Pepe Aguilar and Alexander Garcia "El Fantasma" perform at EstrellaTV's Premios de la Radio at Expo Santa Fe México on Nov. 10, 2021 in Mexico City, Mexico.

Manuel Velasquez/GI for Estrella Media
Rob The Original is a barber-turned-self-taught creative artist who uses salt, glass, and other mediums of art to reach celebs.

Roberto Ferrel  — or Rob the Original, as he’s known on social media — has built quite the following (over 1 million on Instagram and over 700K on TikTok), thanks to his innovative celebrity portraits.

He uses just about any medium of art — salt, concrete, stamps, powder, Oreo cookies, you name it — to recreate portraits of artists such as Selena, 2Pac and Vicente Fernandez. But it was his famous hair portraits that got him on the map when he began his career as a barber, and later became a tattoo artist.

The 36-year-old Mexican-American creative artist says that creating celebrity portraits is his best strategy to get re-posted by artists such as Maluma, J Balvin, Nicky Jam, Taraji P. Henson, and members of the Kardashians family.

For 15 years now, he’s used his incredible art to grow his name, land key brand deals, establish great connections, and travel the world to educate aspiring barbers.

“As an artist, it’s difficult to sell my art,” he admits to Billboard, “but I wanted people to know me more than just a barber, so I decided to do art with things that were rare.”

Below, read our Q&A with Rob The Original, whose art is being shared by countless Latin music stars:

Your art is very impressive — when did you discover that you had this talent in you?

I’m self-taught. I was the type of kid that never really did well academically, because I struggled with ADD. It was hard for me to focus in class and pay attention. But with art, I could focus. I’ve been drawing since before I could read and write, but by the time I was an adult, I already had the talent where I could look at something and duplicate it. When I began doing this, there was no one teaching it — so I just taught myself every medium. I enjoy trying new things, and the reaction that it gets on social media.

Speaking of mediums, you use just about anything to create your work, from concrete to salt to cookies to haircuts, and now, glass.

I’ve always done celeb portraits with my mediums, but glass art is something new that I’ve been doing for less than a month. I’m an artist, so I’m always trying different mediums that are not normal. I’ve been wanting to do this glass art for a while. There’s this guy in Switzerland who inspired me, his name is Simon Berger. I use a special type of glass that it breaks, but sticks together. It’s not cheap to do. The glass alone is $1,000 per glass, and $2,000 for the frame. So each piece costs $3K just to sit in my garage.

 

You’re very active on social media. It seems like every day you work on and post something new. How long does it take you to do these portraits?

Most of my art is very quick. I get it down within an hour or two tops. The glass is one of the easiest, it’s very fast. The murals take a while. For example, El Fantasma is a good friend of mine, and he reached out to me and asked me to create a mural with his lyrics for his new barbershop. It took me a few days, but I worked on it for a couple of hours each time.

In addition to El Fantasma, I see you have photos with many artists, including Pepe Aguilar, Snoop Dogg, Gera MX, and many more. Who was the first famous person to share your art?

The very first artist to support me was [Mexican comedian] Gabriel Iglesias. Then, I would say sports athletes and reggaetón stars. J Balvin, Nicky Jam, and Farruko all shared the salt portraits I did of them. Larry Hernandez was the first celebrity to invite me to his house to collaborate and then I met Pepe Garza, who introduced me to a lot of Regional Mexican artists. But my audience before was mainly reggaetón and sports stars.

You mentioned that selling your art is difficult. So, how do you make an income, and what would be your biggest dream as a creative artist?

If I could live from my art, I’d be the happiest man alive. I had my barbershop for nine years but sold it. Right now, my main source of income is from brand deals, doing tattoos here and there, and murals in restaurants — but mostly brand deals. My goal is to have a gallery in Los Angeles or Miami, where I can display my art. A lot of my art goes away (hair grows, salt and cookies are edible) but the wall carving, wood torching, and glass art are what you can actually keep. That’s my short-term goal, to start selling my art.

What does your artwork represent?

I feel that art is such a beautiful thing and it’s everywhere we look. I’m helping people visualize and see art where they can’t imagine it. I do endless mediums — and that’s what I’m trying to share with other artists or up-and-coming artists, that you can create art with anything you can think of.

 

 

 

 

10cc drummer Paul Burgess has announced that he is leaving the band because the demands of touring have become too much for him.

The 75-year-old musician, who also spent time performing with Jethro Tull, Camel, Magna Carta, and The Icicle Works, has chosen to walk away from the legendary rock group after more than five decades.

He shared: “After so many wonderful years with 10cc, I must admit that the rigours of touring are no longer manageable for me as I get older, and I feel it’s time to let go of the long hours in airports and endless travel on buses.

“I’m not planning to stop playing altogether. I will still perform but at a pace that feels right, working alongside old friends and a new group of fellow musicians called The Guilty Men.”

Frontman Graham Gouldman confessed that it will feel unusual to perform without his “longest-running musical associate.”

He explained: “When Paul and I first joined forces in 10cc, we never could have imagined that we’d still be at it after 30 years, let alone 52.

“Paul has been my longest musical partner and it will feel different to turn around and see another drummer, but I completely understand why he no longer wants to sit on a plane for 14 hours or wake up in a new hotel every day for weeks at a time.”

Ben Stone, who has previously played with Mike and The Mechanics and Bonnie Tyler, will be taking over on drums.

Paul, who had several runs with 10cc after joining in 1973, performed his final show with the I’m Not In Love band in Alexandria, Virginia this past September.

The group is set to continue their And Another Bloody Greatest Hits Tour in the UK next year.

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