Posts Tagged ‘art students’

Beverlie Manson Biography

Wednesday, November 23rd, 2011

At Advocate Art we are very excited to welcome back Beverlie Manson to our team of illustrators. Beverlie uses her skills in composition and colour coupled with her intricate drawing technique to create magical fairlytale inspired illustrations. She has worked for numerous book publishers and also produces everyday and christmas stationary. Read her biography below to find out more about Beverlie and if you would like to see more of her work on the Advocate website click here.

“Originally from Manchester, north-west England, Beverlie Manson went to Manchester College of Art at the age of 16. After graduation she moved to London to become a children’s book illustrator, working for most of the major publishers in the UK and the US, including Doubleday, Hamlyns and Boxer Books.

She specialises in magical fairy scenes, which capture the imagination of adults and children. In 1986 she collaborated with comic actor Kenneth Williams on his only children’s book, “I only have to close my eyes”.

Manson has also produced everyday and Christmas stationery for Marks & Spencer, Boots, Clinton Menzies, Birthdays, WH Smith and Tesco as well as wallpaper and fabric collections, winning the Estar award in the US for the best nursery collection. She is a Fellow of the Chartered Society of Designers. Manson lives and works in London.”

Nyc Gapp’s Biography

Thursday, November 17th, 2011

Advocate illustration agency are extememly proud to represent our fabulous new dynamic photographer Nyc Gapp. Nyc has a passion for photographing landscapes and a real talent for highlighting the essence of the image. We can see Nyc’s work looking great on posters and greeting cards; check out his great work below and read his bio to find our more about him.

“I’ve always loved to create, so getting my hands on dad’s Kodak Folding Brownie when I was a kid was an exciting prospect. It made me realise I could take pictures much quicker than I could ever paint or draw them – that suited my zealous desire.

Ok, I’m not so young anymore, but I’ve packed a few things into those bill-paying years, including: air crew, management consultant, marketing, sales, promotions, IT, fine art dealer/gallery owner, wedding & portrait photography, carpentry & building, farm work, scuba instructor, ski instructor and a DJ. Oh, and I’ve done a lot more things just for fun!

Naturally, I’d like to think this eclecticism adds a positive dimension to my photography, to the way I see the world and interact with it. I’m super fascinated by the way things look: visually, almost anything and everything interests me. Sometimes I think I might be too engaged; it’s not OCD, but you could catch me straightening pictures on your wall someday.

I’m truly enlivened by my return to professional photography, as it allows me to really express and create, and to provide solutions; something that I find highly rewarding. I relish the challenge of innovation, to identify, fundamentally what is required and to deliver results that exceed expectations.”

Ed Burns shares his thoughts on how to package your folio

Tuesday, November 15th, 2011

Edward Burns, the founder of Advocate Art illustration agency explains how we package work from artists and illustrators into a portfolio that is in sync with industry needs. Also the importance of samples, why some images are chosen for your portfolio and some aren’t and what artbuyers look for. If you are a freelance illustrator then read on to perhaps gain some useful tips for yourself.

When work is first submitted to us we can see pretty much straight away where we can place it commercially.

It’s important that this commercial vision or creative direction is shared with the artist and they are fully on board with it before we start marketing their work. It has to be a shared vision, or else the artists may be stuck doing a style that they don’t enjoy or go off in a different direction stylistically and lose the commerciality we first saw. Having the opportunity to meet and discuss what we see in the work and explain this to the artist is important, we call it “packaging with their permission”.

Work is presented just like a product is packaged, easy to understand, the contents are evident, what you see is what you get and the features are highlighted. We want it to say  “this is John Smith! This is what he does, isn’t it great!” We package the work or images into a physical and online folio as well as numerous portals, adverts and marketing material.

The aim is to present the artist’s work in a way that they agree shows them in the most commercial light and is also in the same direction they are going creatively.

In our experience when meeting artbuyers (we meet on average 500 different art buyers between us a year) they are looking for continuity (you can do things over), colour understanding, (co-ordinating colours and complementary colours), characterization (candid, clever poses), a design element (decorative elements, added value), relevant to the age group (the style and characters match the age of the characters shown which in turn match the target audience), matches the rest of your folio, ahead of trend or on trend and most importantly an application (the work has a use).

The work must have an application i.e. be more than “nice” and “well done”, we are a commercial agency so it boils down to application. The work must either on its own be usable or be able to inspire a commission. If you are an illustrator this is completely relevant, but much less so if you are an artist who we are more likely to find an application for their work than the other way round. An illustrator may produce a nice image of a dog on a rug for example but what would it be for? Can it carry a narrative for a children’s book or is it decorative enough to work as a design for a product? As Agents, just like you see in the cartoons, we have to look at work with dollar signs in our eyes- we want to be blinded by them!

The thumbnails we select from an artist to go on material and the main artist site are key indicators to how we we package the artist’s work. They are the style setters, at a glance this is what the artbuyer will see in the rest of the artist’s folio. This may sound obvious but so often I see thumbnails that simply don’t relate, how frustrating that must be when you are searching for style.

Portfolios need to keep growing into this agreed direction, hopefully incorporating any subject matter commonly asked for by art directors and contain unpublished work. We brief artists speculatively on filling these gaps in advance of being asked. The most ideal way to achieve a rounded folio is with real paid commissions, if a client thinks an artist may have the ability to do something but they can’t see it from their folio they may ask for a sample.

Art directors often need to show their marketing department or the author (who perhaps have less of a creative eye) an example from an artist folio, you are not going to convince these people you are the best person for a jungle book by showing a train sample, obviously. So when an artist is asked for a sample, even if it is free, it is important to take the opportunity. The Artbuyer will be selling you, fighting your corner if you like, you need to give them the best chance you can.”


Michael Harvey Biography

Monday, November 14th, 2011

Advocate Art are very excited to announce another new artist to the team. Michael Harvey paints these beautiful harbour scenes using bold colours and shapes. They will look great in the Advocate gallery and we also think they will make fab posters and arty greeting cards for birthdays and thank you’s. Read his biography below.

“I was born into what can only be described as a bohemian environment in Hampstead, and quickly dispatched across London to Holland Park to stay with my great uncle Bernard Partridge KG, cartoonist, an artistic environment and one that eventually lead via a course in typography at the Central to advertising.

As an art director at JWT, I was for years charged with the artistic endeavour of making sure that the population of the UK ate their ‘sunshine breakfast’ every morning. Way before the admirable mac, we had to draw continuity frames for TV storyboards and ads, plus layout type for hot metal setting. Having spent many years dedicated to fast moving consumer goods, I moved to equestrian painting, magnificent stallions like Troy, The Minstrel, and Shergar among many. This lead to a commission by the Royal Family of Dubai, to paint 4 of the Maktoum  family’s horses to be presented as a limited edition print to the their guests at Longchamp. The original hangs in the Palace in Dubai.

Cornwall has become a cliché for the art establishment, the light, the unadulterated colour and texture, and true, if it stops raining for long enough you can spot these ethereal elements. Once all that has ‘soaked in’ you are still faced with that famous blank canvas, but with additional artistic endeavour from Marc Chagall, Alan Bennett, The Stones, Lee Ritnour, Gillian Welch, Randy Newman, Miles Davis, and importantly my miniature Schnautzer, Wizz, we will turn out a good painting in the studio today.”

Matt Robertson shortlisted for Picture This competition

Sunday, November 13th, 2011

Advocate’s Norwich based illustrator Matt Robertson was recently shortlisted for the Waterstone’s ‘Picture This’ illustration competition to illustrate Michael Morpurgo’s version of Beauty and the Beast. Although Matt didn’t win we are delighted that he got so far in the competition! Matt has recently started a Masters in Illustration at Anglia Ruskin University so we wish him all the best and look forward to seeing a lot more from him in the future. Below is the newspaper article featuring Matt.

Matt Robertson’s drawings of Beauty and the Beast were picked from hundreds of entries to feature in Michael Morpurgo’s book. The 29-year-old, who lives in Rosebery Road said: “I heard about the competition through a friend. The closing date for entries was in June and I found out I was through in mid-July. It’s a lot of work and it’s a lot to deal with at the moment as my dad died last week, so it’s a hard time to do this.”

The seven finalists now have to provide full colour artwork for two more pages and sketches for the remainder of the book.

As Mr Robertson did not find out about the Picture This competition, which is run by Waterstone’s, until after it had launched, he had just two weeks to create and submit his drawings. He made three drawings of Beauty, the Beast and Beauty’s father using brush pens and watercolours.

He said: “I wanted to give it a Sixties feel. I’m a big fan of Mad Men and thought it would be quite cool to put the beast in a blue suit.

“I did loads of drawings and chose from the best. So much work goes behind each picture.

“I wasn’t very pleased with them and when they phoned me to tell me I was shortlisted I was surprised.”

Mr Robertson was inspired by the illustrator David Roberts, who focuses on time periods such as putting Rapunzel into the Seventies. He also took inspiration from Sixties cartoons. Mr Robertson, who works part time as a barister, plans to go to Anglia Ruskin university this year to study an MA in Children’s book illustration. Art runs in the family as his dad was a designer and his brother is a painter.

He said: “It would be nice to win. It’s difficult and the competition is very high.

“Everyone’s work is very different and I don’t know what the judges are looking for but it’s good for my personal career.”

The winner will be announced in October. They will receive a £6,000 contract and see their work illustrate Michael Morpurgo’s words when the book is published next year.”

Tiago Americo Biography

Tuesday, November 8th, 2011

Advocate Art our really proud to present one of our newest freelance illustrators Tiago Americo; his cute playful characters and snowy scenes will be great as children’s book illustrations, we also think his designs would be great on greeting cards and posters. Check out his biography below.

Tiago Americo was born in 1986 and lived most of his life in Curitiba, Brazil. During his childhood people convinced him that he was really talented, but after getting in contact with the work of illustrators like Gary Baseman and Bob Staake, he realised that he had a long-road ahead of him.

Tiago Americo has a degree in graphic design and has worked as a 2D animator in a few short and featured animation movies. He has received dozens of awards with his animations Café la Rochelle and The Chance and the Butterfly, screened in festivals in England, Poland, Russia, Slovenia, Greece and Canada.

Tiago Americo produces his illustrations digitally, using Adobe Photoshop. He likes to draw cold landscapes, children playing in the snow and pine-trees… but unfortunately most parts of the job don’t involve these themes. In the past, Tiago worked as french teacher, and ran his own illustration company.

Nowadays Tiago Americo works as freelancer based in his bedroom working with children’s publishers, school books and ad agencies. Tiago loves european cinema, healthy food, playing soccer and traveling. He is currently leaving his parents home to go and live in Montreal, Canada, with his beloved girlfriend, and a bunch of books.”

Big up for Hannah and Natasha!

Thursday, November 3rd, 2011

Advocate illustrator Lara Skinner from Lima Design sent in this lovely big up to Hannah and Natasha, well done girls!
To see more of Lara’s poster design and greeting card illustrations on the Advocate website click here.

“I just thought I’d let you know how impressed I am with Hannah and
Natasha. They both seem to be really pushing my work and are really
lovely to deal with as well as being efficient and professional. They’re
a credit to Advocate.
Thanks, Lara xx”

Andreas von Cotta-Schonberg Biography

Saturday, October 15th, 2011
Advocate illustration agency are really proud to represent new freelance illustrator Andreas von Cotta-Schonberg. Andreas specialises in realistic fantasy, portraying aliens, vikings, animals and rugged landscapes which will be perfect for art licensing, poster design, booksgraphic novels, and even greeting cards. His bio is posted below:
“There is so much you can say with the simple application of color and value to a surface, and I am a firm believer that any good piece of art should have something to say. A story if you will.

Not neccesarily the kind with a beginning and an ending, but stories that can be told in the blink of an eye, and in the reflections and emotions it leaves.

I believe, that being a good illustrator means walking a narrow path between developing and growing your skills, in order to convey your desired message or story, but also to have a curious and playful mind, in order to have something worth saying.
Stray too far to either side, and you risk losing focus on your actual task at hand, which should be to create beautiful and meaningful art.

I could be wrong, but still, this is where I strive to be.
Andreas von Cotta-Schonberg, age 35, Living and working out of Copenhagen, Denmark.”

Amber Cassidy

Saturday, September 3rd, 2011

Amber is a Brighton-based Illustrator producing rich & decorative, traditional illustration with a quirky twist and a nostalgic feel.
 Her areas of interest include folklore, storytelling & adventures, environment, lifestyle and fashion. However she would love to have a career in Children’s Illustration. Having just finished an Illustration degree at Northbrook College she is now taking the first few steps towards this goal.

Website – www.ambercassidy.co.uk

Twitter – @amber_cassidy

Thanks so much to everyone at Advocate, who have been so lovely and welcoming. I have thoroughly enjoyed my time here, it’s gone so quickly and I will be sad to leave!

Intern Ignasi Pi-Sunyer

Thursday, February 3rd, 2011

Ignasi Pi-Sunyer “Pisu” is a freelance illustrator with an extremely peculiar imagery. He was born in Barcelona moving to the Uk in 2009 to take Postgraduate character animation at Central Saint Martins College of Art and design. He says he landed in the world of arts like a martian, after scaping from a big corporation where he was working as a lawyer. Ignasi did a Degree in Illustration at “Massana Art School” of Barcelona and he’s member of the “The Professional Association of Illustrators of Catalonia”. Ignasi loves Terry Guilliam’s animations, folk art, and the German expressionism. He has created silhouettes for several successful shadow plays, and published illustrations for newspapers and museums. His final degree film, a collaboration with The National Gallery has been nominated by VAD (International Festival of video and digital Arts). He says he’s not a gifted drawer. He works better with emotions rather than the head. When he’s not in front of the computer he’s cooking Spanish omelets, drinking wine and missing the Mediterranean.

“This work placement in Advocate-art has been so inspiring to me. Now I know what sort of imagery people is buying right now, new trends in Greeting cards, children’s books and different ways to exploit imagery. At the same time In three weeks I’ve got time to learn a bit how to manage a digital library, and how an illustration agency works. I’m sure this will be very beneficial for my future career as an illustrator.”

cheers,

Emily Collins

Friday, August 6th, 2010

We have yet another recent intern to showcase to you today; presenting Emily Collins!

Upon finishing her internship with us, she had this to say:

“Currently completing an Illustration degree at the University of the Arts London, predominantly creating mixed media collages and portraits. Loved my time at Advocate, learnt loads about the proffesional world of Illustration, the importance of making good contacts, and how to drink your weight in strong coffee ! Find me at www.emilyrosecollins.blogspot.com

Check out Emily’s work in the gallery above & on her blog and for more info about internships go here!

Interns At Advocate

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

Interns have become essential to the running of Advocate Art agency. We run an active internship program that we hope many students or career seekers will find very beneficial. We attract students in art history, design, illustration and related courses. In exchange for helping us out we show them the inner workings of the leading artist agency, what’s hot, what you have to do as an illustrator to get work in the real world, and if they really impress us they may even get a job (5 of our current staff were recruited from internships!)

Here’s what Sophie, our last intern, had to say after she had finished:

“Hi

Just wanted to say thank you very much for having me the last three weeks. Was wicked working with you all, and you all made me feel really welcome.

Take it easy

Sophie”

check out Sophie’s work in the gallery above and for more info about internships go here!