MIXED MEDIA | ILLUSTRATION

ILLUSTRATION TELLS STORIES. In its most familiar format it includes painting or drawing to illuminate a text – often in a book, magazine, or other published work. However, illustration is not necessarily two-dimensional. I consider my mixed media work illustration because I am using these images to amplify and express concrete ideas, stories, and personal writings (even when they don’t accompany the work). The line between “fine art” and “illustration” is a blurry one, and the two are often distinguished by whether the work is commercially viable or conceptual. However, I feel the term Illustration best describes my work.

CONCEPTUAL STORY TELLING

ABOUT THE WORK

Animals and plants are the primary characters in many of the stories I want to tell. Animals especially make great subjects – they are easy to use in metaphor and yet people identify and relate with them intimately. Sometimes it seems people are indeed too personal – the natural world beyond humanity gives us a way to talk about ourselves without any human bias. 

I am also deeply fascinated by the microcosm and so medical or scientific imagery often feature in my work.

SKETCHBOOK

My sketchbooks are full of small incomplete drawings or paintings. Many images are lifted from dreams or layered in a steam of consciousness method, others may be drawn from life. My sketchbook includes a mix of graphite, ink, watercolor, and digital exploration. 

 

Digital Illustrations

Digital & Traditional Media

 

This gallery showcases a variety of primarily digital illustrations. The Hello series was a set of  postcards that featured whimsical illustrations that each had a different visual tone. The intent was the illustration would color the way the word Hello was perceived. Cormorant Knitting and Water Woman were conceived by using a random word generator and later turned into screen prints. The final two illustrations, Young Buck and Eight, were offshoots of my 23 series where  a random number was used as inspiration for an illustration.

 

 

Digital Illustrations

Digital & Traditional Media

 

This gallery showcases a variety of primarily digital illustrations. The Hello series was a set of  postcards that featured whimsical illustrations that each had a different visual tone. The intent was the illustration would color the way the word Hello was perceived. Cormorant Knitting and Water Woman were conceived by using a random word generator and later turned into screen prints. The final two illustrations, Young Buck and Eight, were offshoots of my 23 series where  a random number was used as inspiration for an illustration.

 

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