Author: AD

George VI

 

This portrait of George VI was recently returned to me by the Real World Design Group in San Francisco. Nine illustrator/ artists were commissioned to produce portraits of famous people who also happened to stutter. The poster below was designed and researched by Roland Addad and his team at Real World for the National Stuttering Project in 1986-ish?. After all these years it’s a pleasure to be reminded of the great design culture that existed before computers.

 

Old Commission

James Caan

 

This was commissioned in California around 1983. This is a scan from the original artwork and below is the published version. It was used for a footballing magazine. I recently acquired a few pieces of my artwork from that time but mostly the clients keep them.

 

James Caan

’66 And all That

66 Legshield Nick

 

A recently finished commission. The brief was to create a commemorative group portrait of the three West Ham players who played a vital role in winning the 1966 World Cup for England.

The image below completes Bobby Moore holding the trophy exactly 50 years ago.

When Nick the owner assembles the Lambretta I will post the completed project in the Custom section.

 

Nick Centre Bar

 

Nick Mudguard

Hawley Square

Portrait Unknown #1

 

I don’t know who this is but it was done in the life drawing room at the art school in Hawley Square around 2001.

You can see more life drawing in the UK section in the menu above, just hover over it and select. Most of the drawings were produced between 1995-2005.

Tony and Maggie

Tony

 

A portrait of Tony who studied painting at the Slade in the 1960’s. Apparently he used to skive off and go home to play with his elaborate train set. Tony taught art in Canada and later in St Albans. He still collects train locomotives and rolling stock, very detailed die-cast models which are beautiful objects in themselves.

 

File0320 copy

 

Maggie used to pose for the Empire group back in the mid nineties. It was a small group that met in various peoples houses and there was never more than 8-10 people. Very relaxed, do your own thing. I miss that atmosphere where only discrete background music was played and it was all very relaxed. In 2001-2 we had a spell in the life drawing room at the old art college in Hawley Square. We rented the room and model and the group was un-supervised. For some reason the rules changed and the group moved venue a couple of times and ended up in a Baptist Church. The room was huge and faced south and the group grew. A changing of the guard brought in the idea of obtrusive music of the absurd variety. So these classes now are periodically crowded and new courses are too expensive. Also I’ve noticed that many students are showing up and you would think that the art schools would provide adequate drawing courses for them, they’re paying enough in tuition fees.