Showing posts with label Illustration today. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Illustration today. Show all posts

Sunday, 3 January 2016

Reflective Blog Post



The starting point for my research and practice has been a collection of poems called Crow by Ted Hughes, illustrated by the artist Leonard Baskin. Hughes's gritty poems and Baskin's dramatic wood block prints seemed to drive to the core of something bleak in nature which appeals to my sensibilities. But more their combination also reflected a powerful symbiotic working and understanding that so enhanced the project and questioned the role of illustrator.

I began to try and create my own versions of the crow. I drew using ink as a mirror to Baskin's technique and sought ways of manipulating the crow's image into something obscene, trying to reflect the words of the poems. But on some level this didn't work for me and the illustrations I preferred were very much closer to the original image of the crow and relied more on an aggressive posture of the bird, in the chosen photograph. I looked at other Illustrators experiences such as Lord's A Journey of drawing an illustration of a Fable for insight.
 
But in what respect did this reflect the status of illustration today? Delving deeper into what Illustration is perceived to be (the book The Education of an Illustrator being of particular interest) and an area that is much discussed today, I recognized the concept of Illustrator as Author and that on some level Baskin was embracing. The boundaries between the ownership, or originality, of the visual imagery of the illustrated words was blurred. An illustrator could quite easily own the visual language of a text more convincingly, than the writer, despite the work being their original concept. 


I saw this could create a confused identity for the Illustrator, through my own drawing and reading texts like The End of Illustration by HELLER . When did their work move from being a work of art to an illustration? How much ownership of the visual concepts did they have when working on illustrating a text? For me the prints by Baskin exist separately from the words but so clearly illustrated the meaning of the poetry, which also reflected an unfathomable nature.

 
I felt like I had to grasp more of the narrative of the poem though text like The Author/Illustrator by Brodner informing my practice and decided that I would try and present a whole poem through one illustration. I produced a series of studies that I combined in one image depicting the poem Crow's Fall by Ted Hughes. I supported the content through walks in the country and a trip  to a zoological museum, my own photographs and range of secondary sources.

I stood before the black and white Illustration of the work and felt that something was missing potentially. We then had a workshop with Kerry Andrews where we looked at grounds on to which we might work and I began a series of studies of a range of mid tone papers. I also found the alabaster drawings of Tacita Dean inspiring. I worked up grounds, painting on mid tones and effecting the crow with white paint. For me at this point they engage with the question of what is an illustrator and when does a work become an illustration, but also they reflect something primal that the words of the poem embody.


Thursday, 10 December 2015

Some Useful Illustration Links - Part 1



I wanted to put together a series of links that I have found over the last few weeks for reference or for anybody wanting to find out about what is going on in the Illustration world.

This is a link to The House of Illustration which is a new space in near Kings Cross in London. This will have a range of exhibitions to visit.

Illustration House in London
This link takes you to the World Illustration Award Catagory Winners and a good way of seeing some current and successful Illustrators. http://www.houseofillustration.org.uk/home and the link for 2016 competition entry form is here: http://www.theaoi.com/awards/enter-info.php

The directory of Illustration is a comprehensive database of Illustrators and artists with loads of information: http://www.houseofillustration.org.uk/home

The Association of Illustrators has many links and networks as well as the magazine Varoom which is one of the leading journals. http://www.theaoi.com/

The Journal of Illustration is one of the few Illustration focused publications and can be found here: http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Journal,id=233/

The Australian Association of Illustrators can be found here and is a country I am looking to forge connections with especially seeing I am interested in Aboriginal drawings: http://www.illustratorsaustralia.com/

Illustration web has a list of commercial illustrators and has a range of portfolios to browse: http://www.illustrationweb.com/artists

These are for my own reference and people interested in this area may find them handy.


Monday, 9 November 2015

A Detailed Critical Analysis of The Author/Illustrator by Steve Brodner



The Author/Illustrator is a short text on the current state of the illustrator written in the year 2000 and a forecast of the identity of the Illustrator moving into the new Millennium. It is framed within the context of a series of essays which echo a call to examine the role and place of illustration within society.

Brodner highlights a period, the time of the essay, when computer based graphic design was very much consuming the Illustration industry with quick and cheap alternatives often based around 'Photoshopped collages'. Brodner talks in the first person, the subject matter his own, being an ex-teacher and now a journalistic illustration practitioner  (he emphasises the importance of his practice and his identity as an illustrator). He questions the adaptability of the illustrator and states that he must, and has evolved, to survive in a highly competitive environment.

He presents the premise that illustration is art but that there are some distinguishing features which
characterise, and differentiate, the identity of the illustrator. He goes further to compound that if an illustrator is to retain their identity that they must on some level 'share the mantel of the shaman'. He compares them to poets and composers and talks about embracing your own identity as an illustrator. The key element here being the stories that they tell and the illustrator identifying the narratives that truly drive a 'passion' within them. It's this passion that could realise a style, and polarise its importance, which would be there for all to see.

An illustration I'm currently evolving as nature leads the way.
It seems that Brodner is arguing that illustrators need to take responsibility for interpreting something of society and our age. That they must on some level be contemporary and a interpreter of the current trends and stories that exist in our time, or their own existence. He is saying that an illustrator has a voice and should not merely function as someone who is lead along a path. If this role leads to realisation and a style of interpretation, and therefore some enlightenment, then all the better as this results in a distinct identity.

His argument is based upon this embracing of the a newly realised stance that illustrators could take control of their work by finding a passion in their subject matter. In this way Art Directors will come to an illustrator to tap this 'passion' for the given assignments rather than the artist attempting to fit the required, and already heavily designed, brief. What he proposes is that in the future the illustrator will have greater control of the proposition and that the illustrator will be more exclusive.

Brodner mentions the inclusion of graphic design as a part of illustration but does not go into details. More simple encourages awareness of technique. The emphasis of the essay is no doubt on the role of narrative and story though.

Through his essay Brodner seems to be calling for independence of the illustrator. There is an underlying attempt at reassuring the illustrator by saying that if you can remain true to what inspires you, you will retain your identity in what would appear to be a coming storm. In fact much of this seems to be founded in truth. With the expansion of the online creative arena and growth of websites such as divantart.com and istock there is far more opportunity to disengage the identity of the artist illustrator from their work.

By returning to the beginning of the text we can reflect on some of his motives. He starts by saying that he quit teaching because he had lost sight of his identity as an illustrator and felt he could not explain to his students why or even how to be an illustrator. During the time that the essay was being written the field was changing rapidly and causing uncertainty with the field's practitioners.
The article is one-sided though, because it is a call from his own experiences and is not weighed against other illustrators situation who have succeeded in the new emerging divergent fields of illustration. Although he is talking from a place of eventual career success and experience.

At the time there was a great fear that the discipline of illustration was being outshone by new technology, as previously stated. It's this identity crisis that he chooses to explore through his own experiences and then tries to reiterate his own identity and a place where he himself has succeeded, but also feels rewarded.

Brodner argues that 'self-generated projects' will lead to independence and with the current environment of 2015 it seems like a prophecy well foretold. Within a contemporary market we see independent illustrators and artists emerging with their own brands and styles who are utilising self publishing and websites that allow for their work to be branded on to merchandise.  There is an increasing number of locations where illustrators are able to show their wares and gain independence.

Is this a bad thing? Potentially, yes as the choice of work is massive but how many of these illustrators follow Brodner's principles? How self generated are the presented works and how close are they to their passions? On what level do we see an emerging style within illustration that has been sculpted by the demands of the market and how much pressure does the market put upon these often young practitioners to produce work that mirrors other work? It is difficult to tell at this stage what effect this has had on the market but potentially Brodner's call for independence is well argued.

Ultimately Brodner is saying be true to yourself and identify the illustrator within, a stance he himself has taken, in what he perceives as an increasing competitive illustration sector. He quotes Ansel Adams in the last paragraph; "When truth is the goal your work can not but partake of truth." He sees this as the goal and reward, although this for some will be unachievable as the goal for many is unknown. But it seems that through this text Brodner has made his own journey and found his own truth. Potentially his argument here in this essay could lead many illustrators to success.


BRODNER, S. (2000) The Author/Illustrator. In: Heller, S & Arisman, M. (eds). The Education of an Illustrator. New York, USA: Allworth Press
 

Sunday, 8 November 2015

If illustration is meant to be reproduced then is the reproduction the Illustration?



While reading Michael Lobel's book John Sloan: Drawing on Illustration I came across an interesting statement when the author was considering what Illustration was and is so that he can more clearly interpret the work of John Sloan. He talks about the a series of definitions that classify illustration and states that they are "images meant to be reproduced" and that "Illustrators recognize that the images they create are meant to be viewed not in the original but as reproductions."

This definition he draws from the Joseph Pennell and his book published in 1896 The Illustration of Books, a publication that began the redefining of what Illustration was, and one that Lobel uses as a way of identify the key features of illustration as it emerged in the mid to late nineteeth century, and help frame the context of the book around John Sloan. These may not even be his own opinions but pose an interesting question that may drive to the root of a definition of Illustration and potentially a clearer understanding of where my work sits.

If illustration is meant to be reproduced then is the reproduction the Illustration? And does the original remain an independent piece of artwork? If the reproduction is a mirror of the original art work is the physical nature of this original the aspect that makes it an artwork rather than an illustration? Could the individual identity of something make it understandably unique and therefore more clearly defined? Does this controlled process of reproduction result in an illustration?

The format of the illustration will also vary dramatically. It could be a framed print or in a newspaper, poster or made into a tattoo. Does each style have its own value? Is a framed print more valuable than a illustration in a newspaper? The mass media will produce thousands of newspapers and copies of that image where as a print will be of a limited run. Is the value of the print higher, not just it's monetary value but it's currency increased, by it being closer to the artist? A print seeming as if it has been touched by the artist themselves and that in the newspaper further from the origin.

This also makes the a clear statement about the presence of the artist. By possessing a framed printed potentially the owner has something of the artist. The original work is also an individual object where as a reproduction in a book is framed with the context of the narrative. It is part of another piece of work rather and potentially the identity of the original artist is lost.

M. Lobel, John Sloan: Drawing on Illustration (2014) USA, Yale