Wednesday, 16 April 2014

ILLUSTRATOR #10, DAVID DOWNTON

David Downton is a renowned fashion illustrator born in 1959 in Kent, England who has been in Paris Haute Couture shows for more than a decade. He started his illustration career in 1984 when he worked for several projects from advertising, packaging to illustration fiction. After working for many years, he then was asked by some of the largest fashion magazine companies including Paris Couture shows in 1996. Since then David has become widely known as a fashion illustrator and his name has appeared in magazines in every part of the world. Some of David’s commercial clients include Tiffany’s New York, SAKS 5th Avenue, Selfridges, Burberry, and the British Fashion Council. His works have been exhibited in galleries all over the world such as USA, China, Australia, UK, and some Asian countries. In 1998, he started collaborating with a series of portraits of some of the world’s most beautiful models like Dita Von Teese, Erin O’Connor, Paloma Picasso, Catherine Deneuve, and Carmen Dell’Orefice.

In 2007, he was commissioned by Browns to design its Chritmas window display for the South Moulton Street Store. Shortly after that, his works was featured on some magazines cover produced by Daily Telegraph and Cally Blackman’s 100 Years of Fashion Illustrator. He is a professor at London College of Fashion and eventually honored by the Academy of Art University, San Francisco as an honorary doctorate. Moreover, his book is expected to be published featuring a collection of the work of several artists from Andy Warhol to Rene Bouche. The book is so named Master’s of Fashion Illustration.  

 I was unduly impressed by his lavish illustration which is clean, classical with delicate brush strokes and use light to dark palettes in his colour choices. He has captured the essence and spirit of women and fashion like no other image maker before him.








Monday, 7 April 2014

ILLUSTRATOR #9, RICHARD GRAY

A best-poke fashion illustrator, Richard Gray lived and worked in London. Whilst he was still a fashion student at Middlesex Polytechnic, he was commissioned by Anna Piaggi to make drawings for her pages in Vogue Italia and for the Eighties avant garde magazine Vanity.
Since then, Gray has collaborated with some of Fashion’s greatest names including Alexander McQueen, AgentProvocateur, Vivienne Westwood, Julien MacDonald and Givenchy as well as stars from the Entertainment Industry such as Kylie Minogue and Britney Spears. He has illustrated the couture shows for The Observer and The Independent and his work has been used, amongst others, by a host of Vogue titles, VMagazine, Madame Figaro, amongst many others. 




Gray had a special working relationship with the late Alexander McQueen and for his SS08 show La Dame Bleue, which was dedicated to Isabella Blow, Gray created a poster sized portrait of Blow which was used on the show's invitation. Other projects have seen Gray exhibit work in the windows of Milan’s Via Della Spiga and the V&A where he designed and made an installation called Morpho-illogical as part of Anna Piaggi’s exhibition Fashion-ology.

 He have since become part of the V&A Magazine’s permanent collection of fashion drawings, and a selection of the newly acquired illustrations will be featured in an upcoming book from V&A Publishing entitled Illustrating Fashion, which is being written by Abraham Thomas.

The thing I love about Gray's work is the polygonal aspect in which he treats his characters and the way that lines and shapes break up and balance the composition perfectly. Everything fits into place so well, Gray's a master at working from realist pencil to expressionist-style shapes and proportions, then creating something that combines both. His exotic and explosive use of colour is also something a lot of illustrators find difficult to do so.