Posts Tagged ‘PG Live’

New Ranges for PGLive and Surtex 2013!

Tuesday, May 14th, 2013

One of the reasons we love doing shows, is that it gives us the opportunity to show off fantastic new artwork and designs from our lovely Advocate artists to lots of people. This year is no exception; we’ve done a big call out to all our greetings card illustrators and designers, and boy have they wowed us with all their new work! We’ve got great Christmas, female, male, birthday, and boutique ranges all mocked up and ready to show you at PGLive and Surtex this year, like this quirky Adventure Trail set from Sophia Touliatou; this sweet Bunting range from Suzanne Khushi; lovely bold floral designs from Nicola Evans, and these ultra feminine, classy Bijou styles from Lynn Horrabin.

Catch us at PG Live and Surtex this year to see many more fantastic ranges and designs! To see more from these artists, click on their names above or visit their online portfolios on our website.

Surtex_New_Ranges_2013_advocate_art_illustration_agency

Advocate Art in Art Buyer Magazine Spring/Summer 2013!

Monday, May 13th, 2013

Recently we gave the Advocate Art website a much-needed boost, and introduced 2 brand new features to help our lovely clients’ online search. ImageSearch and the heart icon are sophisticated yet intuitive elements through which you can look for pictures in a more instinctive way, allowing you to compare images using visual references not just keywords.

Art Buyer Magazine are helping us to spread the word about our exciting new digital developments, and we were delighted to have an article about our online revamp feature in their Spring/Summer 2013 issue! Accompanying the text are images from our fantastic greetings card and art licensing artists Alex Burnett, Nicola Evans, Jessica Taunton, Rex Butcher, Victoria Nelson, Zoe Connery, and Chellie Carol. To see more of their work, click on their names above or visit their online portfolios on our website.

‘Searching for Art’ is also available to read in our brand new issue of MaG, available at PGLive and Surtex 2013! And now you can also read it hear! Take a look below:

Laura Lee from Advocate Art writes on their new search interface.

Art_Buyer_Article_SS2013_advocate_art_illustration_agency

 

When I use the Internet to look for images, the biggest hurdle is not where to look; I know the right image is in there somewhere. But how do I describe what I’m looking for so that a search engine can find it? It’s that classic needle in haystack situation: you know your picture is in there, and if you just make the right move it will magically appear.

Getty were the first to use keywords to organise their vast catalogue, and it’s a system that image libraries still depend on. This means that art buyers have to break their search down into very definite terms, or do their best to summarise it in one word. As the saying goes a picture’s worth a thousand words, so what are my chances of finding what I’m looking for with just one or two keywords?

I believe the way we search for images on the Internet mimics the way we think, and feel that the phrase ‘train of thought’ describes the journey-like quality of our mental processes pretty well; we like to meander slowly, make occasional stops, and admire the scenery until we reach our final destination. Image searching is fun, inspiring and completely illogical, so shouldn’t the technology we use follow suit?

The problem with working in an increasingly digitalised space regulated by apps and shortcuts is that we start to buy into the myth that everything is a click away. I fall prey to this sort of thinking all the time; as I look for lost house keys I try find them by mentally hitting CTRL + F. Countless times I’ve been disappointed I can’t CTRL + Z an irreversible problem. Picture libraries like to claim that they can give you this kind of instant access to The Right Answer, but this is only true if you know exactly what you’re looking for and where to find it. You know what? I say it’s time we stop worrying about our target, and start enjoying the journey again.

Edward Burns, our MD, comments, “If I’ve learnt anything about designing websites it’s that everybody thinks differently. Let’s say you have a button; you put it in a place that fits with one person’s logic. But another person will look for the same button in a completely different place. So hey: why not have two buttons? The other thing I’ve picked up is that it’s important to follow as closely as possible the experience of having one of our agents guide you through our website. That’s why we came up with the Advo Guy as our company mascot; he’s a bit like the paperclip they had in Word, he’s there to help you if you don’t have the benefit of having an agent take you through the website”.

With this in mind, we recently upgraded our website to the jolly tune of £20,000 and twelve months of programming. The latest features allow art buyers and picture researchers to look for images in a human way, as if they were having that valuable face-to-face meeting with an agent.

To make this possible, we travelled all the way to Berlin’s University of Applied Sciences and came back with ImageSearch. With this tool, users can upload an outside image to the website and have it compared to art from our catalogue. It’s not perfect – searches based on colour, shape and brightness can only get you so far – but that’s half the fun! You never know what to expect. Why stop there though? When you use ImageSearch, one of Advocate’s six agents gets notified of the image you’ve uploaded and where you’re looking and they’ll get back in touch to make sure you’re on the right track.

It’s a two-pronged attack that means you’re getting a kick out of the latest in image searching technology, as well as the help of an experienced, and more importantly human, agent.

We’ve also introduced the heart icon, which allows you to pull up a range of artists with related styles. This is particularly useful if you’re familiar with one of our artists and are interested in finding others who are similar.

I appreciate that keywords provide structure, but the thought that they’re the only things linking me to my image concerns me. It’s safe to say that humans – generally speaking – are confused, grammatically incorrect, illogical beings who like to ask a lot of really long, weird questions, which means we’re not that good at communicating with the Internet. We like searching instinctively, maybe tentatively, but certainly adventurously. I don’t have a problem with unpredictability; I’m not going to get upset because I uploaded an image of an artful red shoe adorned with flowers, only to be shown a picture of a woman in a dress straddling a tube of toothpaste. It’s these sorts of flaws that I enjoy; the mysterious brain farts of the Internet. When you go on the Internet to find a piece of artwork it should be like falling down the rabbit hole; an absurd, upside-down journey strewn with funny objects. Even when browsing for a specific picture, it’s nice to encounter or be exposed to the random and unexpected; to be taken on a meandering path through images that lie on the fringe of our original expectations.

Meet Advocate Art at BEA and Seoul Book Fair 2013!

Thursday, May 2nd, 2013

Now that we’ve recovered from Advocate‘s busiest shows ever at Bologna Children’s Book Fair and London Book Fair, we’re dusting off our suitcases and planning to take to the road again!

Not content with hitting PGLive and Surtex (more to come on that soon) we’ll also be showing off our Picture Book, Young Fiction, Older and Real, and Boutique folios at Book Expo America, and Seoul International Book Fair!

We’re now taking appointments for Book Expo America at our booth C1284. If you’d like to book ahead to meet our girl wonder Hannah, and see amazing new artwork from our fabulous children’s book illustrators, get in touch at hannah@advocate-art.com

BEA_Seoul_International_Book_Fair_Advocate_Art_Illustration_agency

 

Hot off the Press! Advocate’s MaG featured in Art Buyer!

Monday, April 15th, 2013

Following the roaring success of Issue 1 of MaG – a print catalogue giving an overview of Advocate‘s new art and design -  we’re shortly launching Issue 2 in time for PG Live and Surtex 2013!

We’ve put together an even bolder and brighter issue than the last, with a stunning cover from newly-joined artist Jenny Wiscombe, and art from Annabel Spenceley, Jenny Wren, Katy Donaldson, Jo Parry, and Sophia Touliatou. You can also see brilliant work from our greetings cards and art licensing artists, get a closer look at the world of a freelance illustrator in our artist features, look through the latest trends, and read about our amazing new web interface ImageSearch, which will change the way you search for pictures.

Adding to our general excitement about its release, the nice folks over at ArtBuyer Magazine have just promoted our MaG in their latest news bulletin!

We’ll be posting a copy of MaG out to all our clients, and taking a whole bunch with us to PG Live and Surtex, so feel free to come and say hello and pick up a copy!

To find out more information about our greetings cards and art licensing artists, or to see where we’ll be at upcoming shows, visit our website.

 

Here we go again – Live from PG LIVE

Tuesday, May 24th, 2011

Here we go again Edward Burns and Francois Aquesbi from Advocate-Art illustration agency are this week at PG LIVE the London international Greeting Card Show. Featuring fantastic Greeting card ,Calendars, stationary and other licensing products design. Here are some photos of them at work.

Advocate On Tour

Thursday, May 5th, 2011

It is one of the busiest months at Advocate Art in preparation for  three major shows this month. Ed and Francois are taking to the air next week for Surtex greeting card show in New York  (15th and 17th of May). Then on the 24th and 25th of May we will be attending  PG Live in London.Kate  will also be of to the Book Expo in New York on 24th-26th of May, All together we will be covering over 10,000 Miles,seeing over 200 Art Buyers.