Monday, April 12

Artwork on iTunes


It always makes me happy to see my artwork on the iTunes Store. Can you spot 2 different Citizen pieces on this screen shot? A prize for anyone that can.

Thursday, April 8

Citizen Wiki page

I've just set up a Wikipedia page for Citizen Studios and complied a list of all my major label work, I'm pretty proud of it as it stands. Need to get something lined up for the rest of 2010 now.


ArtistReleaseLabelDate
Medium 21Acting Like a MirrorUniversal Records2003
Medium 21Daybreak Vs PrideUniversal Records2003
Medium 21Black and White SummerUniversal Records2003
Medium 21Killings From the DialUniversal Records2003
MapsStart SomethingMute2005
MapsLost My SoulMute2005
MapsDon't Fear the SunMute2005
MapsInternational EPMute2006
Kooky RecordsKooky is 10Kooky Records2006
MapsIt Will Find YouMute2007
MapsWe Can CreateMute2007
MapsYou Don't Know Her NameMute2007
MapsTo The SkyMute2007
Durutti ColumnSunlight To Blue... Blue To BlacknessKooky Records2008
SlipstreamMantraNorth Star Records2008
White Belt Yellow TagTell Your Friends (It All Worked Out)Distiller Records2009
White Belt Yellow TagRemainsDistiller Records2009
White Belt Yellow TagTell Your Friends (It All Worked Out)Distiller Records2009
White Belt Yellow TagMethodsDistiller Records2010
White Belt Yellow TagAlways and EchoesDistiller Records2010
The MoonsTorn Between TwoAcid Jazz2010
The MoonsNightmare DayAcid Jazz2010
The MoonsLife on EarthAcid Jazz2010
The MoonsLet It GoAcid Jazz2010
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Monday, April 5

New Moons: Let it Go


This is the last single from the Moons album 'Life on Earth', it's called 'Let it Go'. 

The art was inspired by the opening line of the song "Collect your ammunition, shoot a bullet in my back" and is the last piece of work to feature Dr. Moonhead who has been on all the releases so far. This cover marks his death, we all felt he'd run his course and it was time to kill him off.

As far as the style goes it follows on from the previous artwork in it's application, but it's much more progressive in it's composition. Overall it's my favourite of all the covers, this is probably because I created each piece from scratch so it feels the freshest to me. 

Pointless fact for you; The snub nosed revolver used was traced from a photograph of the one used by Jack Ruby.

This marks the end of a great campaign, Acid Jazz have been a great label to work with and The Moons are really kicking up some interest, so everybody's happy.

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Friday, April 2

Eat the Art



Two good things happened this week, the first, the Moons Vinyl arrived. It's actually the hardest thing in the world to get the final artwork out of the label once it's all finished, it always annoys me. I've been known to actually buy it to get my hands on it. But Acid Jazz are a different class and they've sent me 3 copies. Thank you to Archie for modelling it for me.



The second is the first placement of the 'Methods' artwork that's begun to creep into the media, this (above) was in this weeks NME.


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Tuesday, March 23

Part 2: Methods my methods.

Following on from my previous post, here's some more information on how the Methods composition was built up, and some of the key layers involved. 

It's too complicated to show about each layer actually affected the final image as there are about 60 layers in total, so here's a look at some of the key ones with my thinking for blending them into the image.

Layer 1 (below), was the boat itself. It ended up being buried deep within the composition with not much but the actual shape of the vessel coming through.



Layer 2 was a tone and texture layer, and an old photo I took in Miami Harbour. This gave the image some contrast from bottom to top and put some variance in the sky.


Layer 3 is a grunge, burnt photo paper layer with a few holes punched in it to let different textures come through. This layer gave the image it's oil painted feel, adding a scratchy feel to all the colours.


Layer 4 is probably the most visible layer, these are inverted clouds that have been flipped upside down. I left these in quite strong to really muddy up the scene, creating a dense, foggy look to the storm.


Layer 5 is a beautiful piece of NASA photography that gave the sky it's twinkly texture and put a slight tint of reddy-brown into the hills on the horizon. You can see where I've put some white on the image to allow the ship to come through.


Layer 6 is the layer that really bought the whole piece to life. This layer of light-spots gave the sea some real movement and created a splash in the bottom left corner that is my favourite part of the whole image. I love that it's out of focus creating a nice sense of depth to the piece.


Read more about Methods and the thinking behind my creative here.

White Belt Yellow Tags album Methods is out 5th April and available here.


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Monday, March 22

Part 1: Methods. Construction One Year.


Over a year ago Jamie Johnson approached me with with a project that he said was the 'best thing he'd ever worked on'. Of course I was interested, especially after we'd worked on Maps together, and after meeting Justin from White Belt Yellow Tag I was onboard.

This was a major campaign on a big label, and I wanted it to be the best, most integrated, intelligent piece of work I'd done. I wanted the single artwork to build into an explosion of album artwork, that continually developed a theme, revealing itself once you'd seen every piece of work.

Methods – Origins.



The band's brief was simple, they wanted 'Unknown Pleasures in white', difficult one right?

Here's the design notes that accompanied the above illustration that I sent back to the band in a attempt to drive them in a new direction;


LORENZO, BOSE and KEPLER.


As a starting point I was directed to ‘Unknown Pleasures’. Showing the death of a star, isolated on a black background, and resized to an underproportioned canvas, it gives omits a coldness and desperation found in the music. (To simply do ‘Unknow Pleasures’ in white, isn’t possible, the black gives it, it’s hostility, without that we’re in dangerous ‘Coldplay’ terrority.)


Having listened to WBYT I don’t get the same stark vibe, there’s a warmth and a soul to the music that underpins its depth.


So to reflect the brief I’ve gone back to what made Unknown Pleasures an iconic piece of work and applied similar principles to this artwork. 


My focus was on your title ‘Ode To Nothingness’. From here I researched the dissolution of atoms (see left). I found numerous graphs, charts, illustrations and theories all about what happens to atoms and particles when they disintegrate, From these I extracted the parts that interested me and evolved them into striking pieces of art.


Over the next few pages you’ll find different applications, that vear away from the original brief and skirt dangerously close to it.  These are rough sketches and rendered ideas, they can be a starting point for discussions or the final piece of work.


--


Once new thinking was agreed, I began work on the singles, these 3 covers formed the first steps of the campaign, mapping atomic paths based on scientific diagrams these were;

Tell Your Friends
Remains
Always and Echoes

They had a distinct style, and while being amongst the best work I'd ever produced, visually they were very familiar to me, using similar techniques to my Maps and Slipstream work. When it came time to start work on the album I wanted to develop something that tied all the singles together and had a radically different look and feel to anything I'd ever done before.

So from various shared start points; English art, the idea of atomic star maps and the sound of the Methods album I created a piece of work, based on the idea of 'being lost', a multi-textured illustration that conveyed the themes of the songs, carried the message of the single artwork and was the most original piece of artwork I'd ever created.

Many different layers were used to build-up the cover image, inverted clouds, light spots, ice textures, NASA photography and grunge textures were layered and blended for weeks until the finished result looked as it does. Lucky for me, when it came time to present this to the band, everyone loved it from Jinky to the label. Now the challenge for me was to show how this tied back into the singles...

Star-maps – The Missing Link


The story so far had shown a series of atomic paths, then, seemed to jump to a ship lost in a snowstorm. The challenge now was to use the album booklet to demonstrate how the two things related to one another, and the answer to this was to create navigational star-maps out of the atomic paths of the singles.

These maps were the answer to the question theoretically posed by the cover and they also solved the brief, giving me a linear story that ran through each piece of artwork.








Now everything made sense in my head, if the album was the ship lost in the snowstorm, then the singles were the stars guiding it home, ambitious? Sure, but everything had to fit together if this was going to be the best piece of campaign work I've ever done.

Finally, a safe port

The last piece of the puzzle was the back cover. I felt it was important resolve the whole story, so, the ship had to be safe. The back cover shows the ship in safer waters, guided by the stars.



The project so far has been very well received and art work has been developed for Underground advertising in London as well as adverts for all the major music publications, so hopefully you should all be seeing a live copy soon.

I've really enjoyed working on this release, the band, and their manager Jamie have been very open to ideas and it's been a real pleasure to develop them, plus, credit has to go to Gideon at Distiller Records, who has entrusted alot of the thinking to me, and let us all create something we're all very proud of.

White Belt Yellow Tags album Methods is out 5th April and available here


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