Illustrations by Amandine Comte
French illustratrice and graphiste Amandine Comte shows off her latest artwork she does for personal manner or for commercial collaborations with names like Marionnaud, Durance, J.L David and R. Furterer
French illustratrice and graphiste Amandine Comte shows off her latest artwork she does for personal manner or for commercial collaborations with names like Marionnaud, Durance, J.L David and R. Furterer
“We live in a society ruled by social conventions and labels with pre-established set of traits that would be construed as weak, weird, bad, or unacceptable. My work aims to use self-deprecation and satire as a way to own up to those labels rather that shy away from them, and thus, put on display the very thing that others would scorn at. By using satire as a weapon against one’s inner demons, but also by rejecting a pre-established set of codes of social conventions to break down a systemic derogatory social hierarchy. It’s about owning up to one’s own short-comings and imposed labels, and refusing to apologise for them by revelling in them as part of one’s own identity. ”
Ana Miminoshvili is a freelance illustrator and graphic designer. She completed her bachelor’s degree in Visual Arts at TSAA. While she was still a student, she started taking her first steps in being part of the creative industry. Ana is passionate about finding and crafting visual solutions in both illustration and design.
Jiaqi (Jackie) Wang is an illustrator and animator originally from China, currently based in Los Angeles. She specialises in 2D moving images and motion graphics. Her work revolves imagination about daily life, full of colours, visual design, and character design.
Illustration of Gianmarco Magnani follows the style of original Swiss movie posters - eye-catching attention to details and sleek graphics
Being Petersburgers ourselves Katie’s illustration project “The Petersburger” made us jump in the air from excitement. Hope these covers (perfectly matching with a context) will find a real publisher to deliver a magazine for the “cultural capital” that constantly missing its cultural media.
Stefania Tejada explores and studies the female spirit, an immersion within the concept of identity and her personal evolution as a human. She is in constant search of capturing her subjects when they feel most vulnerable and most powerful.
“n my work I explore the relationship between woman, photography and self-expression. I find the connection between the camera and the eyes of a woman a magical moment, a truthful moment. The way a woman can connect and express so much with just being, with simple movement, through eye-contact, with just being herself in a natural environment and through fashion. The way she owns her identity and her cultural background.”
Apparatuses for (Extra)Ordinary Acts (artist Charitini Gkritzali) is a sequence of depictions of the complex relationship between humans, objects and surrounding spaces. They attempt to illustrate this relationship’s present form, designate the way it is currently experienced, analyse it, and reflect over it in a descriptive or connotative manner. In this context, several factors and concepts deeply familiar to humans appear anaemic, unsound or expired: time, senses, individuality, conscience. The succession of apparatuses is cyclic. It exceeds progression and graduality, evoking doubt over its representational robustness. Ultimately, Apparatuses for (Extra)Ordinary Acts lead to the reformulation not only of human’s relationship with objects and surroundings, but with the very notion of realness and representation’s utopic nature.
Explore colourful and texture-rich illustrative universe of Kentish artist Eve Lloyd Knight
The San Jose based artist Samuel Rodriguez benefits from the mix of street art background and classic art education and has done some amazing illustrative art so far. He is mostly focusing in two types of portraiture which he refers to as, ‘Topographical Portraiture’ and ‘Type Faces’. The Topographical Portraits Rodriguez creates, are made by stylizing a portrait with topographical lines and shapes, in a similar manner to those found through images on geographic maps.
Young artist from Latvia, Anna Ābola, creates warm and mellow scenes of urban life happening somewhere in South Asia during golden hours in the evenings. She also does a lot of fan art for K-Pop music style and gained a lot of attention from the music scene since then
“I love writing too and a few days ago my first article got published along with my illustrations, which is a small step towards my dream of becoming an author-illustrator.”
Illustrator with academic art background Evgenia Chuvardina easily creates striking artworks featuring daily basis topics in a twisted way.
Talented illustrator from Poland, David Planeta, shares his mythical creations on @Behance
Trained as architect, self-taught digital artist Anastasia Kraynyuk shares her latest CG experiments with forms, colours, lights and shadows.
Talented illustrator from Kuala Lumpur shows off her skills. O.C.May likes to create personal illustrations to tell stories and ideas to her audiences. YOLO is what she always keep in mind, to complete her to-do-list in her life.
Futurist artist you may know since ages if follow us properly:) Alex Andreyev does not need a special introduction as his works say everything. Follow his “Separate Reality” series to get the atmosphere of post internet utopia
Polish artist Izabela Dudzik fascinates with her very own editorial style based on the mix of mediums she used to create each illustration
Brand designer at Behance Mark Brooks shares his love to bold and clear poster graphic desgin