know, what was the hold up, why didn’t he make it in time  to save Mound Number One? In a way the scale of the show is kind of heroic. Like, there’s a giant Torpedo  Boy “T” painted on the wall. But, he arose and fell all in the same show. (laughs) It’s pretty pathetic. I tend to have an entourage  with me wherever I go – not necessarily people, but objects. I have a collection of grocery lists, plastic tops, amateur paintings, photos I find on the ground. Balloons – you can never have too many balloons. This belonged to my  grandfather, who was a butcher, and I guess he used this to  shield himself from offal and various meat juices. I don’t know, I just like to  have echoes of my family around and then they echo into the work. Even here at home, I like to  have things out all the time. I’m a big toy collector and  I’ve been actively trying to piece together my childhood  by finding all of those toys. It’s just an effort to reconnect with a time when I was just a little more  open and receptive to things. And its just great to have these  things around me as a reminder. It’s almost a dangerous obsession, like I have to get all of the toys  since some of my toys were taken away, I have to now get all of them back. I had one when I was a kid,  but it got thrown away. Monica: Some people put things  in files or folders or stacks, but he doesn’t stack, he piles. TDH: I’m getting better about  filing things because of her, because she’s organized, she can do that. It’s hard. Anywhere I move, these  mounds seem to move with me. It's like, in my car there’s a  pile of things that’s a mound. In my studio, there’s piles  of things all over the place and that’s how I pick from these piles. What’s happening with the  pieces that are in the studio, I see those as colorful blasts of  energy or communication from Mounds, these visions of hope. So in a way it’s like God’s promise  with the rainbow after the flood. In my work, I feel I’m finally  being able to bring together the worlds of comic book narratives  and the history of abstraction.