These are just some of the illustrators that really made an impact on me many years ago in art school and still inspire me today. I love the work of many, many illustrators of all genres, but I have a tendency to gravitate toward a somewhat darker and more mysterious or expressionistic sensibility. These are some of my all time favorites. (see examples shown in order below) Franciszek Starowieyski (1930-2009) was an absolute master of the Polish Poster. His bizarre figures and creatures disturbed and fascinated me when I first encountered them as a child in my father’s collection of GRAPHIS magazines back in the 1970s. Roger Dean, most famous for his phantasmagorical collaborations with the band YES. I first became aware of his work through listening to the music of YES and then through his classic monograph “VIEWS”, originally published in 1975. Ralph Steadman, probably best known for his collaborations with writer Hunter S. Thompson. I had taken his book “AMERICA”, pub.1974, out of the local public library as a teenager. I wasn’t particularly interested in the political content of the drawings, but more taken with the extraordinary draftsmanship and outrageous energy of the art, which seemed to border on insanity. Marshall Arisman, editorial illustrator who often depicted violent or challenging subject matter. His dynamic use of color and form knocked my socks off when I first came upon his paintings at the Society of Illustrators in NYC. And finally, innovative illustrator Brad Holland, who is well known for his New York Times Op-Ed spots and editorial work for Playboy magazine. His astonishing, surreal and allegorical pen and ink drawings and paintings have a distinctive and unique stamp that I was immediately drawn to. If you’re not familiar with the work of these artists, do a Google image search and enjoy! ![]() ![]() Roger Dean ![]() Ralph Steadman ![]() Marshall Arisman ![]() Brad Holland
3 Comments
7/26/2019 11:13:51 am
Thanks for the great insight.
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7/26/2019 11:17:25 am
Thanks for the great insight and the information about these artists.
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Oh yeah, absolutely! Those guys were great and as a matter of fact, ALIEN (1979) was such an inspiration to me from the ground up. It's where I (and I'm sure many, many others) first encountered the work of Giger and Cobb for the first time. Cobb had done a number of monster magazine covers in the 1960s that I had seen but I don't think that I made the connection till ALIEN.
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The Art of William Basso Archives
July 2022
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