Showing posts with label Peace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peace. Show all posts

24/09/2010

•PRE DIGITAL

QUEEN POSTER. 1979
This is the first illustration I ever sold. I started it during the summer months of 1979 whilst still in my final year at Liverpool.
I watched Wimbledon on TV as I painted and airbrushed this piece from photographs I'd taken myself when we saw Queen live at the Empire in Liverpool the year before.
I travelled to London to meet Peter Small and Mal Burns of Communication Vectors. (what a name) and they paid me in cash - £160 for this and for a Pink Floyd poster too.
I travelled back to Liverpool with a pocket full of tenners, the promise of a printed poster and a huge, satisfied grin.
They also commissioned 2 more posters/bands for Visions of Rock (Proteus Books) and my Police and Yes posters were the first book work that I had published.

Please feel free to click on any image to enlarge but remember all are strictly copyright.©



29/07/2010

•MORE PRE-DIGITAL WORK
My preferred medium of choice before pixels came along was water colour. Dr Martin's watercolour inks is a fantastic range of brilliant colours and when combined with coloured pencil work they gave me all the freedom and detail I needed to create my first greetings card commissions and posters. Airbrush always played a major role in poster work too. I employed a small variety of styles that included black and white pen work. The brush pens with the rubber tip were excellent for freehand work.
In this set of pages you'll see some of my early efforts, whilst researching and collectingwork for this anniversary blog I was amazed firstly by how much work I had saved, and secondly by just how much I'd totally forgotten ever doing!

•POSTCARDS
Postcards, like stamps, are an almost perfect art form.
They can be powerfully angry helping campaigners put over their point in the most succinct way.
They can be a snapshot window to the world (pre FaceBook) and can convey the journey you are currently enjoying to the folks back home.
I once bought a pack of 50 old, used postcards and found hours of entertainment reading out the sometimes bland, sometimes poignant messages scribbled on the reverse.
In his book THE POSTCARD CENTURY, collector Tom Philips finds the same kind of enjoyment and fascination. I mention this book because one of my miners' support postcards features in this collection of 20th century postcards.
Originally created in conjunction with Leeds Postcards my pack of 8 designs, and then a subsequent follow-on pack, raised over £25,000 for striking miners' families during the 1984 strike.
Here are some details about Tom's book...November 2000 marks the publication of Tom's latest book, The Postcard Century. It tells the story of the Twentieth Century with postcards and the messages they contain.
Like so many of Tom's projects, this book grows from a set of rules: the postcards had to bear contemporaneous imagery (e.g., a Beatles card from 1962, not 1996); they had to have been sent; and the message ought to relate to the image on the recto. The result is a treasure-trove of first-hand accounts of the banal and sublime, the profane and the sacred.
The book has already received critical acclaim in the British press, including a stirring piece by Simon Callow in The Observer. 
My postcard designs eventually influenced the publication of MY first book DRAWING CONCLUSIONS. Along with charts and cartoons, illustrations and photographs it chronicles the main campaigns during the acid reign of Thatcher. Plus, a foreword by Bruce Kent no less!
Still available, directly from HFG, email for details.

29/06/2010

•SKETCHBOOKS




Over 30 years of ideas represented in these dog-eared, well travelled and well loved notebooks and sketchbooks. I'd been determined since artschool to never be without a pencil and notebook of some sort. Like Dumbledore's pensive they act as a kind of portable second brain.
OK, so over the years they've evolved into some kind of fetish item, and I currently have somewhere in the region of 40 brand new little gems waiting to to be opened and recorded in. If anyone would like to come and see them, I get them all out once a week and appreciate them.
The quality of the notebook often influences the productivity, that certain waxiness that soft HB has when it glides and traces over fresh creamy white cartridge! Mmmm.
In this very final image you can see the finished artwork that was initially sketched out in a WH Smith's A4 superior cartridge hard back notebook.
Please feel free to click on any image to enlarge but remember all are strictly copyright.©