Illustrator, character designer and stop-motion animator Taili Wu discusses the advantages that stop-motion’s tactility has for connecting brands with their audience.
In G. Neri's Christo and Jeanne-Claude Wrap the World: The Story of Two Groundbreaking Environmental Artists, Elizabeth Haidle’s mixed-media illustrations convey the artists’ “what-if?” spirit with joy and verve.
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As we get ready for Illustoria's 21st issue, we've gone through the archives and pulled together three incredible...
Dreams are great — and easy. Exploring them is tougher. Achieving them? That's when we all really need help. Children's books columnist Caroline Luzzatto recommends several titles for kids (and their folks).
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Originally published on May 12, 2021 9:16 am
As freelance artists in a time of pandemic drought, David Cowles and Josh Gosfield sensed it was time to put matters in their own hands.
“Let’s not wait for art directors to give us jobs,” Cowles says, “let’s do something that we really love.”
Heroes. We love heroes. We need heroes to get us through tough times. Cowles and Gosfield have given us 63 heroes, as defined by 63 artists, for this moment in a new art-driven magazine, Public Eye.
There are distinctive portraits of heroes of the moment, such as Dr. Anthony Fauci and Stacey Abrams. Heroes of the long past, who seem relevant today: Frederick Douglass. Heroes such as the artist’s mother. Or boxer Jack Johnson. Or Betty Crocker, a pioneer of today’s TV cooking heroes.