Hermann Mejia is very well known for being a regular contributor to Mad Magazine and for his unique watercolor portraits and illustrations. Here are some figure illustrations he posted on his blog that we just had to share, they are so lovely! |
Hermann Mejia is very well known for being a regular contributor to Mad Magazine and for his unique watercolor portraits and illustrations. Here are some figure illustrations he posted on his blog that we just had to share, they are so lovely! |
Jason Seiler has signed up to help out a good cause. The Drawing Dreams Foundation provides art supplies to hospitalized children through children's hospitals' Child Life and Artist-in-Residence programs. Artists and talented children have donated artwork to be sold to raise money for this great cause.
Read the rest of the article here.
Matthew Lennert, art director at the Deloitte Review made the right decision when he asked Dongyun Lee to illustrate an article about the growing new mobile developer trend causing a threat to the older, more established companies. You can read the full article here. |
It was last year that Jon Foster was contacted by the people over at Evolve Media Corp to create a project for their client, Cineworld, a cinema company with theaters in the United Kingdom. The concept very complex and on an epic scale; he was asked to create a giant web mural with about 40 small scenes from different movies. This was all so web visitors can test their movie prowess by finding the hidden images in a "where-waldo" type of game.
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Thomas Ehretsmann's fine brushwork landed him a commission with Rolling Stone magazine to create a portrait of Leonard Cohen for their album review. He really outdid himself this time, you can see each tiny grey stubble on his face. |
Although Barnes & Noble is one of the most popular book stores in the world, it is the artwork of Mark Summers that helps make it so recognizable. Years ago Mark did numerous portraits of authors for them that they now use on every Nook (their version of an e-reader) as well as other products. So when The Simpsons decided to reference to Barnes & Noble in their version "Burns & Noble", it is no wonder that they used a Mark Summers style portrait to further the likeness to popular store (and thus inadvertently paying tribute to Mark). We think its great his illustration has such a broad distribution. |