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Wednesday, 20 February 2013

New Work: Mark and Dave go shopping

Just finished of some illustrations for the lovely people at Umbrella Design.  A large part of the project consisted of character design which is always fun to do, my figures were to be based loosely on two real people Mark and Dave.  My illustrations are to feature in their blog a diary of adventures in travel and shopping. The Mark and Dave go shopping blog offers a unique perspective from the duo, tips on what to buy and where and a little culture too.
Dave left and Mark on the right.
These are two trendy guys and designing such happening fellows can always be a stretch when you don't consider yourself to be trendy having a much different definition of the word.  Thankfully however I got a nice run down of their likes and what they wear.

Let me introduce you to Dave…

Name: David, but all his mates call him Dave.
Age: 29 ish. He's kinda geeky, and wants to thought of as really cool... in fact beyond cool. Of course he isn’t, he is in fact a bit of a twat, but nice, really nice in a bloke sort of way. Likes women who have an oriental twist, but always keeps them at arms length. I call them 'mysterious girls', cos they drift in and out of his life and none of us ever actually meet them. We only know about them by the morning smile of his face!

Where he shops: Carnaby Street for trainers, Ted Baker for shirts, Urban Outfitters, and surprisingly, Acne, which is uber cool. Some vintage bits from Brick Lane and Spitalfields, especially sun glasses and picture frames.

Jeans: Cheap Monday 
Watch: Vintage
Boxers or commando: Calvin Klein Boxers
Interests: Cool pubs and restaurants with friends. Sunday league football, gym... only when necessary. Pop-up Art Galleries, street art, photography, gigs headlining up and coming bands, such as: The Black Keys, The Cribs, Twin Atlantic or The Maccabees.
Job: Graphic Designer 
Loves: Geeky gadgets
Favorite Drink: Great beer
Drives: No need, Dave lives in London, but would like a vintage Triumph.
Personal Head Space: Need to make a change and find stuff that inspires him! 
Dave as a finished illustration.

And now on to Mark…

Age: early 30’s, trapped in the wrong era, should have been born mid 1800's then could have been a poet riding an old bike round a village green, a romantic at heart, yeah I know, I am a twat!
Where I shop: Selfridges, Harvey Nichols and Fenwick Men’s, Diesel, Paul Smith. Some
Vintage bits from Notting Hill, especially furniture.
Jeans: Diesel
Watch: Tag
Boxers or commando: Diesel Boxers
Interests: Out door stuff, cycling, cricket. Love great coffee with mates on a Sunday morning. Play occasionally in a band and open mic nights with guitar. Sketching (belong to urban sketchers).
Bands: Keane, Band of Skulls, Muse, Paul Weller, Florence and The Machine, Elvis Costello
Job: Furniture Designer
Favorite Drink: G&T
Drives: BMW Motorbike
Personal Head Space: Looking for direction and want to go and see great stuff! Like Dave, I need some ideas to guide me to my next project in life, what ever that might be.
Mark in all his illustrated glory
As the blog progresses we get to see more how they both develop via the travels and adventures in shopping they have.  

Mark and Dave's adventures in Brighton.
Good luck to Mark and Dave I hope they continue to trek around the country with their wallets ready and shopping bags full.  Visit Mark and Dave go Shopping blog here.

Go to my website for more illustrations.

 

Tuesday, 29 January 2013

Starting the Day



I don’t have to commute to work, I’m quite lucky in that regard.   I still feel I need to get out and do something before I start work so instead of a lengthy commute I go walking the dog with my wife after breakfast in the rain or shine or like this week in the freezing cold fully wrapped up with layers of clothing that take ages to peel off again. The walk helps wake me up, gets my mind and body functioning again, especially useful on the mornings when it feels like I hardly slept at all.  


I used to be a morning person, a fact that I’d forgot until my wife reminded me of recently.  Somewhere down the line my factory setting seems to have fallen into disrepair, replaced by grouch overdrive mode that seems to be my current default.  Some mornings it can be hard shaking off the sleepy head, If I’m still not awake after my morning regime and my head feels like it’s running some sort of start-up check complete with virus scan I try to reboot by visiting the local deli to get the best coffee in town.  If I haven’t booted up sufficiently I will indulge myself in the delight that is bacon roll with red sauce and a good strong coffee.  This I might remind you would be a second breakfast, a feeding regime that the hobbits of the shire would certainly approve of.


It’s a fine place and one that I often frequent, a  ritual of waking that will get my creative mind going if first breakfast and walkies don’t cut it.  I get that necessary social interaction and people spotting that is sometimes missing from my day.  I enjoy that little bit of small talk, asking about the day ahead, passing the same people walking to work or getting the paper, saying hello and chewing the fat before work calls.


The Scottish Deli is a little place that helps me wake up and serves me my second breakfast when needed.  It offers lots of foodie delights that will brighten up your fridge, store cupboard and eventually your dining table.



The Scottish Deli, Pitlochry. Click for website here

Monday, 3 December 2012

Sketch Book

I'd thought I would write briefly about my recent sketches done while away in New York, in my last entry I talked a little about how projects I'd done set there and how my thoughts and ideas about the place had changed since my visit.

We were lucky to have time to get round some of the places we wanted to get to when we were planning, the sites, museums, boat tours and we wanted to get lots of walking done to places you would not get to on a tour or on the tourist map.  Thankfully living where we do in a rural area and with a dog we had correct and very sensible footwear for long hours on our feet!

Your need to move quick to see everything and like any city not if stopped and staying still get in the way of anyone, who in their mission to get somewhere quick will mow you down.   Stopping for a little moment to catch a breath, I was able to sketch a little and quickly get a few things down.


The Intrepid Air and Space Museum
Bloomingdales


Times Square
Staten Island Ferry



The Met Museum

The American Natural History Museum


I've a few more to add soon, to see more of my work visit my portfolio
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Monday, 5 November 2012

Being There


With a new project you get a brief, it is mostly written out in an email or word document with a few reference images in some cases it’s a description over the phone.  Whatever way its delivered the most interesting and exciting part of starting a new illustration is doing a little research.  The art of doing this has radically changed since I started freelancing twelve years ago, where it could start with a visit to a library or going out and doing some sketches.  I’m sure I don’t need to elaborate to much more in how this has evolved, now I and most everyone else go online and Google image the hell out of it.

Then I would brave the rain sit in the quite surround of the library punctuated by the odd cough and the sound of me operating the photocopier , humming,  clicking and churning out the images I would need from books I couldn’t take away with me to  join my rucksack of books I could.  Now I create a wee project folder with another in it for reference images and texts, its cleaner, drier and less time consuming.  More often than not I get what I need from the internet searches, its fantastic for places, especially ones the popular or more tourist visited places of the globe.  Using Google Earth or Street view you can place yourself on a street corner and get a feel for the geography of a place or catching a recognizable building or attraction from a different angle. 

About a year ago I had a book to illustrate for an educational publisher, a storybook called The Girl With Green Eyes. Its narrative set in New York, I got a little flexibility in where I set some of the locations and chose Times Square for the setting of the hotel that featured in the story and location of the café used of key scenes.  I also picked some reference from the East Village area for the residence of the main character to give a balance between the hi-tech Skyscraper part of the city and the older areas.  Around the same time I had another project for an Aids Drug Awareness graphic novel story set in a similar area of architecture to East Village.

The Girl With Green Eyes.


Both these projects required a looking around the net and getting a feel for the areas, the latter project for Aids Drug Awareness the client was based in New York and was very helpful in providing images for the characters which needed to be based on real people and their story.  Having faces to look at really helped in that job as corny as it might sound.   The realities of their lives were etched into their faces, from their stories which detailed some of the darker moments of their lives up until they changed things for the better.  Thankfully I have not experienced such hardship but the connections I made with them through their photos allowed me I think to tell their story better.

Having holidayed recently in New York I would revisit both these projects again and do things differently and it will certainly inform any future work based on my travels there.  Nothing prepares you for that place, years of TV and film set there only heightens the excitement of seeing all that eye candy for real.   Fantasy and the fantastic suddenly become the reality around you, bustling and brimming over with people, traffic and towering over all that buildings so impossibly big and tall.  It’s wonderful, crazy and brilliant like a wondrous Lego city created by an excited bunch of kids driven by egos to build bigger and taller.  Super sized architecture, Like Central Station or The Empire State building with its grand marble reception all the way to the top observation deck with stunning panoramic views of the city, and I’m told six states. 
View from the 86th floor, looking north east towards the Chrysler Building

My wife and I walked from 46th St to Battery Park taking in the Flatiron building, Soho, Greenwich Village, with a visit to East Houston St, East village for lunch at a proper deli.  Down through China town and Little Italy, Brooklyn Bridge, Wall St, ground zero and arriving at Battery park to jump on the Staten Island ferry  for a sunset cruise and beautiful views of the city and surrounding area.  It takes in a broad range of building styles and New York’s famous melting pot of cultures and is a recommended thing to do given the right footwear.

Its why I would love to tackle a project based there again, I really didn’t cram enough into those frames, they lacked the variety of the actual place and people, I missed the point of it all and didn’t get that down on paper at the time.  There is so much of the world crammed onto that small island of Manhattan something the reference material I’d collected for those projects only hinted at and I’d missed.   From the point of view of my holiday I’m glad as it was an amazing experience one I hope I’ll carry with me and  influence my work until the next time we visit.

If you are going, places to see:

The American Natural History Museum: for the fossil collections

The Metropolitan Museum of Art: For most things there!

The MOMA: if only to see Vincent Van Gogh’s Starry Night.

The Intrepid Museum: A museum on an aircraft carrier! That also has the Space Shuttle Enterprise as an exhibit.

30 Rockefeller Plaza: with a nighttime view at the top!

Central Station: for cocktails and to gaze at the fresco on the high above vaulted ceiling
.
The Empire State Building: A must see and better early in the morning before the crowds with amazing views at the top.

Also, The Flatiron, The Staten Island Ferry (it’s free!) A harbour tour, a city bus tour, Department stores and shops around Soho and Greenwich Village.  A proper American stack of pancakes, a deli sandwich and pizza in Little Italy!

It was also very distressing to see it so damaged and lives destroyed by the recent hurricane Sandy, I hope the city and the people there can rebuild and move forward again.




Wednesday, 27 June 2012

I Love Comics


I collected comic books a lot when I was a kid, still do in graphic novel form.  I was my introduction and I’m sure most people's to the world of illustration the artists of these books would use their skills to tell the stories the comic book writers wanted to tell, talented artists would take the words and concepts and flesh out the story telling the narrative in brightly coloured frames and create fun and interesting characters to inhabit worlds of their creation.  I bought or borrowed many from the Commando war comics, 2000AD and Judge Dredd, Spiderman, X-men and The Transformers, my earliest recollection of browsing and choosing my own comic was getting Transformers issue 22 in 1985 from a little newsagent close to where we lived in Northampton. Comic books are not solely produced for kids, they just happen to buy them with their pocket money.  

Transformers issue 22 (it was only 27 pence!)  Though it was nearly a third of my weekly pocket  money.

The themes explored by the writers and artists are weighty and relevant to not just life growing up and trying fit in but issues of alienation, being different and acceptance of otherness, stories about overcoming difficulties in the face of adversity and dealing with loss or abuse all infiltrate and help inform an impressionable mind.  They can be very literate too, I was introduced to classic literature by the stories they told inspired by Greek myths, Shakespeare and other older mythologies including the bible and the epic of Gilgamesh, all laid out in the pages of Superhero comics.

Comics are also heavy influenced by the times they were written and illustrated by, the creative’s involved in their construction would enrich their narratives with moral messages with world events and politics in a way that would assist in the storytelling.  By putting themselves the comic characters shoes they could tell stories inspired by real world events things complicated or horrid could be made sense of in the small dramatic frames.  The horror of World wars, The Korean War, Vietnam and the Watergate scandal, Capitalism and Communism all filtered through and grounded the story to create a more textured environment for the Superhero’s, giant robots or aliens to inhabit.

Judge Dredd created by writer John Wagner and artist Carlos Ezquerra was another favourite of mine, Dredd inhabited the authoritarian police state of MegaCity 1, as one of the judges of that city he was had the powers of the police, jury and executioner.  It was violent and heavily laced with issues of Democracy, corruption, and tyranny as Dredd himself was an instrument of a dictatorial regime that enforced a cruel form of justice on the criminal ilk and on democracy activists alike.

Judge Joesph Dredd.


Today my bookshelves have graphic novels from Alan Moore, His excellent Watchmen (please read the book and don’t judge it by the film) V for Vendetta (again don’t judge by the film) From Hell, Frank Miller’s Batman The Dark Knight Returns and Sin City and other works from Neil Gaiman, Garth Ennis and Mike Mignola.  

Its seems that most have been made into films, with varying degrees of success and its very understandable why the stories are being retold on the big screen.  They have to do with the big themes, tragedies and larger than life characters and environments peppered with real world concerns and issues of being human and all that means that have been so lavishly created.  These modern day myths and struggles are continuing the traditions of storytelling that have been with us since people learned to communicate with one another, to write and tell stories to spin tales of powerful Gods and mythical creatures and the consequences that their actions had on humankind while also speaking of personal dramas. 

Like all good stories and Science Fiction is also a very good example of this: Create a world and people live in it, far into the future or on another world, fill it with vengeful Gods, monsters, mythical creatures, superheroes or mechanical beings. Make it different enough from our world while still making the characters believable and you can write moral tales about genocides, teen pregnancies, ideologies, bigotry, sexism, sexuality and get these issues across to an audience and either inform or change perceptions. 

A few recommendations rightly deserved to be called classics.  Though part of the fun is the discovery of having a look and finding your own favorites.

Watchmen by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons (1987)

V for Vendetta by Alan Moore and David Lloyd

Batman: The Dark Knight Returns by Frank Miller and Klaus Janson

Hellboy: The Seeds of Destruction by Mike Mignola and John Byrne


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Wednesday, 6 June 2012

Tally Ho!


This is a recently finished illustration and will soon be posted on my website folio pages.  Adding new images and keeping the content of my site fresh and up to date is important to keep people coming back while also broadening the subject matter on display.  It can take time to come up with something new if I’m lucky I can maybe add two illustrations a week.  Sometimes these are paid commissions others are selected from self-initiated work. 
My sketch in pencil roughly works out the perspective and dive angle I want to show .


The Spitfire artwork is something I wanted to add to my folder, it’s the sort of thing I hope appeals to potential clients that are in children’s publishing in the UK, the type of illustration they might use for a reference book or children’s encyclopedia if my style is appropriate for the project.   The image itself was sketched out first in pencil then refined and finished off as a pen and ink illustration.  The colour was added after it was scanned on the computer with Photoshop.

Also personally the Spitfire is a very impressive plane, I was lucky enough as a child to get inside the cockpit of one on display and I had a little airfix model I built too.  So it was very nice to revisit those memories and have fun drawing it.

Finished image in pen and ink coloured on Photoshop.  Note the angle of the plane in relation to the horizontal line shown by the White Cliffs of Dover in the background.
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Friday, 25 May 2012

Just for fun!



Another self initiated illustration, my take on a poster for the film Drive.  Rendered in pen and ink this illustration was just for a bit of fun and a little diversion from my usual projects I hope you likely.
The rough-work below shows the development of the image, I've taken three images to show though their was lots of other bits an pieces to work on to flesh the illustration out.  

A series of sketches showing the  poster development.
Finished poster!
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Dylan Gibson