Posts Tagged ‘Line Drawing’

Ralph Steadman – Alice In Wonderland

Friday, March 12th, 2010

Alice was beginning to get very tired of sitting by her sister on the bank, and of having nothing to do: once or twice she had peeped into the book her sister was reading, but it had no pictures or conversations in it, “and what is the use of a book,” thought Alice, “without pictures or conversations?”

Gonzo In Wonderland

Gonzo In Wonderland


While most children derive pleasure from the pure prose of Lewis Carroll’s most well known work, adults try to decipher the reputed use of complex mathematical codes in the text or debate his alleged use of opium. Among the multitude of of characters – extinct, fantastical and commonplace creatures brought to life by Ralph Steadman’s frenzied, ink-splattered illustrations, Alice journeys through this Wonderland, trying to fathom the meaning of her strange experiences – turning “curiouser and curiouser”, seemingly without moral or sense. At every turn, Alice’s new companions scoff at her traditional education, readers can revel in the delightfully non-moralistic and non-educational virtues of this classic, this gives some insight to Steadman’s notoriously iniquitous illustrations in itself. The Mock Turtle, for example, remarks that he took the “regular course” in school: Reeling, Writhing, and branches of Arithmetic-Ambition, Distraction, Uglification, and Derision.

Steadman’s Alice In Wonderland was first published in 1967 and is a remarkable departure from the original illustrations, remaining faithful to the book’s satirical tone while revealing the artist’s own passion for irony. Through his audacious and dynamic images, he breathes new life in the classic story with a modern illustrative approach. Steadman explains, “It is difficult to explain in words what the pictures are trying to say, and therefore my explanations are not precisely what I had in mind because they add shades of meaning which are not there. The reader can only interpret them in his own way, bringing his own observations to bear on the image he is looking at, so that he may agree or disagree with what I have tried to convey. When I set out to draw an idea, part of that idea is not yet formed and only takes shape and reveals itself as the drawing progresses. Consequently, the drawing acquires a life of its own and virtually takes over the direction it will follow – or so it seems.”

The Kind & Queen of Hearts by Ralph Steadman

The Kind & Queen of Hearts by Ralph Steadman


Steadman describes the picture above as, “The Monarch having evolved or developed into a shapeless mass of hangers-on, the State, H.M. Forces, the Church, the establishment walking on one pair of very well-worn legs. The King and Queen born into it and enveloped in it and lost in it, obliged to go through the motions automatically but surprising even themselves by their own outbursts.”
The White Rabbit by Ralph Steadman

The White Rabbit by Ralph Steadman


The artist says that his inspiration for The White Rabbit comes from todays commuter, “worried by time, hurrying and scurrying. Sane within a routine, slightly insane but more engaging when the routine is upset.”
A Mad Tea Party by Ralph Steadman

A Mad Tea Party by Ralph Steadman


He describes the Mad Hatter as, “the unpleasant sides of human nature. The unreasoned argument screams at you. The bully, the glib quiz game compère who rattles off endless reels of unanswerable riddles and asks you to come back next week and make a bloody fool of yourself again,” and says the March Hare “is always standing close by. The “egger-on” urging the banality to plumb even greater depths. He always seems to be around to push someone into a fight.” As for the Dormouse, Steadman says he’s, “Harmless and nice. The man anyone in the office can take a rise out of. If you tread on his face he will smile right back at you.”
The Card Guards by Ralph Steadman

The Card Guards by Ralph Steadman


Taking inspiration for his Card Guards from British workmen, “Bickering about who splashed who and standing in the stuff all the time anyway.”
The Pool of Tears by Ralph Steadman

The Pool of Tears by Ralph Steadman


Steadman explains that the animals in his illustration of The Pool Of Tears “remind me of people I know, rather as Lewis Carroll apparently created them around friends and associates. The reader can place his own interpretation on them. It was never my intention to set everything in concrete.”
Advice From A Caterpillar by Ralph Steadman

Advice From A Caterpillar by Ralph Steadman


And finally, defining the Caterpillar as a “young intellectual. Smoking hash, pedantic, who thinks he has something to say and sheds his opinions as easily as his skins.”

Check out some more Alice illustrations by Salvador Dali here. And more about our obsession with line drawing in general here.

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Franklin Booth

Friday, December 11th, 2009

Easter Prayer, 1925

Easter Prayer, 1925

As a boy in Carmel, Indiana, Franklin Booth was determined to become an artist. He studied pictures and illustrations in magazines such as Harper’s. His unusual technique was the result of a misunderstanding: Booth scrupulously copied magazine illustrations thinking they were pen-and-ink drawings. In fact they were wood engravings.
At Prayer, 1925

At Prayer, 1925


He developed a style composed of thousands of lines, whose careful positioning next to one another produced variations in density and shade. He was largely a commercial artist with illustrations appearing in Cosmopolitan, Good Hosuekeeping, Ladies Home Journal and Harper’s.
General Electric Company, 1912

General Electric Company, 1912


The characteristics of his art were large scales in extremes, with large buildings and forests looming over tiny figures. He also created advertising art for Rolls-Royce, Paramount Pictures and Bulova Watches among others.
Garden Font Delgada, 1925

Garden Font Delgada, 1925


Booth contributed to the Great War by illustrating recruit posters, the Red Cross, US savings bonds envelopes, booklets and death certificates for American soldiers who parished in France and Belgium.
Hand Of The World, 1925

Hand Of The World, 1925


Despite the laboriousness of his technique, Booth’s compositions were characterised by a grand sense of space. As a result, his drawings were often well-matched to poetic or editorial entries. Two wonderfully done books of his illustrations have been published and has helped to bring back the memory and incredible output of his work.
Harvest Time, 1925

Harvest Time, 1925


Mr. Booth possesses to a rare degree the power of expressing in design or picture an idea, an abstract conception. He illustrates not so much things as thoughts.

More Franklin Booth

Franklin Booth – Biography

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Jean Giraud aka Moebius

Friday, December 4th, 2009

01MOB
Continuing our thematic look at line drawing from our inaugural blog post and subsequent articles today we examine a series from French illustrator Jean Giraud aka Moebius. Born in 1938 and from the Parisian suburbs, he has an influential career as graphic artist and illustrator.

01MOB1
This particular Moebius “story” – 40 Jours Dans le Désert B from 1999 has no words, so buy the French version. The 65-year-old Frenchman’s reputation in the world of comics is undisputed.

01MOB2
If you notice the comparison to H.R Geiger, the two contributed together on the film Alien and an unmade version of Dune. Giraud has contributed storyboards and concept designs to numerous other science fiction films.

01MOB3
Most of his own series are related to fantastical science fiction. Several contain poetic elements, and some are also related to metaphysics. He was one of the most influential artists in France who contributed to the emergence of comics for an adult public.

01MOB4
Moebius used to draw a lot on notebooks, several of which are displayed on occasion at exhibitions. Besides the jewels of the notebooks, numerous original drawings, and comic strips have also been on display. Moebius draws very quickly, his narrative techniques, his work for films and responses to his work in the world of architecture make him an important and unique artist.

But Does It Float?

Flickr

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Iain MacArthur

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009
Mars Volta

Mars Volta

Sticking with the artistic theme of line drawing from our inaugural blog post, today it’s a young artist from Swindon. Iain MacArthur became a fanatic of art at a young age through watching cartoons and reading comic books. He cites influences such as Klimt and Lucian Freud.

Gorilla killa

Gorilla killa

His work can be described as surreal and unique in its own way. Using pencil, water-colour and pigment pens he embellishes patterns and effects onto portraits to give vivid explosion effects. Faces from something plain to bizarre and wonderful at the same time.

Speech bubble

Speech bubble

iainmacarthur.wordpress.com

booooooom.com

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Line Drawing

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

Vetruvian Man

With our inaugural blog post we would like to introduce you to the man behind the recent graphical vision and creative identity of We Love. David Tazzyman, originally from Leicester studied illustration during the heady days of early 90’s Manchester. By his own admission he “enjoyed going out a bit too much…”. After 3 years at Manchester Metropolitan University, ‘90 to ‘93, there was another 3 spent traveling Asia with friends – from where he drew the inspiration for his first solo exhibition showing drawings from India and Nepal. He cites Picasso, Egon Schiele and Ralph Steadman as some of his biggest influences.

Anti-Cooler by David Tazzyman

Anti-Cooler by David Tazzyman

Drawing with a minimum of lines to show the whole volume and essence of a figure has been a challenge to artists since Greek vase artisans circa 400BC. The line is at the heart of breathtaking drawings by Picasso ranging in style from cubist to “neo-classical”. The brilliance of technique and fertility of his imagination is no-where better represented than in his use of the line. Picasso, master of all methods, always returned to his origins in line. In his own words: “Art is the elimination of the unnecessary.”

Picasso - Nude And Draped Models 1934 Etching (27.7 - 19.8 cm)

Nude And Draped Models by Picasso 1934

After moving to London in 1997 commissions came quite quickly for David Tazzyman. His first big break was working for Darren Hughes at Cream (also founder of We Love) in 1998, designing all of the artwork for the summer residency at Amnesia in Ibiza.

A collage of the Cream Ibiza artwork by David Tazzyman 1998.

A collage of the Cream Ibiza artwork by David Tazzyman 1998.

The variety in subject available to the line artist is vast. Ralph Steadman most famous for his work with Hunter S Thompson as “Gonzo” journalism uses the line as wit. Slaying political egos with ironic violent imagery – in the words of Thompson: “By way of exaggeration and selective grotesquery”. Another artist to revel in the line, Egon Schiele, used it to explore not only human form but also explicit human sexuality.

Schiele Drawing A Model In Front Of A Mirror by Egon Schiele 1910 / Cartoon of Nixon by Ralph Steadman.

Schiele Drawing A Model In Front Of A Mirror by Egon Schiele 1910 / Cartoon of Nixon by Ralph Steadman.

Since his commission for Cream in 1998, Tazzyman has designed campaigns for clients such as Vodafone, Orange, Natwest, Yahoo, Renault and Virgin Atlantic. As well as advertising he has worked on numerous design projects, published across magazines and the broadsheets. He has a uniquely playful yet mature and sincere style. To paraphrase what Darren Hughes said of David Tazzyman’s work: It provides a graphic identity which is totally in sync with how the musical output is “rolling out” this year in Ibiza and beyond.

A collage of We Love... Space Ibiza 2009 Flyer Artwork

A collage of We Love... Space Ibiza 2009 Flyer Artwork

Landscape drawing of D'Alt Vila, Ibiza by David Tazzyman

Landscape drawing of D'Alt Vila Ibiza by David Tazzyman

David Tazzyman Agent Website

Picasso: Line Drawings And Prints

“Spike Magazine” – Interview with Ralph Steadman.

Ralph Steadman – Official Website

Lenin Imports – A biography of Egon Schiele

100swallow.wordpress.com – Great Line Drawings

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