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Emiliano Ponzi’s artful conceptual illustrations cross language barriers and cultural divides in their concise yet playful simplicity. The past year has been a momentous one for him, in addition to winning top honors from some of the industry’s most respected associations and exhibiting his work in a number of cities around the world, he has received international press, including a documentary about his work for Swiss television.

NEWSPAPER

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CLOCKWISE (from upper left): The Washington Post; La Repubblica;
La Repubblica; Le Monde; The Los Angeles Times; Le Monde

Emiliano’s illustrations can regularly be seen in the pages of The New York Times and other newspapers. His recent piece for the Sunday Book Review’s feature on Emily Rapp’s book, The Still Point of the Turning World, provides a somber yet beautiful treatment for the autobiographical story of a mother and her terminally ill child. Another unique piece (check it out – it’s animated) for the Opinion Page ‘goes green’ in response to a recent article about the economic benefits of a federal climate policy. Last year, The New York Times’ Manhattan office presented a solo exhibition of some of Emiliano’s most successful pieces for the newspaper. Curator and Art Director, Nicholas Blechman, said “These illustrations answer perfectly to the Munari principle, for whom the designer must be able to answer with humility and talent, the questions made by the society in which he lives.”

THE NEW YORK TIMES

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ABOVE: All illustrations from The New York Times

His editorial work includes recent covers for Computerworld and the Pennsylvania Gazette, as well as assignments from The New Yorker, Runner’s World, More, and PCWorld. His illustration of two tanks takes a clever approach to the The New Yorker’s article about the battle between Amazon and traditional book publishers, while another piece for PCWorld’s report on ‘rescuing’ your data from Google features a superhero character, offering a solution that is both charming and witty. The illustration was also animated for the iPad edition of the magazine (see it here).

MAGAZINE

TOP (from left): PCWorld; Computerworld; The New Yorker BOTTOM (from left): The Pennsylvania Gazette; Entertainment Weekly; China Reform

TOP (from left): PCWorld; Computerworld; The New Yorker
BOTTOM (from left): The Pennsylvania Gazette; Entertainment Weekly; China Reform

Another project for UK-based shopping tourism company, Global Blue, had Emiliano illustrate a series of covers for their European shopping guides. The eye-catching Stockholm guide features a bold, graphic illustration that celebrates the cutting-edge menswear that Sweden is becoming known for. The series also includes guides to Madrid and Barcelona, Frankfurt and special luxury editions for Berlin and Rome.

TRAVEL

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ABOVE: Shopping guides for Global Blue

One of Emiliano’s biggest recent assignments came from Italian publisher, Feltrinelli, who tasked him with creating covers for the Italian language editions of German-born American writer Charles Bukowski’s novels, poetry and short stories. Bukowski, famed for his gritty, explicit style of writing, depicted “a certain taboo male fantasy: the uninhibited bachelor, slobby, anti-social, and utterly free” said Michael Greenberg of The Boston Review. The illustrations Emiliano created needed to communicate both the titles and Bukowski himself and they succeeded in doing so. The series, which includes nine titles so far, has already earned Emiliano a coveted Gold Cube from The Art Directors Club 92, a Gold Medal from the Society of Illustrators of New York 59, inclusion in the American Illustration 32 annual and a front page feature in Italy’s largest newspaper, La Repubblica. Clickhere to see an animated video teaser for the series.

CHILDREN’S BOOKS

ABOVE: All illustrations from Il più grande fiore del mondo by Jose Saramago (Feltrinelli Kids)

ABOVE: All illustrations from Il più grande fiore del mondo by Jose Saramago (Feltrinelli Kids)

Feltrinelli Kids, chose Emiliano to create the illustrations for Nobel Laureate Jose Saramago’s first and only children’s book, Il più grande fiore del mondo (or The Biggest Flower in the World). When describing his work for the book, Emiliano says “I […] mostly worked with wide/empty spaces so children could imagine what they don’t see in my illustrations. There is a lot of ‘air’ in the book and some details represent fragments from my personal childhood memories, such as my grandma’s house floor or the t-shirts I used to wear when I was a little boy.”

PUBLISHING

TOP (from left): Feltrinelli; Einaudi; Mondadori BOTTOM (from left): Feltrinelli; Grove Atlantic; Mondadori

TOP (from left): Feltrinelli; Einaudi; Mondadori
BOTTOM (from left): Feltrinelli; Grove Atlantic; Mondadori

Another publishing project sprung from a New York Times editorial assignment. Originally appearing with the newspaper’s review of Francisco Goldman’s book Say Her Name, the hauntingly beautiful illustration was later licensed for the Grove Atlantic US paperback and UK editions, the French edition (Editions Bourgois) and Dutch edition (Lebowski Publishers). The touching memoir of a man whose bride dies tragically while surfing went on to win the French literary prize, the Prix Femina Étranger, while the illustration made the AltPick Editor’s Choice list.

PRODUCT + PACKAGING

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FROM LEFT: Beer label for Portsmouth Brewery; Greeting card for Marian Heath; Calendar for Arcobaleno

A similar situation spawned a packaging project. Emiliano’s somber illustration of the infamous Russian empress, Catherine the Great was noticed by a brewery with an interesting project. Portsmouth Brewery’s annual ‘Kate the Great Day’ marks the only day of the year that the Great Russian Imperial Stout is available, attracting crowds from all over New England with many waiting in line overnight for a chance to sample what Beer Advocate magazine calls the “best beer in America.” The tongue-in-cheek illustration appeared on the beer’s label, as well as souvenir pint glasses and t-shirts.

EXHIBITION

ABOVE: Artwork created for Design Time, the main exhibition at the 2012 Beijing Design Fair

ABOVE: Artwork created for Design Time, the main exhibition at the 2012 Beijing Design Fair

Emiliano had the opportunity to present his work internationally as part of Design Time, the main exhibition at the 2012 Beijing Design Fair. His illustrations provided the backdrop for the show which was conceptualized by Italian design studio, Migliore + Servetto, and showcased how Italian industrial design has embraced all aspects of everyday life. Emiliano’s work again took center stage in the Suspension of Disbelief exhibition at Rome’s Wunderkammern Gallery. His piece, Sunrise Hotel, was the result of a collaboration with Italian artist, Giacomo Benelli. Viewers were invited to peer inside nine of the hotel’s twenty-eight windows and witness the guests of Sunrise Hotel, from celebratory newlyweds to a woman scorned. In his coverage of Sunset Hotel, Rob Alderson of art and design blog, It’s Nice That, said “Emiliano has produced an extraordinary set of scenes glorifying in the seediest parts of society’s underbelly. With sex, death and neglect all present and correct this is an interesting project about the perseverance of private vices in an increasingly public society.” Other exhibitions included TOWNIES: An Exhibition of Illustration from the New York Times Opinion Blog and a display at the MoCCA Arts Festival in New York.

GALLERY

ABOVE: Artwork created for Sunrise Hotel, part of the Suspension of Disbelief exhibition Wunderkammern Gallery

ABOVE: Artwork created for Sunrise Hotel, part of the Suspension of Disbelief exhibition Wunderkammern Gallery

Emiliano and his work were the subject matter of Sense and Sensibility, a short documentary from director Fabio De Luca for RSI, a Swiss television network that specializes in Italian programming. In the 7-minute documentary Emiliano discussed the unique texture of his digital illustrations, his thoughts on creativity and the universal appeal of his work. A selection of his most-popular illustrations were also animated for the film with Emiliano actually stepping inside and interacting with his work. He says “They were very interested in building a story around my job and the way I feel it. Not just a usual documentary but something more, a view that could show both the inner and the outer side.” Visit Emiliano’s website to to watch the video with English subtitles and to see some behind-the-scenes photos. Other press includes a recent appearance on Italian music television channel, DeeJay TV, and an interview on Italian radio show, RaiTunes. During the interview, RaiTunes live streamed a drawing demo by Emiliano online. See the video here.

PRESS

TOP: Still from Sense & Sensibility, a documentary from director Fabio De Luca BOTTOM (from left): Appearance on DeeJay TV; Live drawing for RaiTunes; Still from Sense & Sensibility

TOP: Still from Sense & Sensibility, a documentary from director Fabio De Luca
BOTTOM (from left): Appearance on DeeJay TV; Live drawing for RaiTunes; Still from Sense & Sensibility

Click here to read Magnet Rep’s previous spotlight on Emiliano.
Click here for downloadable items – desktop wallpapers and a high-res printable letter sized promo.

 AWARDS

TOP: Society of Illustrators 55 MIDDLE: Society of Illustrators 55; Society of Illustrators 55 / ADC 92 / American Illustration 32; Society of Illustrators 55 BOTTOM: PRINT In Motion; HOW International Design Competition; PRINT Hand Drawn Competition

TOP: Society of Illustrators 55
MIDDLE: Society of Illustrators 55; Society of Illustrators 55 / ADC 92 / American Illustration 32; Society of Illustrators 55
BOTTOM: PRINT In Motion; HOW International Design Competition; PRINT Hand Drawn Competition

Q&A with EMILIANO PONZI

Use three words to describe your style.
Universal, synthetical, easy to read.

In an ideal world, you would have an infinite amount of… ?
Money.

What are some of your interests and hobbies outside of illustration?
Nothing too odd: hanging out, reading, watching a movie, running.

What is your ideal assignment?
1. A narrative topic without many bonds
2. Great art direction that leads me in the right direction without being too imperative
3. A very good fee

What’s the best way to get over a creative block?
Smoking a cigarette on the balcony or distracting the mind and hanging out with someone.

What is your favorite part of living and working in Milan?
Milan is the only city in Italy where you can breath an international atmosphere. There are many people here I have things in common with. On the job side mostly the editorial and advertising industry is located in Milan so it makes it easier to interact with them. On the living side you could have some benefits of staying in Italy but with a look to the outside. It’s  a sort of bridge city.

Do you have a favorite movie?
I have more than one, Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown by Pedro Almodovar, Annie Hall by Woody Allen…

How has the illustration industry changed since you became a professional illustrator? How do you see it changing in the future?
I guess that the references changed. I started around 2001 when the visual trend was more realistic. Illustrations on average were more detailed and naturalistic. Now vector based and flat images are mainstream and the border between graphic and illustration are thinner than in the past and illustration direction is more minimal. I don’t know what other subtraction will be possible in the future so I think that rather than being more synthetic it will simply change in other direction connected to the switch between a static illustration and a moving image.

What is your biggest challenge as an illustrator?
Last a lot, being able to interpret the audience feeling along the decades.

Your ideal vacation spot?
A place where I can unplug my mind, hopefully somewhere I’m not able to speak the language or access to the web.

Who are three artists you admire and why?
Fortunato Depero was a Futurist painter. He designed many of the greatest posters during the first decades of the 1900′s. His style and technique gave a new shape to the advertising industry helping to build modern imagery of applied arts. Edward Hopper was able to enter into the intimate emotions of normal people, daily gesture loaded with extraordinary meaning. I love his environments and scenes. David Hockney learnt all the lesson from the past and added the ‘pop’ culture and colors to his visions.

Best way to end a long day of work?
Three possible great ways:
1. Going out doing something interesting and exciting
2. A long walk in the neighborhood
3. Laying on the couch with a book or watching the TV zombie style

For more information and images, go to Magnet Rep’ website and Emiliano’s Altpick page.

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Friday’s Picks :: Portrait Photographers

To see more of the photographers’ pages on Altpick.com, go to their individual pages:

Tom Atwood, Keith Barraclough, Gina Binkley, Jon Blacker, Art Brewer, Blair Bunting, Geneviene Caron, Eric Cassee, Studio Caswell, Chris Clor, Scott Council, Steve Craft, Chris Crisman, Brian Cummings, Rick Dahms, Kristofer Dan-Bergman, Stephanie Diani, Van Ditthavong, Elk Studios, Lisa Fasten, John Fedele, Mark Finkenstaedt, Mark Guthrie, Stephen Hill, Jordan Hollender, Robert Houser, Bruce Hulse, Leslie Jean-Bart, Matt Kalinowski, Ryan Ketterman, Shane Kislack, Brian Kuhlmann, Landry Major, Tim Mantoani, Christopher T Martin, Alex Martinez, Doug McGoldrick, Jonnie Miles, Tadd Myers, Henrik Olund, Beth Perkins, Brook Pifer, Lisa Predko, Simon Puschmann, Bruce Racine, Daniel Rey, Ken Richardson, Lara Rossignol, Tom SandersChris Sembrot, Stephen Sherman, Ken Sax, Brian Smale, Jenna Stamm, Zave Smith, Kevin Steele, Jay Watson, Ken Weingart.

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Illustrator James Benn :: In His Own Words

James Benn lives and works in the UK.  As an illustrator, James loves to come up with new ideas for both his clients and his own personal projects.  With graphic influences and illustrative undertones, sometimes he prefers flat bold shapes within the imagery to tell the story.  James first sketches out his drawings by hand before scanning them into the computer. He creates a flow that tends to have a narrative base.  His strong concepts within his work captures the idea and delivers the message.  You can feel the joy he is portraying.  In his own words, James tells us about some of his favorite images.

SnowJB: Snowman – I created this past winter, no surprise from the fact that it was snowing and I was searching for inspiration.

Apple
JB: Apple – is a fun play on the brand, as it is so symbolic nowadays I thought it would be humorous to play on that.

heartbreak
JB:  Heartbreak – a slightly more graphic image but one I’m sure that resonates with everyone.

Cow-jockey
JB: Jockey – In the UK there was big news when Horse meat had gotten into beef products. So it was merely a bit of a joke that if were eating horse were riding cows.

To see more of James Benn’s work go to his website and Altpick page.

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The Eddie Adams Workshop :: Application Deadline May 31st

October 11-14, 2013 Jeffersonville, New York

The Eddie Adams Workshop is an intense four-day gathering of the top photography professionals, along with 100 carefully selected students. The photography workshop is tuition-free, and the 100 students are chosen based on the merit of their portfolios.

The weekend offers an excellent opportunity to meet the top photojournalists in the world, and to work alongside the best photo editors in the business. They are be accepting applications until May 31, 2013. Please encourage all who qualify to apply at www.eddieadamsworkshop.com.

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Allen Crawford’s Foray into Videography

Allen Crawford has been making forays into videography: Last autumn, Allen was approached by Hendrick’s Gin to write, direct and star in a series of videos about the Apocalypse of Dec. 21, 2012.

In less than three weeks, with the vital technical and artistic assistance of Susan Crawford and their friend and colleague Laura Baird (Laurabaird.com), Allen wrote, acted, and edited all eight videos. At times they were food stylists, mixologists, propmasters, and makeup artists. Friends were bribed with bottles of Hendrick’s Gin for model skeletons and antique sleds.

In the eight video series, he addresses and refutes each of The Seven Deadly Sins, and makes a convincing case for embracing them before The Endtimes come. The folks at Hendrick’s concocted a unique cocktail for each episode. The recipes–as well as the videos–can be found on the Apocalyptic Epiphany page.  Cheers.

To see more of Allen Crawford’s work, go to his website and Altpick page.

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Illustrator Daniel Fishel :: In His Own Words

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Illustrator and hand letterer, Daniel Fishel, typically likes to work with swatches of paint, lino block/silk screen textures and ink washes collaged together in Photoshop to create his characters and images.  He uses metaphor, color, the placement of figures and lighting to tell the story.  In his own words, here are a few of Daniel’s  favorite illustrations:

DF: This is a piece (above) I worked on for the Globe and Mail. They are a really wonderful Canadian newspaper that has a section called “Facts and Arguments” where the readers submit stories. Often times these stories are emotional and somewhat etherial. This story in particular is about a young man who just turned 25 and was going through a quarter life crisis. I just turned 26 not to long ago so I can emote with the writer on not feeling as if he’s lived life. Especially because his grandfather just turned 100 years old and has lived a great life. The anxiety of wanting to explore and experience so much is what came to mind with this image. So it made sense to some how draw the piece sequentially to feel as if the young man was trying to fulfill his quest.

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DF: I’ve gotten hired by the Washington Post to illustrate a book review about “The revised fundamentals of caregiving” by Jonathan Evison. The main aspect of the story is that a man is down on his luck and the only job available was to be a caregiver for someone in poor health. He is assigned to a 19 year old he has a degenerative disease that is slowly killing him. The main character spends the entire book trying to show the beauty and wealth life has while also trying to deal with his own demons. The idea for this illustration was to show how the young man was slowly falling apart and how that was also hurting his caretaker. Like many illustrations, I try to dig deep on what the emotional pressure point of the article is and try to focus the emphasis on that. The idea for this came after I was walking home after getting coffee and saw a mangled umbrella in a trash can on a street corner.

fishel_003

DF: I was asked by the exceptional folks at National Public Radio to make a piece for their 2013 Calendar. The art direction was to make an image that reflected our personal connection with the radio. I was in high school when I started to listen to NPR. For the longest time I wanted to go to college to eventually go back to my home town and make something there. I really didn’t know what. Listening to NPR opened me up to a world out there that I wasn’t aware of and made me want to begin exploring it.

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DF:  Not long ago, I started working in a limited color style along with my painted work. I’m doing this to not only offer something more bold and graphic but to challenge myself to make something more minimal and to the point. Not everything needs to be a landscape of detail. This piece was done for the Globe and Mail for a story about a woman who loses her job and realizes that her identity is completely wrapped up in what she did for a living. A consistent conversation I have with my studio mate is about this very subject. Are we our work? I like to think that the majority of it is an extension of myself, but when does the identity of the illustrator end and where does Daniel Fishel begin? Making an image showing a invisible business women looking at herself in sweatpants and a t-shirt seemed like an obvious answer to show her externalizing this question I often times pose to myself.

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DF: This is an unpublished cover illustration for Markets Media magazine. The sketch was selected but was killed before I went to final after it was given a second look over by the editor. It doesn’t happen often but it happens. I still didn’t want to see this illustration not be finished up. The article this illustration goes with is about how investors can over protect their assets so they don’t lose money. Growing up in a small town there wasn’t a lot to do. So I remembered a moment where my friends and I would put on a ton of sports pads when we would jump our bikes over a ramp. The idea of putting a child in a ton of sports pads acted as the perfect metaphor since investments are like investing in your ‘children’.

fishel_006

DF: Recently I got hired by the New York Times Book Review to illustrate a review of “Give me everything you have: on being stalked” by James Lasdun. The book is about a creative writing professor who helps out a talented student who becomes obsessed with him. She reverts to terrorizing his existence by writing strange reviews of his books on Amazon and writing weird emails to his fellow professors to the point that it is not only making him look bad but slowly crippling his creditability as a writer. I have two roommates who probably forget I live there sometimes, since I am pretty quiet.  It’s funny to see them jump out of their skin if they are in the kitchen cooking and then notice me walk by.  That same scare is what I was going for but with his digital stalker.

To see more of Daniel Fishel’s work you can go to his website or Altpick page.

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Johanna Goodman::Explores Womanhood Through Pop-Culture

Johanna Goodman’s tantalizing, fresh and classic illustrations and portraits are created with lush paint, razor-sharp pens and a super clean digital approach.  The cutting-edge collage pieces are moody, conceptual and raucous mixes of emotions.  This collection of Johanna’s work is a personal project exploring womanhood as it is depicted through pop-culture.

deep lg

deep

groove

groove

treat

treat

sassy

sassy

curl

To see more of Johanna Goodman’s work go to her website and Altpick.com page.

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Altpick Members :: Pics of the Week

To see their wonderful work, go to Altpick.com.

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George Mattei :: In His Own Words

Photo illustrating Time Standing Still

One of George Mattei’s favorite ways to shoot is interpreting conceptual ideas.  He finds it the most fun and the most stimulating part of his photography.  In his own words, George describes some of his favorite images.

Photo illustrating organ donation using a recycle symbol

GM:  The Organ Donation concept was influenced by a friend from my fishing club who donated a kidney to another fellow fisherman.

Photo illustrating time.

GM:  The Frozen Time was a suggestion by my stock agency editor.  The concept of time is fascinating to me and so the 2nd Time photo was created.

Paranoid Schizophrenia

GM: My wife is a mental health professional.  I am exposed to the topic on a regular basis, and so paranoid schizophrenia was created.  It is inspired by the work of photographer Gerald Bybee.

Photo illustrating the influence of the United States in the world

 

GM: The last photo illustrates the influence of the United States in the world.

To see more of George Mattei’s work go to his website and Altpick page.

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Doug McGoldrick’s Moto-Mucci Series

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by Doug McGoldrick

Like most commercial photographers, I’m always shooting for myself as well as shooting for people who pay me. Recently I started a new project that I’m super excited about. I ride motorcycles and I’m interested in the Café Racer scene. Recently I shot The guy behind the blog Moto-Mucci, it’s one of my favorite blogs so it was great to meet him and see behind the scenes at his shop in Chicago, he makes some of the coolest bikes around, and while I was there I got to see a couple up coming bikes he’s working on. In the photos he’s working on his girlfriends Honda SR250, it’s looking really cool and is going to have some amazing detail work done. I also got to see his personal ride a Honda CX500. I hope to be shooting more local builders and riders for this project.

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To see more of Doug McGoldrick’s photography go to his website and Altpick page.

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