Showing posts with label Emma Cowley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Emma Cowley. Show all posts

14 Jul 2012

News: The Picture Show


It's time now for a bit of exciting exhibition news so please, take a gander at the exciting and fresh work of ten great up and coming illustrators including IR contributors! Support them and lace up your trainers straighten the glasses and put on your least ironic jacket for a great show at a sweet gallery. In their own words it's The Picture Show!  

The Picture Show
Illustration Showcase 15 – 21 July 2012
Private View Tuesday 17 July 2012 6-9pm

10 emerging illustrators present a selection of new artworks at the Coningsby Gallery in central London for one week in July. The exhibition showcases young UK talent working across a range of media including painting, textiles and digital art. The group’s diverse influences and inspirations are reflected in the eclectic array of styles and subjects on show. The exhibition is sponsored by Barefoot Wines. Original artworks and prints are available to purchase.

Gallery Details:The Coningsby Gallery, 30 Tottenham St, London, W1T 4RJ
Open 10-6 every day
Free Entry

Contact Details:contactpictureshow@gmail.com
www.thepicshow.co.uk
@ThePicSho

Participating Artists:Jo Cheung’s work explores surreal and dreamlike landscapes, which are loosely based around memories. She is inspired by nature, everyday experiences and places around London. She was listed in Wallpaper* magazine’s 2010 graduate directory, and her work has been featured in Amelia’s Compendium of Fashion Illustration, Flamingo Magazine, and the Great Big Book of Fashion Illustration. www.jocheung.com

Chetan Kumar’s work has been published in educational textbooks, and he has been featured in the 'new talent' section of the Association of Illustrators'-Images 34: Best of British Illustration. He was also commissioned to design a hoarding that was installed near London’s world famous Leicester Square. He goes by the pseudonym Cheism, which is inspired by his extensive traveling around the world as well as his interest in visiting places he has never been to. www.cheism.com

Kyle Maclennan runs Headon Art, which specialises in creating hand painted pop art canvases of cult and iconic figures. These bold and vibrant paintings would complement the décor of any home, office, pub, club or restaurant.  Currently based in the Scottish Highlands, his paintings can be found as far afield as Australia & America.  Previous commissions include work for the likes of SOMA Records founders & DJs SLAM.  www.headonart.com

Kellie Black is a designer and freelance illustrator. Her work has been exhibited at P3 (Baker Street, London) Munny Show (APW Gallery, New York) and at the AOI ‘Images 34’ exhibition at London College of Communications. Her latest collection reveals her own reverence for the quintessentially British eccentric and pays homage to her subjects with portraits including the likes of Stephen Fry, Terry Wogan and The Queen Mother. www.pearlgreyillustration.com

Emily Bakes is a London based Illustrator, who paints contemporary portraits with a surreal twist. She is interested in interpreting characters and telling stories. Emily has produced work for The Croquet Gazette, Nails Inc, and IN magazine. She is exhibiting a series of paintings depicting popular musicians as various fruits. www.emilybakesart.com

Amber Dickinson is an Illustrator and Digital textile designer, who playfully explores dark and edgy themes, incorporating traditional and digital methods of illustration with personal inspiration to create unique effects. Amber has designed prints for various up and coming fashion designers and is currently working on her bespoke textile and silk scarf label 'Wyart'. The new S/S Wyart collection 'Hold Your Breath' will be exhibited at The Picture Show. www.wyartdesign.com

Emma Cowley's formative years were spent in leafy Leicestershire, where she developed her continuing interest in animals and the natural world.  Though she now lives and works in London, a nature lover can still find sources of inspiration in the city, sometimes in surprising places.  Her work is inspired by British wildlife and its associated rural traditions, food, history and folklore. www.emmacowley.com

Vinesh Shah’s work explores the relationship between Type and Image. He enjoys producing work using a multi-disciplined approach, be it hand rendered or digital. He has exhibited at the Old Sweet Shop Gallery, interned at The London Print Studio as a Digital Studio assistant and currently works as a full time Runner at Stinkdigital - a Digital Production Company. During his time at Stinkdigital, Vinesh has enhanced his skills in motion design, which has led to a commission to co-create a short animation. www.mytwopages.com

Chrissy Wallace enjoyed recent success with her solo exhibition at The Modern Pantry and a collaborative exhibition at the The Curious Duke Gallery. For this series of work, she has continued to explore hallucinatory scenes and characters, using strong imagery and fine detail. She likes to clash traditional drawing techniques with graphic shapes and vivid colour.  She engages the viewer by producing work that draws them into the landscape of her mind's eye. www.chrissywallace.co.uk

June Chanpoomidole is a freelance Illustrator and Artist with a love for painting. She loves to draw figures, to tell stories in her images with a vibrant, ethereal colour palette and invoke a pleasant feeling within the viewer. Her inspirations come from observing mundane tasks, surrealist motifs and listening to people’s stories. Her work has been featured in “Amelia’s Compendium of Fashion Illustration”, Sketchbook Magazine and LA Fashion Snob. June is also exhibiting this year at The Curious Duke Gallery. www.junesees.com







8 Oct 2010

Artist 30: Emma Cowley





 

 




A big shiny Illustration Rally welcome to the fabulous Emma Cowley! Emma serves us up delicious slices of British life  fantastically capturing the sights sounds, smells and tastes of gloriously English subjects. Her work is very warm and you can tell at a glance that it comes from deep observation and love of her subjects. Instantly it fosters nostalgia in all those that have stood baking cakes or making jam with mum watching robins in the garden. Wonderfully sweet, her work is a real spirit lifter and her delicate yet firm style re-enforces the sense of belonging her work evokes, and gives her work memorability. Its definitely possible to see the makings of the girl in her work and its this that gives it a real sense of heart  which can only be a good thing! Read about her here!


Who are you: 
I'm an illustrator!  I'm also a self-confessed foodie and animal lover, which you can probably tell by my work.

What do you do
I usually start with a pencil drawing and then either polish it up and fill in the colour with water colour paint, or use the drawing as a guide for a gouache painting.  When I'm not doing my illustration work I like to cook, play video games, research new recipes, do a little sewing, watch crappy TV, or fantasize about all the gorgeous clothes I would buy if I had all the money in the world!

How did you start:
I remember considering illustration as a career as early as infant school.  Even at that age I was certain that I wanted to make pictures for books, rather than 'art'.  Beatrix Potter books were an important early influence, with her reverence for the natural world and close attention to detail.  I still wish I could draw as beautifully as her!

A Personal statement about you or your work:
Many of my fondest childhood memories include helping my mum cook while we watch the birds in the garden, walking the family dog at the woods, eating freshly picked hazelnuts at the park... these interactions with the outdoors are what make me love the nature of the British Isles, despite so many people saying they hate the rain and cold in this country!  So it's often British plants and animals that turn up in my work, as these are the ones that have the most personal associations for me.  I've spent the last little while flirting with different styles or media, so right now I want to focus on really getting 'my' way of working nailed down.