Showing posts with label illustration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label illustration. Show all posts

Tuesday, 17 August 2010

Attila Szamosi
























Attila Szamosi is a Berlin based German illustrator and member of Peachbeach.

Peachbeach  is a design collective with an eye on illustrative design. Szamosi says "Peachbeach are three crazy nervous guys. Falk Hoger, Lars Wunderlich and me met in 2007 on a creative camp in the nice countryside of Brandenburg. We didn’t know each other very well, but painted a canvas together. It worked quite well and we realised that our minds fitted together, so we decided to do something together. That was the starting point of Peachbeach. Everybody is free to do what he wants, and sometimes we do stuff together. It depends on what we want to do."

Thursday, 10 June 2010

Paul Alexander Thornton













Paul Alexander Thornton is an artist and pattern designer based in London. Everything he does starts out as hand drawn work. He has a love affair with ballpoint pens and has an eclectic style that ranges from intricate photo-realistic pen drawings to psychadelic drawings that make your eyes hurt. Above he shows us how its done.

Saturday, 29 May 2010

Jérome Lagarrigue












Jérome Lagarrigue  was born on August 18, 1973, in Paris, France. Son of a French father and African-American mother, he is known for his paintings and illustrations. The main topics of his work include portraits, urban landscapes and fight sports.

It was while visiting his grandmother in Harlem every summer that Paris-born Jérome Lagarrigue increasingly became interested in depicting New York City urban atmospheres. The people, the architecture, the sounds that one can only witness in New York have become his areas of exploration. Lagarrigue has always decided to explore themes and subject matters close to him.

Lagarrigue is the recipient of many awards and honors, including the Coretta Scott King-John Steptoe Award for Best New Talent, the Marion Vanett Ridgway Award for Best Illustrator, and the Villa Medicis grant and residency in Rome.

Friday, 28 May 2010

Gez Fry







Gez Fry is an illustrator based in Tokyo, Japan. He has developed a distinctive manga style, utilizing computer-generated and hand-drawn techniques, and influenced by both traditional Japanese woodblock prints and contemporary anime imagery. His unique combination of eastern and western techniques reflects his dual British and Japanese nationality.

His clients include Industrial Light and Magic, New Riders, Plastic Animal Studios, AP Comics, Future Publishing and Carbon Industries.

Tuesday, 11 May 2010

Frank Frazetta R.I.P


 











Frank Frazetta the iconic fantasy artist has died, the following is from a tribute written in the New York Times by Bruce Weber.

"Frank Frazetta, an illustrator of comic books, movie posters and paperback book covers whose visions of musclebound men fighting with swords and axes to defend scantily dressed women helped define fantasy heroes like Conan, Tarzan and John Carter of Mars, died on Monday in Fort Myers, Florida. He was 82.

The cause was complications from a stroke, said Rob Pistella and Stephen Ferzoco, Mr. Frazetta’s business managers.

Mr. Frazetta was a versatile and prolific comic book artist who, in the 1940s and ’50s, drew for comic strips like Al Capp’s “Lil’ Abner” and comic books like “Famous Funnies,” for which he contributed a series of covers depicting the futuristic adventurer Buck Rogers.

His most prominent work, however, was on the cover of book jackets, where his signature images were of strikingly fierce, hard-bodied heroes and bosomy damsels in distress. In 1966, his cover of “Conan the Adventurer,” a collection of four fantasy short stories written by Robert E. Howard and L. Sprague de Camp, (top image above) depicted a brawny long-haired warrior standing in repose on top of a pile of skeletons, his sword thrust downward into the mound, an apparently naked young woman lying at his feet, hugging his ankle.

The cover created a new look for fantasy adventure novels and established Mr. Frazetta as an artist who could sell books. He illustrated many more Conan books (including “Conan the Conqueror,” “Conan the Usurper” and “Conan the Avenger”) and works by Edgar Rice Burroughs (including “John Carter and the Savage Apes of Mars” and “Tarzan and the Antmen”).

"Paperback publishers have been known to buy one of his paintings for use as a cover, then commission a writer to turn out a novel to go with it,” The New York Times reported in 1977, the same year that a collection of his drawings, “The Fantastic Art of Frank Frazetta,” sold more than 300,000 copies."

Sunday, 9 May 2010

Mike Laughead









Mike Laughead is an Illustrator and Comic Book maker from Kalamazoo, Michigan.

Currently, he illustrates for teen and children's magazines, young adult novels and children's picture books and also designs tee shirts and posters and writes and draws comics.

He says his hobbies are "Reading, movie watching and cleaning up after my 2 daughters."

http://www.mikelaughead.com/