Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Bernini


I chose this image this week by Bob Kessel because I like his abstraction of a statue done by one of my favorite sculpters- Bernini. The original statue is very life-like, instead of the typical Roman statues which were supossed to make men look more like gods immortalized in stone. Bernini made the couple look very fleshy and curved. Here Bob Kessel has reversed that and made them simple and sharp. Abstracted into almost all lines and 3 colors.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Snow


I chose this image mainly because it was funny to me, and its starting to get snowy here. The perspective and simplified forms make the idea immediately apparent. Had this artist tried to add more detail I think it would take a little longer to get it.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Forest


I have seen this artists work in a few places such as communication arts, but I found this one on illustrationweb.com. I really like the realistic portrait of Forest Whitaker. He has a unique face that would be hard to render as well as this artist has done. The brush strokes are bold and the use of the background is a subtle hint of this celebrity's name. If I had to guess at the medium I would say it was digitally oil painted with a program such as Corel. Definately some good inspiration for my current biographical illustration project.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Letter


This illustration is by Paul Combs and its a poster for veterans day. I like the extreme texture on everything which helps convey the message. I also like the color choices and exagerated features.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Tyler Jacobson


I found this image by Tyler Jacobson while searching for an illustrator to do a presentation on. It looks like it might be another Moby Dick illustration. He tends to do a lot of fantasy stuff but he has a handful of nice illustrations like this one. What I like about this image is the simplified manner in which the story is told. The focus is on the man harpooning a whale while on top of it. The only details are in the man, his harpoon and the eye of the whale. The crashing waves, blood and clouds take up the majority of the image and make this guys feat of slaying the whale seem all the more heroic also due in part to the size of everything compared to the man.

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Halloween


Heres an image I found online that I thought was particularly well done. I like the colors that overlap with varied opacities. I also like how the artist chose not to show a witch or a jackolantern but instead depicted images that are associated with both. I dont know who the illustrator is.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

davinci


These are some of Leonardo Davinci's sketches. He may or may not be considered an illustrator himself but he did many detailed sketches of various ideas and natural things he was studying and Im sure he has been ripped off by many actual illustrators for many many different applications.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Roma


I had to scan this small image from near the inner spine of a large book (Illustration now). The reproduced image quality suffered but the illustration can still be made out pretty clearly which I think says alot about this illustration. The simplicity and the immediately recognizable objects say alot visually, very effectively and fast. The added bonus is it also fits project 2 well.


Wednesday, September 15, 2010



Sorry You have to click the image or the link below to see this better but this portfolio is really cool. This illustrator has a strange style but its awesome.
http://www.camellie.com/index.php?x=browse&category=2&title=work


















Thursday, September 9, 2010


I thought this was a cool illustration of a paratrooper. I could definately see it being used as a units insignia... it is kind of a new adaption of an old unit insignia with the motto Death From above and the one below which is known as the widow maker.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Hedgehog in the Fog


Hedgehog in the Fog is a cool russian animation from the 70's. I like the style it's done in. The illustrated cut-outs are highly textured but simplified.





Thursday, August 26, 2010

Where The Wild Things Are


One of the best parts of "Story Time" in grade school were the great illustrations in books like the Polar Express, Hungry catepillar, and my favorite Where The Wild Things Are. The book had a unique style that was part drawn and part cut out that made it stand out to me. Childrens books have some of the best illustrations.

First Blog

GDS 273 Illustration 1 Randy Suchy