He's a stocky 5 feet, 5 inches
tall, 160 pounds-from weight he gained during his years of
bodybuilding. His face, chiseled like stone, doesn't look
mean.
Wolf, a graphics instructor at
the Defense Information School here, is a very easy-going
person who believes in thinking outside the box to which most
people limit themselves. Through his perseverance he has managed
to apply his artistic creativity to other aspects of his life.
Growing up, he never believed
his interest in art would develop the following it has, he
said. Like most kids, he enjoyed doodling on scratch sheets
of paper as something to pass the time. His first formal graphic
design education was at a vocational school the year before
he graduated high school.
"I just believe that everyone
doodles or draws in their free time," said Wolf. "Some
of us try, and then there are people who have a natural talent
for it and excel from an early age."
He joined the Marine Corps in
1987 and started his career as an anti-tank assault man, or
dragon gunner. For nine years his artistic creativity remained
dormant, except for small requests to draw things like range
flags, random sketches, or cartoons during his off-duty time.
"Initially I saw it as an
opportunity to boost morale," said the Ashtabula, Ohio,
native. "And I never lost that fire for seeing something
come to life in front of me-that's the essence of art."
While stationed aboard the USS
Blue Ridge in Yokosuka, Japan, he began drawing cartoons,
which would soon be referred to as Sempertoons. This assignment
fueled Wolf with a plethora of ideas for cartoons. "It
was endless, and I saw how my cartoons made people laugh,"
he said.
Wolf's love for art began to
equate to his love for the Corps, but he thought he had to
keep the two worlds separate.
"I knew that art was going
to take me somewhere, I just had to figure out how to connect
the two worlds," he said. "It all came together
in one moment, and it was like a big tidal wave hitting me."
As an enlisted instructor at
Marine Corps Base Quantico, Va., the instructor group tasked
him with drawing a sketch of the range. His sketch was sent
to the graphics department to be drawn on a larger scale,
and subsequently, he was sent to graphics to ensure they were
duplicating his work correctly.
"I didn't even know that
graphics existed," he said. "I walked through that
building completely astounded, and that's where the desire
to change my (military occupational specialty) evolved."
After the seed was planted, he
was sent to his new duty station in Camp Pendleton, Calif.,
assigned to 2nd Battalion, 1st Marines, which deployed with
the 4th Marine Expeditionary Brigade. This provided another
opportunity for him to gather material for his cartoons.
Even though Wolf had done several
drawings during his Marine Corps career, he still did not
realize the full capability of his talent.
"To be honest, the full
impact of art did not hit me until I started doing Sempertoons,"
said Wolf. "In fact, the first few drawings weren't even
that great."
When he returned from deployment,
he met with MOS monitors and requested a lateral move to the
4611 MOS, or graphic illustrator.
His request was eventually approved
and he reported for duty at the Quantico graphics center for
three years, to include six months of on-the-job-training.
He then served as the chief of graphics on Marine Corps Base
Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, and two-and-a-half years later he was
selected to be an instructor at DINFOS.
He now has the opportunity to
pass on to younger Marines his talent and knowledge as a graphics
illustrator.
Yet, his graphics knowledge is
not the only thing Wolf passes on to DINFOS students, and
students aren't the only ones affected by his presence.
Instructors and students alike
are inspired by the enthusiasm he brings to everything he
does.
"If I could say one word
to sum up when I first met him-motivation," said Air
Force Master Sgt. Brian Nickey, noncommissioned officer-in-charge
of the Media Production Department. "He's like a steam
train running full-speed ahead at anything he does. It could
be the simplest of tasks. He's the first to volunteer for
anything, and probably one of the most motivated people I've
ever met in my life.
"In the short time that
he has been here, he has already taken the media production
team to a new level," said Nickey. "I even feel
a little more motivated."
Wolf continuously pushes himself,
and that has an affect on everybody, said Nickey.
The motivation Wolf gains from
his cartoon also helps him stay ahead of the game and has
helped him become the first instructor in about three or four
years to be certified in all three functions of the media
department, said John Thomas, academic director, Media Productions
Department.
"He accomplished that within
his first 60 days here, whereas inthe past, instructors made
that accomplishment within a year," said Thomas.
Thomas has been a member of the
DINFOS staff since 1989 as active-duty enlisted and now as
a civilian. "I've seen a lot of Marines come and go,"
he said. "Staff Sgt. Wolf embodies the Marine Corps ethos,
and he has managed to take off running since he's been here."
Wolf obtained his teacher's certification in 30 days, when
most instructors take the full 90 days they're allotted after
completing the Instructor's Training Course, according to
Thomas.
"The sole emphasis is to
inspire the artistic talent in young Marines everywhere,"
said Wolf. "There's an artist in every platoon, or unit,
who is not using his or her talent to it's fullest potential.
If I can inspire just one of them to take their talent to
the next level, then it's all worth it."
His ability to inspire saved
DINFOS student, Pfc. Michael Molinski, from a lack of motivation
when he failed the Basic Journalism Course.
"When I failed BJC, I was
very demotivated, and I didn't know what I was going to do,"
said the Hudson, N.Y., native. Wolf helped Molinski put a
portfolio together, and get re-assigned as a graphics student.
"I've been drawing my whole
life, but I didn't know this MOS existed until I got to this
school," Molinski said. "When I wake up in the morning,
I don't feel like I'm going to work, it's something I love
doing. That's the best part about the job."
Wolf said the creation of Sempertoons
has allowed his creativity to flourish, not only in art, but
also in music and physical fitness.
He has friends because of Sempertoons
who have inspired him to play the guitar and compete in bodybuilding.
He and a friend recorded a compact disc and hope to go public
with their musical talents someday.
Another friend he artistically
encouraged convinced him to try his talents at bodybuilding.
He took the same motivation that he applies to Sempertoons
and focused it on bodybuilding and placed in a few competitions.
He displays his awards on a table in his home office.
In fact, his home office is full
of items that reflect his accomplishments.
The walls of the office are covered
in cartoons and pictures of famous people who appreciate him
and all he does for the Corps. One of his cartoons was included
in the Navy Times 1998 Year in Review. One of his first full
page articles in a military publication is laminated and hangs
next to cartoons signed by military dignitaries, encased coins
- including a pair of presidential cufflinks-and a license
plate that reads "SMPR2NS."
The office is very neat and organized
with a computer on a desk at one side of the room and a large
box of markers on a drawing table at the other side of the
room.
"I still have the pencils
in a Ziploc bag like I used when I first started drawing,
but I also have a huge box of pencils and this collection
of markers," said Wolf. "It helps to add color to
the cartoon."
The Ziploc bag is new, but it
still has the same things that were in it in 1995, when it
all started - drawing pencils with more colors than the rainbow,
three pennies, a poker chip, a wrist watch without the band,
and an assortment of other odds and ends.
With all that Wolf maintains
as a full-time Marine and a cartoonist, it's hard to imagine
how he can stay organized, but his wife explains it easily.
"I do it," said Amy,
his wife of 13 years. "And I'll admit when he first said
to me that he wanted to market the cartoons, I laughed at
him. I didn't think anyone would be interested in drawings
on paper."
But one day around Christmas
1996, they sold more calendars than Amy could have ever imagined
at the time.
"I came back to the exchange
and saw this crowd of people around something and I said 'it
must be a sale' so I wanted to get in on it, too," she
said. "When I got there, I saw it was Charles, I couldn't
believe it. He was signing, selling and bagging all at once.
I jumped in to help."
After that, Amy realized this
was going to go further than she anticipated, so she started
calling suppliers to avoid paying retail prices for their
resources.
Now, they market mouse pads,
calendars, matted prints, and Wolf even sits for print and
calendar signing sessions. Most recently, he completed his
first book, "Welcome To The Real World, Devildog,"
which will soon be available for sale.
Wolf has taken his creativity
and exposed it for the entire Marine Corps and world to see.
"As a Marine you're always
trying to convey certain situations and moments to family
members, and it's sometimes hard to do without a visual aid,"
he said. "So that's the most magical thing for me now,
is that I get to bring those moments home for so many Marine
families."
In an article published in "Marines"
February 1996, Wolf made a statement that encapsulates his
whole motivation.
"Marines spend their whole
lives surrounded by stories and adventures. I key in on that
fact and put them into my cartoons," said Wolf. "I
think it makes Marines feel better when they have a cartoon
to go with their story, or their particular adventure." |