Thursday 15 August 2013

Ronald Searle


Ronald Searle was born in Cambridge in 1920 and was educated there at the Cambridge School of Art. On the outbreak of the Second World War he left his studies to serve in the Royal Engineers and in 1942 was captured by the Japanese at Singapore, then held by them for three and a half years. He is a hugely successful graphic artist and pictorial satirist. As well as his collaboration with Geoffrey Willans on the Molesworth books and his invention of St Trinians, his work has been the subject of numerous exhibitions across the world and appears in several major American and European collections. He moved to Paris in 1961 and then, in 1975, to a remote village in Haute-Provence. He died on December 30th, 2011.







Peter Fowler


Pete’s inspiration for his work comes from nature, daily life, psychedelica, monsters, music  and much more. Forming a backdrop to his ever growing family of characters and creatures, his work inhabits a world where character design meets music and art in a weird and wonderful way. His unique, instantly recognizable approach and sense of playfulness and visual adventures have brought his work to the attention of people around the world. He has worked with various commercial clients as well as bands, music festivals, brands and charities. 






Neville Brody

Neville Brody, the British designer and art director, has now been at the forefront of graphic design for over two decades.Initially working in record cover design, Brody made his name largely through his revolutionary work as Art Director for the Face magazine. Other international magazine directions have included City Limits, Lei, Per Lui, Actuel and Arena, together with London's The Observer newspaper and magazine.

Brody has consistently pushed the boundaries of visual communication in all media through his experimental and challenging work, and continues to extend the visual languages we use through his exploratory creative expression.In 1988 Brody published the first of his two monographs , which became the world's best selling graphic design book. Combined sales now exceed 120,000. An accompanying exhibition of his work at the Victoria and Albert Museum attracted over 40,000 visitors before touring Europe and Japan.






J Otto Seiblod

J. Otto Seibold grew up in the small town of Martinez, California. As a child, he loved to draw, and he credits Lego and the cartoons Ultraman and Speed Racer as definitive influences on his later career. High school drafting classes led to work after graduation with big corporations in the area. He was working for Clorox when he first got the idea to try illustrating for a living his first solo design-and-illustration work was that year's company Christmas calendar.
In 1988, Seibold set off for Spain with a good friend, Vivian Walsh. Though they intended to rent a house and work on art and writing, respectively, they instead traveled through much of Europe, ran out of money, and fell in love. They moved back to San Francisco, where Seibold began doing commercial art in earnest. It was while flying across the country with their pampered dog, Dexter Lunch, that Walsh came up with the idea for their first children's picture book, Mr. Lunch Takes a Plane Ride.

J. Otto Seibold and Vivian Walsh now live in San Francisco with their three children. Their second dog has since joined Mr. Lunch in children's book fame: she stars in Olive, the Other Reindeer.






David Carson

David Carson is principal and chief designer of David Carson Design, Inc. with offices in del mar,california and zurich Switzerland.
Carson graduated with “honors and distinction” from San Diego state university, where he received a BFA degree in sociology. A former professional surfer, he was ranked #9 in the world during his college days. Numerous groups including the New York Type Directors Club, American Center for Design and I.D. magazine have recognized his studio’s work with a wide range of clients in both the business and arts worlds. Carson and his work have been featured in over 180 magazine and newspaper articles around the world, including a feature in Newsweek magazine, and a front page article in the new york times . London-based Creative Review magazine dubbed Carson “Art Director of the Era.” The American Center for Design (Chicago) called his work on Ray Gun magazine “the most important work coming out of America.” His work on Beach Culture magazine won “Best Overall Design” and “Cover of the Year” from the Society of Publication Designers in New York.

Carson’s first book, with Lewis Blackwell, The End of Print, (forward by David Byrne) is the top selling graphic design book of all time, selling over 200,000 copies, and printed in 5 different languages.The work featured in The End of Print is the subject of various one-man exhibitions throughout Europe and Latin America,Asia and australia. Carson’s other titles include 2nd Sight, Fotografiks (with design historian Philip Meggs). He has two recently released books, TREK and The Book of Probes with Marshall McLuhan. David is also art director for the Mcluhan estate(“the medium is the message”).







Vaughn Oliver

“For inspiration you don’t have to look far, just look closely.”

Vaughn Oliver is a British graphic designer most famous for his work with studios 23 Envelope and V23. Throughout most of the 1980’s and 1990’s, both studios worked closely with record label 4AD and helped produce album covers for bands such as Bush, Dead Can Dance, The Breeders, Lush and Throwing Muses.

At 23 envelope Vaughn Oliver worked graphic design and typography while Nigel Griersen worked photography, creating artwork for nearly all of 4AD releases until 1987. Griersen left the following year and left Oliver working solely under the name V23. Over the years using his imagination and collaborative skills to launch a boom in graphic design through the 80’s and 90’s, leaving a legacy of influence on designers afterwards to discover the possibility of type and print.  






Saul Bass

Saul Bass born on May 8, 1920 in Bronx, New York was one of the greatest graphic designers of the 20th century. He became known for designing brilliant animated sequences for motion pictures. In his 40+ year career he did work for the best Hollywood movie makers including Otto Preminger, Alfred Hitchcock, Stanley Kubrick and Martin Scorsese just to name a few.

He did work for numerous movies, including classics such as Psycho, Casino, West Side Story, Anatomy of a Murder and dozens of others. He won numerous awards, including an oscar in 1969 for best documentary for "Why Men Creates." In 1965        won Lion of San Marco award for Best Film about Adolescence for the film "The Searching Eye". In 1994 won Time-Machine Honorary Award and in 1984 won Special Award for the movie "Quest." He is also well known in the publishing/advertising industry, for example, he designed the corporate identity of United Airlines as well as poster for the Los Angeles Olympic games in 1984. He had a very successful career working on some of the best movies of the 20th century, he died on april 25h, 1996 in Los Angeles.







Ross Collins


Ross was born in Glasgow, Scotland in 1972. As he grew up he was fond of drawing, the Bionic Man and precariously swinging backwards on chairs. He graduated from the Glasgow School of Art in 1994 with a First in Illustration. In the same year he won the MacMillan Children's Book Prize an achievement that opened many doors in the Big Smoke. Ross then spent two years in London cultivating an exotic image of the scribbling Scotsman abroad. Ross returned to Glasgow, where he spends his time writing and illustrating children's books aswell as doing animation character development.






Peter Saville

Peter Saville (born 9 October 1955 in Manchester) is an English art director based in London.
Saville attended St Ambrose College. He studied graphic design at Manchester Polytechnic (later Manchester Metropolitan University) from 1975 to 1978.Peter Saville is famous for the design of record sleeves for Factory Records artists, most notably for Joy Division and New Order.
Influenced by a fellow student, Malcolm Garrett, who had begun designing for the Manchester punk group, the Buzzcocks, and by Herbert Spencer's Pioneers of Modern Typography, Saville was inspired by Jan Tschichold, chief propagandist for the New Typography. According to Saville: "Malcolm had a copy of Herbert Spencer's Pioneers of Modern Typography. The one chapter that he hadn't reinterpreted in his own work was the cool, disciplined "New Typography" of Tschichold and its subtlety appealed to me. I found a paralled in it for the New Wave that was evolving out of Punk."
Saville entered the music scene after meeting Tony Wilson, the journalist and television presenter, whom he approached at a Patti Smith show in 1978. This resulted in Wilson commissioning the first Factory Records poster (FAC 1). Saville became a partner of Factory Records along with Wilson, Rob Gretton and Alan Erasmus.
Saville's album design for Joy Division's last album, Closer, released shortly after Ian Curtis's suicide in May 1980, was controversial in its depiction of Christ's body entombed. However, the design pre-dated Curtis' death, a fact which rock magazine the New Musical Express was able to confirm, since it had been displaying proofs of the artwork on its walls for several months.
Saville's output from this period included reappropriation from art and design. Design critic Alice Twemlow wrote: "...in the 1980s... he would directly and irreverently "lift" an image from one genre—art history for example—and recontextualize it in another. A Fantin-Latour "Roses" painting in combination with a colour-coded alphabet became the seminal album cover for New Order's Power, Corruption and Lies (1983), for example."
In the 2002 film 24 Hour Party People based on Tony Wilson and the history of Factory Records, Saville is portrayed by actor Enzo Cilenti. His reputation for missing deadlines is comically highlighted in the film.

In 1979, Saville moved from Manchester to London and became art director of the Virgin offshoot, DinDisc. He subsequently created a body of work which furthered his refined take on Modernism, working for artists such as Roxy Music, Duran Duran, Wham! and Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark. Saville founded the design agency Peter Saville Associates (still designing primarily for musical artists and record labels) before he was invited to close his office in 1990 to join the partner-owned Pentagram, one of the most respected and very few truly multidisciplinary design consultancies/agencies in the world.






Pentagram






Pentagram is the world's largest independent design consultancy. The firm is owned and run by 19 partners, a group of friends who are all leaders in their individual creative fields. They work in London, New York, San Francisco, Berlin and Austin. Designing everything from architecture, interiors, products, identities, publications, posters, books, exhibitions, websites, and digital installations. Working closely to the clients so as to keep the passion and inspiration strong and improve the final outcome. 
Michael Gondry


French-born Gondry was raised in Versailles, near Paris, and had dreams of becoming a painter or inventor. He attended art school to study graphics in the '80s. There he and friends created a pop-rock band called Oui-Oui. After releasing two albums, the band members went their separate ways in the early '90s. Gondry, who had played drums for the band and directed their music videos, was asked by Björk to direct a video for her song, 'Human Behaviour.' Impressed with his work, Björk hired him to direct five more of her videos. With the world-wide exposure, Gondry suddenly found himself sought out by other artists such as The Rolling Stones, Beck, Daft Punk, Chemical Brothers, Foo Fighters, Lenny Kravitz and Sheryl Crow to direct their music videos. Gondry also entered the world of commercials, working with high-powered companies like Gap, Smirnoff, Air France, Nike, Coca Cola, Adidas and Polaroid. While establishing himself in the music video and commercial industry, Gondry developed a number of new film techniques including morphing and invented the idea of using several cameras to take pictures at the same time around someone. This technique was eventually used in The Matrix (1999). His work led to numerous awards in both fields. In the late '90s, Gondry decided to give feature filmmaking a try. His English-speaking debut film was the comedy Human Nature (2002), starring Tim Robbins, Patricia Arquette and Rhys Ifans. Gondry won numerous awards for his second film, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004), starring Jim Carrey and Kate Winslett, including an Academy Award for Best Screenplay; Best Director from the Online Film Critics Society, the Toronto Film Critics Association and the Washington DC Area Film Critics Association; and Best Original Screenplay from the Writers Guild of America. Since then, he's also won awards for his work on the comedy film Tokyo! (2008), a collaboration with directors Leos Carax and Joon-ho Bong.






Kyle Cooper

Kyle Cooper is a director and designer of film title sequences. He holds an MFA in graphic design from the Yale School of Art, where he studied under graphic designer Paul Rand, as well as a BFA from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. In 1996, he co-founded and named creative agency Imaginary Forces. He has directed and produced more than 150 film title and VFX sequences, including Se7en, Spider-Man, and The Mummy. In 2001, he directed a feature film, New Port South.

He moved on to found Prologue Films in 2003, with which he has created title sequences for The Incredible Hulk, Final Destination 5, and The Walking Dead. In 2008, he was a finalist in the National Design Awards. He has earned five Emmy Award nominations and one win for his work on the 81st Annual Academy Awards. He also holds the title of Honorary Royal Designer for Industry from the Royal Society of Arts in London.