Monday 22 September 2014

Summer Break Work; Pursuits, Commissions, Things I've Wanted to do...


I think I've hit the Summer of 2014 pretty hard in regards to doing things I'd been meaning
to get around to doing, and following my own interests as an illustrator/person who loves art.
So here's a breakdown of a few highlights...

Edinburgh Fringe Festival Visit
I wound up at the Edinburgh Fringe, and whilst watching the performances, some excellent,
some dire, remembered one of the reasons that I started drawing in the first place as a child.

I'm a firm believer in "Wit" which I associate as being the most important part of an illustrator;
having a spin, an edge, or a take on your work that through being an honest reflection of your beliefs,
creates something purely unique, and evokes a "smile in the mind" in your spectators; appreciation.

I'm still a firm believer in integrity, and can't see my work being compatible with
"tea cup" disposable illustrator styles on display in Kath Kidston, or drawing cats and flowers.
This isn't a comment on the quality of my work, but how personally I am prepared to present my style and be held emotionally accountable for my work.

I remembered that my influences have always been integral to my work. Drama, Theatre, Comedy,
Poetry and film in particular came to light at the Fringe. I reconnected with my "wit" in some ways.

My passion for the dark, the psychedelic, the macabre and gallows humor is something that I
want to fix to my work this 2nd year, which was discouraged at foundation in favor of "fitting the brief" and not taking risks.

(Photographs from the expedition)


The Giant Canvas
Early on in the Summer, I realized that I hadn't painted properly in a year. Working first hand with colour, and not from a back-lit computer screen is something I'm still coming to terms with in regards to colour-blindness. Perception of colour fascinates me, and I don't even feel remotely "impaired" or at a disadvantage to others. With this, I can appreciate psychedelic work in a world of my own, which I think is a gift.

I started working on a giant canvas, taking elements of trash culture and spirituality and creating a wholly unique, imagined composition. An almost morbid fascination with the occult, paranormal, spiritual and deathly is something that's stayed with me since I began putting pen to paper, and I don't think it's in any danger of leaving me any time soon.

I made it my mission to paint this piece as an on-going project, something I could really let myself
go on, and create something that I was totally in control of, instead of brief based/commission work.


(Still a work in progress)

Jimmy Getaway & The Friends Album Illustration
I was contacted again by a previous client about creating some more work for their band/artistic project. After producing a tour poster, and a working logo, it was an honor given to me to design their first release this time, an album. Having worked with artwork for bands since I was about 13, this is an area I love, and have always wanted to go into.

I was given alot of creative freedom, based on a working relationship established with the last commission, and them being satisfied that I would deliver a good, strong piece that they could relate to artistically and put out there happily.

As usual, I took a holistic approach to the work, I spent 3 days listening to the work, sketching, and playing along so I could get a gritty feel for the album. My work tends to be at it's strongest when I let my obsessive nature take over, and exhaust myself.

I created something that I'm very proud of, and still consider designing the front-cover of albums to be a privilege. It's a meeting-of-the-minds, and negotiating/working with another artist from a different discipline and respecting their creative wishes is something I pride myself on. Neither of us would be content if the other were not.


David Shrigley Exhibition
My cultural highlight of the time I spent on the break getting back in touch with my roots was the David Shrigley exhibition in Edinburgh. I have huge respect for his application of wit, his un-pretentiousness, his narrative voice, and his dark humor. Seeing his work in the flesh for the first time was a huge experience for me and I took away alot of inspiration concerning fine-tuning my own narrative voice.

I hate people taking photos of themselves with other people's work but my Mum insisted:

" And if these pictures have anything important to say to future generations, it's this: I was here. I existed. I was young, I was happy, and someone cared enough about me in this world to take my picture." Sy Parrish (Robin Williams) - One Hour Photo


Christine Borland's "L'homme Double"
One of the most influential exhibitions I've seen was this. The artist commisioned six others to sculpt
the Nazi doctor/surgeon Josef Mengele based on contradictory first-hand accounts of what he looked like. It was the content, more than the style that struck me hard, and still resonates with me.

Having studied the holocaust previously, and the politics at the time, I'd encountered him before in books. Dubbed "The Angel of Death" in modern times, Mengele performed operations without anesthetic on captives in concentration camps, almost exclusively on twins, and those viewed to be "degenerate" in pursuit of "Eugenics". He was truly a monster, and a fiend that could only exist in a nightmare.

This exhibition was about so much more than shock. To see the face, of a man described as "good-looking" by accounts of witnesses given in the gallery, and know what atrocities he committed was deeply unsettling. I found the exhibition extremely intimidating.

This exhibition put me back in touch with fear. Appreciating and feeling it, rather than illustrating the macabre for somebody else to appreciate. The experience was humanizing, and the empathy for those
who had seen this face before was chilling.


Something Old, Something New
Beyond sentimentality, I looked back on work I had created anywhere for A-Level to my first drawings of graveyards, monsters and Scooby-Doo inspired work (still, unashamedly, one of my biggest and most significant influences since I was small!) to see what had changed.

I wanted to look back before I started thinking about the future.
I spent a few days mulling over old work, sorting it, scanning it, and trying to make sense of
myself and how I used to see the world.

I learnt that not everything that's in the attic necessarily gathers dust.


Notes from a train
I spent a long time on trains, travelling between London and Winchester, my hometown. I remembered the reportage aspect of the first year, and how I felt drawing legitimized people-watching; making observations that were social, cultural, and political. Not just "skin-deep" portraits
of people with the most interesting faces.

I kept my small, leather-bound black book at hand everyday for the best part of a month, flowing
ideas into it from various parts of the city that I found myself in at night especially. Although most of the observations were abstract, I found my funk bringing elements of the mundane and the surreal together, under my application of narrative voice. And the bizarre, which fascinates me.

  


From book to canvas
Upon being asked to show my book around one night, I ended up translating a piece that escaped me from my small journal of musings onto a canvas to decorate a new flat. Although it was only a small gesture, and hardly life changing, It made me think about my work more objectively. Work that I thought was pulp, and disposable, people appreciated enough to hang on their wall. It put things in perspective for me, and affirmed that I must be doing something somewhere with the scribbles.

 


Cartoons and shit
One night I found myself watching old cartoons again, after a night out with friends. I picked up a pen and paper, and over the next few days a whole stream of subverted characters flowed out. Having
been going to shows since I was about 12, seeing Hardcore/Metal bands and collecting my scars from the shows, and pits, I wanted to pay homage to the people I'd see around me in the shit, damp venues.












Monday 20 January 2014

My own work this term and how it's looking so far!

So here are how things have been shaping out recently!


Continuing with line illustration, and reading into the work of David Shrigley,
whilst trying to retain my own sense of humor and sensibilities.


Having a return to form on this style of illustraton work, my own psychedelic side project.
I'm trying to find new value in white space to contrast with pastel shades and colours that 
are less bold and unexplored by myself. Struggling with colour theory is something I'm working
to overcome, and is still a challenge taking my colour-blindness into account.

I enjoy seeing the world through different shades to most people, and haven't really noticed
colorblindness playing up much before, until this point where subtle shades and "reference" colours
have come into play.



My commissioned celebrity portraits continue to be churned out on a regular basis,
I'm looking to expand my subjects beyond musicians though, at the bequest of
recommendations from my facebook page following and friends/acquaintances.

These kind of paintings, although time consuming, translate well onto social media
and generate alot of interest for my work as a freelance service. 

A smarted logo I was commisioned to produce for Oxford Producer "Upper Focus"
I produced several variations on this design which I attached and sent as a package,
interfacing with clients and potential customers is something I pride myself on doing well,
And I still enjoy the business aspect/commercial viability of my work.

It's also great to see it on album covers, nothing quite compares!



Speaking of which, here's another one I've done earlier... 

This album artwork was created for a new acoustic/electronic artist called "Goodnight. Good Morning"
Whilst the colour scheme needs to be switched up a notch to grab attention and become more
distinctive, I'm pretty pleased with the general composition and feel of the piece as a draft. 


And finally, for this little extract of my work!

A painting completed for a friend's birthday! The practical implications of being an illustrator,
Such as having requests made for paintings, designs and illustration work by those around me,
such as friends and clients is a massive boost of confidence, and continues to motivate me
to strive for excellence and to create work that has personality and soul.



Sunday 29 September 2013

ARTISTS, ILLUSTRATORS & DESIGNERS - Camberwell Project

Illustration
DAN MUMFORD




                                                                                               
1.   Illustrated for bands such as GALLOWS, PARKWAY DRIVE
2.   Use of colour, traditional screen printing technique, adaptation to graphic tablet use
3.   Works with magazines, and promotes music and originality




Quentin Blake



1.    Created artwork for many people’s childhood memories
2.    Vibrant use of colour and composition, intelligent application
3.    Other work with political cartoon art is a big influence
4.    Capture of character and characterisation is stunning
5.    Lively, celebratory style, appreciated by all ages


  
Matt Taylor


1.  Print screen style art with retro/vintage edge
2.  Multi-media manipulation excellence
3.  Striking, almost graphic communication
4.  Statement making artwork, large scale




 Art
DAVID HOCKNEY

1.     Use of colour, vicbrancy and versatality to his work,
2.     Use of modern medium to create, iPAD, technology, photography
3.     Impressive large scale, conciseness of work and attention to detail
4.     Composition and controlled use of light is central to his work




 FRANCIS BACON
1.   Outsider art approach to work, fascinating life story
2.   Very pscyhologically intense work, painted passionately
3.   Seen work in gallery in Florence and London
4.   Use of tone, and suggestion with composition

  
DAMIEN HIRST


1.   Intelligent manipulation of the media and self publicity
2.   Connceted with Charles Saatchi, favourite collector
3.   Daring and provocative work, explains pieces well
4.   Un-pretentious attitude to work, very revealing style



DESIGNERS
Ridley Scott


1.   Although using HR Geiger as an artist, he masterminded the visual aesthetic of the movie
2.   Creates haunting, ehteral moods
3.   Master of lighting and set design
4.   Contributed heavily to British cinema




Kevin Mccloud


1.   Presenter on BBC’s “Grand Designs”
2.   Fantastic ideas and great connector with an audience
3.   Un-pretentious approach to art and design
4.   Kindling an interest in concemporary architecture
5.   Gorgeous aesthetic of buildings produced
6.   Overseen many projects from start to finish


 Norman Foster


1.   Grand scale designs produced in public places (London)
2.   Sleek, smart city design for urban living
3.   Functional and stylish buildings that are environmentally sound




Caravaggio


Early paintings by artists such as Caravaggio and Michelangelo are important to me,
The religious connotations, and the switch between violent and serene imagery is done
so effortlessly and at times with such conviction in the brush strokes. 


Soulful times


Soul music and music from the south is a big influence to me, 
this portrait of Curtis Mayfield is something I refer to to get a feel for the times
The vibes and music scene at that time was so different to it is now,
Sometimes the easiest way to engage with a situation is to put it in a different context, 
such as this time.



Rock and Roll Clothing


Original rock n' roll fashion and clothing is something I've been interested in for years. 
The darker aesthetic of bands since the late 80's has been developing constantly
With musicians now frequently owning their own clothing line, fashion and music
are becoming inexplicably intertwined. 

Thursday 19 September 2013

Tattoo Design and Watercolour


An image I found online of a tattoo style I'm deeply interested in.
Tattoo art fascinates me, right now as someone who's without ink, 
Especially now when attitudes towards tattoos and body artwork are developing
Abstract and watercolour tattoo really catches my eye as proof that tattoo art is just
a worthy medium for art as traditional methods such as charcoal, pen and ink and paint.

It reminds me of a quote I heard a while ago, that:
"Nothing is worse than a bad tattoo, but nothing is better than a great one"