.
Overcoming the odds
Rushed to the hospital, He flatlined in the ambulance and was immediately wheeled into the OR where a team of surgeons and nurses worked on him against almost impossible odds – the blades of the scissors had penetrated five inches into Glenn’s skull, and lightning-fast decisions had to be made to keep Glenn alive. In fact, he died two more times during surgery from lack of oxygen, which caused his stroke that has left him with lasting after effects. Doctors placed Glenn into a medically-induced coma to allow his brain to heal and he spent two weeks in the ICU. During this time, Glenn contracted pneumonia from the tracheotomy tube, so it was a rough few weeks. Once he came out of the coma, Glenn spent another 16 days in a step-down unit where he had to relearn everything– standing, walking, speaking and regaining his independence.
Glenn crosses the rehab finish line

How Glenn's brain "sees" the world now
New approaches and strategies for success
Anyone who’s ever met Glenn knows of his persistence and determination. A true artist at his very core, he realized he had to find new strategies that would allow him to create again. Since the vision problem was one of the primary obstacles to his creating art again, he adapted his drawing style. By positioning his work so he looks at it from the left, Glenn is able to see the piece better. Glenn is right-handed, but he now sometimes draws with his left (non-dominant) hand, which he has found helpful in achieving the look he wants. Drawing often takes more time than before, more sketching, more thinking and more relying on his peripheral vision, but he continues to create amazing and beautiful artwork.

Prince

Stranger Things
A long-time Wacom friend
Wacom has worked with Glenn for many years (back to 2009, when Glenn won the ISCA (International Society of Caricaturist Artists) Golden Nosey Master Caricaturist award), and when we learned that Glenn was making a comeback to art, we were overwhelmed, relieved and grateful that he could return to a career he loved so much. Here's an excerpt from a 2015 Lucky Card Productions documentary about American caricature artists in which Glenn proudly wore his Wacom shirt. 🙂 Glenn now creates on a Wacom Cintiq Pro 32, and with the large-format display his body of work is growing and thriving. He now does all his digital artwork on the Cintiq because the large screen allows him to better see his creation, and using the Wacom Flex Arm, he can move the Cintiq anywhere he needs it.
Zuckerberg

David Bowie

Self portrait

Dave Chappelle - Glenn's latest work

Glenn's analog drawing of JoAnn
With a little help from his friends
This story is not just about Glenn – it’s also about the wonderful caregivers who brought an amazing artist back into the world again – the first responders, the medical personnel who worked hard to keep him alive and helped him regain his life, his friends and most of all his beloved, JoAnn, who stayed by his side every step of the way. JoAnn stuck with Glenn even through the dire predictions that he would not wake up, or be paralyzed or unable to walk, talk or draw ever again.


Glenn reunites with the first responders

During those long days in a medically-induced coma, JoAnn stays by Glenn's side

The indominitable Glenn

Glenn at the trial of his attacker
Glenn made a recent appearance on Jason's Seiler's Face the Truth podcast
About Glenn Ferguson
Glenn Ferguson lives with his lovely wife JoAnn, and his devoted service dog, Gracie in Florida. He's doing very well and is rediscovering his love of art. We look forward to seeing what Glenn will do in the future and will be following his journey very closely.
Glenn and JoAnn Ferguson today

Glenn's service dog, Gracie





