illustrations

The Inside View

Inside View sketches 01
A few months ago, I got a call to work on the cover and interior spread for a feature on insider trading for Wardour's Securities and Investment Review magazine in London. The article was still in progress, so I began working from the brief, which mainly outlined a noir take on a short sequence involving the illegal exchange of privileged information. So right out of the gate the spy sketches were flying and rainy nights and briefcase handoffs at train stations were too enticing not to jot down.  However, after sending in the above sketches, I received the final copy for the article and after chatting further with the Art Director, I realized that, as opposed to corporate espionage theatrical international treason, real-world insider trading is usually done under much more mundane circumstances like homes or offices, often with as little as zero fedoras.
Inside View sketches 02
So the next round of sketches were tailored to the idea of a dark and stormy night, but more in a cubicle setting and with some foreshadowing of the regulatory enforcement agencies looming into the scene in the second image.

The second set above were approved with a few small adjustments, like adding an eerie late-night custodian on the cover and lowering the angle on the office on the double page spread.  Overall, it was an unexpectedly fascinating subject to get to research and illustrate. Much thanks to Steven Gibbon at Wardour for the call.
Inside View cover illustration
Inside View spread illustration

William Burroughs

Burroughs_CoverPhoto
The William Burroughs paperbacks that I illustrated earlier this year along with Naked Lunch just arrived from the printers. Because the art director liked the style of the Silky Shark print in my portfolio for the initial Naked Lunch assignment, I continued the process using a silk screen-style approach and a limited palette throughout the sketches and finals. The Soft Machine, The Ticket That Exploded, and The Place of Dead Roads all followed the same process as Naked Lunch, including two or three layers of drawn tones, which I attempted to keep in tune with the style of each book and as a set. The final layouts and text were done by Jo Walker at Harper Collins and I think they did a nice job of pulling the artwork together. (Below is a bit of a process breakdown of the finished covers.)

Burroughs_CoverSketches
Initial sketches for The Soft Machine, The Ticket that Exploded, and The Place of Dead Roads (columns L to R respectively.)

Burroughs_CoverSketchRevisions
The selected sketches with some adjustments in the saturation and color to help balance out the group as a set.

SoftMachine_Inks1
Ink and brush on Bristol Board drawing for the Soft Machine shadows layer.

SoftMachine_Inks2
Ink drawing for the Soft Machine mid-tones layer.

SoftMachine_artwork
Finished colors on the background layer with some separations for black.

Finished cover illustrations and designs:
SoftMachine_jacket

TicketThatExploded_jacket

PlaceOfDeadRoads_jacket

NakedLunch_jacket

Postcards from London

Courtyard_drawing
NaturalHistory_drawing01
LondonRooftop_drawing
LaSiene_drawing
Postcard_TowerHill
ParisFountain_drawing
BritishMuseum_drawing01

In between projects over the past couple weeks, I've been working on some pen and ink drawings on postcards to send from London. Here are a handful from the British Museum, London Natural History Museum, the Louvre, Tower of London and some streets around London and Paris.

Hope everyone out there is having a warm and happy holidays, here's to the end of a monumental year and the beginning of a bright new decade.