MassArt Illustration

March 15, 2018
by alice.stanne
0 comments

Noodle & Doodle

Poster by Eric MacEachern (BFA ’18)

 

The Illustration department will be hosting another Noodle & Doodle live drawing session on Tuesday, March 20th at 6:30pm in the Fenway Studio of the Design and Media Center. This live drawing session features MassArt student/musicians as the models!

Check out the slideshow below of some sketches and pictures of last semester’s session:
Noodle + Doodle - Fall 2017

March 9, 2018
by alice.stanne
0 comments

The Journey So Far

On March 15th several Illustration alumni will be returning to campus to speak with current seniors about their experiences after graduation. The Journey So Far event will be held in the the Kennedy Conference and Lounge (K280) at 2:00 pm.

The following alums will be joining the panel:

Krista Perry is an illustrator and designer from Massachusetts. She received a BFA in Illustration (with honors) from MassArt in 2015. In 2016 Krista was recognized by the Society of Illustrators Student Competition, and was her artwork was printed on the cover of their student catalog! She loves F-U-N! She thrives on color and pattern and holds a special interest for pop culture, kitsch, music history, mid century design, classic American culture, and silliness. Hand lettering, pattern making, and big explosions of color make her world turn. When she isn’t illustrating, she loves people watching, seeing live music, an​d daydreaming about fabulous Italian dishes.

Becca Cahan graduated from Massart in 2013 and has been freelance illustrating ever since. Some fun projects she has worked on since graduation have included creating wall art for Target, greeting cards for Trader Joe’s, calendars and planners distributed at stores such as Barnes and Nobles, illustrations for craft books with Klutz Scholastic and other illustrated stationery goods such as journals and illustrated gift books. Becca’s work all starts by hand with watercolor paintings that are digitized to create flexibility when it comes to client revisions. Most of Becca’s illustrations are colorful hand lettering pieces filled with decorative florals and geometric patterning.

Steve Mardo is an Illustrator from Rhode Island. He has been commissioned by an array of clients ranging from Boston publications to galleries in Los Angeles. Steve also self-publishes his own graphic novels and comics under his creative endeavor Angry Baby Comics. He has studied at the School of Visual Arts in New York and received his B.F.A. in illustration from the Massachusetts College of Art and Design in 2012.

 

Marc Roulstone, a graduate of the Massachusetts College of Art and Design (1997) with a BFA in Illustration, worked for many years as a staff graphic designer and product developer. In 2009 he went out on his own as a freelancer and also began offering his personal work for sale at art shows and high end artisan open markets.

October 16, 2017
by alice.stanne
0 comments

Kingdom Animalia: Illustrations from New England Exhibit

by Professor Suzanne BarnesThis month, I had the unexpected pleasure of being invited to exhibit in “Kingdom Animalia: Illustrations from New England” at the art gallery at Eastern Connecticut University, August 31, 2017 – October 12, 2017. Included in the exhibit were two of my former students, Skarlett Prittie and Liveta Lapinskaite, as well as my colleague Prof. Scott Bakal. The FAIC gallery is brand new, impressively designed, and spacious, with high ceilings and lots of floor to ceiling glass.

Emily Handlin, coordinator for gallery & museum operations at Eastern, beautifully curated the exhibit. “The motivation for the exhibition was Eastern’s new illustration concentration, which began last year,” said Handlin. “I hope that the exhibition would introduce illustration students to the wide range of media, techniques, styles and markets within the field. New England is home to so many wonderful illustrators, many of whom are dedicated educators themselves – I also wanted to showcase their work.”Here’s something about art education. I could lock a student in a room, throw away the key, and keep slipping sandwiches under the door until they’d made one hundred drawings or paintings. By then, they’d be pretty good, even though I’d never said a word. Who among us would want to do that though?

What happens instead is that we spend several hundred hours together over the span of three years. A student listens to me talk about art in general and their work specifically, while I poke them to try a particular thing that they might not want to try or think they can’t do. Then maybe they try it and maybe it turns out great, or maybe it doesn’t, and we pick up from there. While I am talking, listening, poking, my colleagues are doing the same, and by the time we have passed a student along our line, they’ve produced a body of work they could not have made on the day they entered MassArt. That is a teacher’s real pay.

Consequently, I felt exceptionally rich and extraordinarily proud at this exhibit. My twig sharing green herons hung to the left of Prof. Bakal’s fat red and tiny blue birds, both of our birds beneath Liveta Lapinskaite’s colorful toucan tunnel book.
My series of small books about claws and snouts was displayed in a plexiglas vitrine directly in front of Skarlett Prittie’s monumental passenger pigeon, a piece I’d watched Skarlett work on in the ninth floor studio hallway for two months. Now here we were.Decades ago, my teacher Barney Rubenstein, who studied with Oskar Kokoschka, taught me things that Oskar taught him. I teach these same things to my students, and some who are now teachers pass Oskar’s knowledge to their students, along with their own accumulated wisdom. This is how artists have taught one another for centuries, in a long chain that stretches back to French caves. As artists, we make art in part to leave something of ourselves behind. As teachers, we leave something equally important behind in our students, who become working artists and links in the chain, and continue to pass us all forward. It’s a pretty noble profession.

October 3, 2017
by alice.stanne
0 comments

Professor Linda Bond’s Solo Exhibition Opens

The Human Rights Institute Gallery at Kean University welcomes Linda Bond’s exhibition After-Effects: Beyond the Shadow of War (Sept 5 – Dec 20, 2017). Bond’s art work exemplifies the Institute’s longstanding efforts to promote the awareness of human rights issues and violations across the globe. Our obligation to teach, to educate and most importantly, to act on behalf of the powerless is beautifully expressed in this extensive body of work. Included in this ten year retrospective is her One to One project, a collaboration with women in Afghanistan. The project highlights the importance of educating women worldwide – especially in conflict areas – as a means of stabilizing and empowering communities. Other compelling works addressing issues of war and unrest are examined in drawings, prints, collages, 3D installations and videos.

September 25, 2017
by alice.stanne
0 comments

MassArt Travel Course in Baseline Magazine

by Associate Professor Scott Bakal

My colleague Elizabeth Resnick who is Professor Emeritus in MassArt’s Graphic Design department as well as an author and designer and I co-teach a travel course. The course is called Crossing the Pond: Exploring Communication Design in London and Dublin. We take graphic design and illustration students (usually 50/50) to the UK and Ireland for about 17 days for museum and studio visits. During these visits the students see lectures from some of the most prolific and world renown designers and illustrators in the region. The focus of the course being; what are the differences and similarities between the U.S. and other countries in their use of design and illustration as well as experiencing life in these two countries.

The last trip we held was in the Spring of 2016 and this Fall, we will begin the process of organizing the next UK trip for the Spring of 2019. For this upcoming trip, we will be centering the trip exclusively in the UK but spending time in three cities – London, Cambridge and Leeds.

During a previous course trip, Elizabeth and I met with Hans Dieter Reichert, Publisher of Baseline.

The magazine has an education section and we discussed how are trip can be formulated into a story. After we got through the trip, Elizabeth and I spent a few weeks writing the article and sent it in and am excited to announce that the current issue with our students and trip concept and details are live!

You can download the full article PDF here.

2016 London Dublin Class

It is a wonderful trip and highly curated experience for the students. We hit the ground running from the very day we land. Often visiting two to three studios a day as well as cultural visits such as the V&A Museum in London, Chester Beatty Gallery in Dublin. We also purchase tickets to plays running at the time so they have cultural experiences outside of only graphic design and illustration and there is always one day in each country that the students can explore the country on their own.

Annie Atkins

Highlights for the trips include visiting Pentagram UK and a talk from brilliant designer Harry Pearce; visiting St. Bride’s and seeing original sketches for Gill Sans, pages from the Book of the Dead and a complete first book printed in English from the 1400’s; visiting Annie Atkins studio in Dublin (she creates the graphics for TV shows and movies such as the Grand Budpest Hotel, The Tudors and others and all of the newspapers, signage, etc. for the sets. Further, while in Dublin, the students saw lectures from illustrators Steve SimpsonAlan Clarke and Sarah Bowie which were wonderful. After the lectures, the artists had a meet-up with the Irish Illustrators Guild and invited all of the students to a local pub to top off the rest of the evening.

This is only to list a fraction of the itinerary.

I am incredibly proud and honored to work with Elizabeth on this course and hope to expand it in the near future. My goal is to have a course like this run every year. I am very thrilled that I have the ability through MassArt to give students once-in-a-lifetime experiences traveling abroad. In many cases, not only is it students first trip outside of New England, but out of the country.

We look forward to students coming to the information sessions next Fall! Spread the word!

Baseline Article: You can download the full article PDF here.

June 13, 2017
by alice.stanne
0 comments

Professional Artist Magazine Featuring Faculty and Alumni

The June/July issue of Professional Artist Magazine features an article by Visiting Lecturer John Roman, “Go for the Gold: The Artist as Athlete.” The article focuses on the challenges a freelance artist faces in a variety of markets and the satisfaction achieved by reaching a successful goal.

The article also features work by several MassArt illustration alumni, who have gone on to work in a variety of fields.Becca Cahan (BFA ’13), Illustrator Specializing in Illustrated Lettering

Laura DeDonato (BFA ’08) , Mural Artist

Leah Klein (BFA ’11), Graphic Designer

Frank Koran, Gallery Artist

The June/July issue of Professional Artist Magazine is now available online and at your local bookstores.

June 13, 2017
by alice.stanne
0 comments

MassArt Award Recipients

With the close of the spring semester comes portfolio reviews, graduation, and the excitement of seniors moving on into the professional world. Another exciting end of the year milestone is the awarding of MassArt institutional awards. Students from all across the school apply for a variety of awards; there are two travel awards, a senior project award, and a new prize for creativity and innovation. A committee of faculty and staff review the proposals to select the recipients that have the most well thought out project that shows outstanding artist merit. Out of those four awards, two Illustration seniors were selected to receive recognition.

Caitlin Mavilia, a double major in Illustration and Sculpture, was awarded the Donis A. Dondis Travel Award for her project Rediscovering the Trojan Horse. The $5,000 Dondis Travel Award is granted to a Junior or Senior to help defray the cost of travel for the purpose of completing a well-defined project having artistic merit.Caitlin Mavilia will be shedding new light on the history of a 3,000 year old narrative as a part of a current project designed by Handshouse Studio to bring the Trojan Horse back to life. The Handshouse Studio run by MassArt professors Rick and Laura Brown is an educational organization that replicates historic objects as student-driven projects. Their current project to reconstruct the first ever, period-accurate Trojan Horse at full scale will be installed in The International Spy Museum’s new building in Washington D.C. In pursuit to further investigate the thinking behind the Mycenaeans, the makers of the Trojan Horse, Caitlin will be traveling to Greece to develop a series of large scale drawings informed by Mycenaean depictions of horses. Caitlin will also be developing an illustrated book on the story of the Trojan horse that includes informational illustrations of how the horse was built.

Joshua Chace was awarded the brand new Lam Prize for Creativity and Innovation for his interactive comic Full Plate. The $1,500 Lam Prize is granted to sophomore, junior, or senior from any major who shows dedication, creativity, and innovation.
Full Plate is an interactive comic designed for mobile phones and digital media. The use of a touch screen allows the viewer to progress through images in the application much like one would flip a page of a book to proceed. The benefit of this is the infinite scrolling space that exists within the application and the use of the Z-axis. Images can be placed in such ways that a modern comic book would never be able to accomplish. Thus, pages and the page format are not necessary in a comic designed for digital viewing. A hail of bullets fly into wounds and sandstorms bleed into dragons; the imagery of this interactive comic can flow into one another in beautiful transitions. At a touch, the viewer can witness over 100 illustrations that exist in a 3D space and move with the perspective of your eye. A video of Joshua’s interactive comic can be viewed here.
Congratulations to our incredible illustration seniors!

May 11, 2017
by alice.stanne
0 comments

Arlington International Film Festival Poster Competition

Last month Robert Maloney’s Experimental Illustration class worked with the Arlington International Film Festival (AIFF) organizers to design a poster for the 2017 festival. To expand the interdisciplinary celebration beyond just film AIFF sought to work with students from MassArt – not only to create a beautiful poster for the festival, but also to provide a paid opportunity for students to develop a professional portfolio piece. Students and organizers celebrated the partnership with a reception held on April 28th.

Congratulations to Joshua Chace, whose poster was chosen to represent the 2017 festival! About his work Joshua said “The imagery of the film reel and flags over a colorful painted surface lets the viewer know about the art and creativity that happens at this international film show.”

Of the work, the judge Jennifer Cheng DesAutels said, “There were several very outstanding concepts, which speaks very highly of the thoughtfulness with which the artists approached the project. In addition, all of the pieces showed sophistication of technical ability in each artist’s chosen media.”

Experimental Illustration - AIFF Posters

April 25, 2017
by alice.stanne
0 comments

GROW! Boston Assignment

Sophomore Illustration and Digital Painting classes taught by Lisa Kennedy collaborated with GROW! Boston to create the cover and interior spot illustrations for the Spring 2017 issue. Students focused on issues such as phytonutrients, pest management, the plight of pollinators, and more. Each student submitted professional and creative solutions beyond expectation.
Cover by Michelle Nutter
Ask A Grower spot by Danielle Hill
Growing with Kids spot by Eda French
Grow! Boston
GROW! is a quarterly publication with a distribution of 30,000 to help promote the alternative to the globalized, industrialized, and over processed food -resulting in locally, sustainably grown and responsibly distributed food.

April 20, 2017
by alice.stanne
0 comments

Working on Site at the Harvard Museum of Natural History

By Visiting Lecturer Katia Wish

Students in Sophomore Illustration class, taught by Katia Wish, recently visited the Harvard Museum of Natural History to do research for the assignment “Unusual Pets.”

The museum has an expansive collection of taxidermy animals, including mammals, birds, reptiles, insects, and marine life from around the world. The students had a chance to study the forms of different animals and sketch from observation.While at the museum the students were encouraged to start exploring different directions for the assignment. The assignment “Unusual Pets” consisted of three narrative illustrations portraying an animal (one we usually don’t associate with being a pet) with a human. The students started by thinking of situations and behaviors involving regular pets and the relationships between a pet and a human. They sketched numerous scenarios involving unusual pets. The students chose a humorous, serious, thought-provoking or heart-warming approach for their assignment.

Even though most of the students had never previously worked with sequential illustrations, they responded to the challenge with enthusiasm and commitment.  They were ready to receive feedback, improve the concept, work and rework the thumbnails, try different options for value and color studies and experiment with the media.

The results were impressive narratives that delighted, surprised, and engaged the viewer.