Category: Illustration
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Armand Serrano (update)
I posted about visual development artist Armand Serrano last month. Since then his web site has had a complete redesign with added material and a much improved interface. I mentioned in my original post that the interface of the old site was a bit frustrating and difficult to use. His new design is superb and…
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James Jean
James Jean is an illustrator who is widely recognized in the comic book community for his distinctive and beautifully done covers for DC Comics. Born in Taiwan, educated at the School of Visual Arts and currently living in LA, Jean has an impressive list of illustration clients including Time, Playboy, Wired, SPIN, The New York…
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Pablo Lobato
I was writing about the geometry of faces in yesterday’s post about Modigliani. Well, there’s geometry of faces and then there’s geometry of faces! Pablo Lobato is an designer, illustrator and caricaturist from Argentina who has an uncanny ability to distill the essence of a likeness out of starkly graphic geometric shapes. The structures of…
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Eyvind Earle
Eyvind Earle was an illustrator, author, animation art director and background artist. He did backgrounds for a number of Disney’s notable short films in the ’50’s and was the background artist and art director for Disney’s Sleeping Beauty feature length animation. He also worked on Lady and the Tramp and Paul Bunyan. His illustrations appeared…
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Koren Shadmi
Koren Shadmi’s site includes illustration, drawings, comics (in PDF format) and prints, but very little in the way of biographical or background information. Shadmi has a blog called PAPERfeast, which includes work and sketches, but is sometimes more of a personal journal style blog than one devoted to displaying work. Without more time to read…
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Acid Keg (Steve Hogan)
Here’s a webcomic to get “cool” with in the hot days of August. So there’s this band, see, except that it’s just two people, but they get a new drummer, except that he’s really a secret agent looking for a cover, and they have these adventures, except that they’re more like pastiches of 60’s modern…
