Saturday, February 29, 2020

Artist of the day, February 29, 2020: Bill Gekas, an Australian photographer (#930)

Bill Gekas (1973) is an Australian photographer that focuses on fine arts and portrait photography. His daughter Athena is the main focus of many of his fine art photographs.

Self-taught and by learning the intricacies of photography since the mid-'90s, his admiration and respect for the works by the old master painters have influenced his stylistic approach to the craft.
His works have been published in various art journals, books, magazines, newspapers and other media outlets worldwide including BBC, NBC Today, ABC News, Daily Mail, and others.
Although he occasionally shoots commissioned work, the renowned and exhibited works are primarily of his young daughter Athena portraying a protagonist in a storytelling scene, a universal child.

© 2020. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Bill Gekas. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only


Mr. Bill Gekas

Cherries
Potatoes
Beauty and the Beast
Fur
Plums
Steampunked
The Scholar
Red Beret
Girl And Balloon
Brat
The merchant's daughter
Laundrette
Grapes
Buttons And Eyes
Gekas
Red Scarf
Umbrellas
Untitled
Royal Gala

Cameo
Spyglass
Pears
Maid it
The Arrival
Doilies in Delft
Mini Me
Sanday
Sardines
Orchid
Feline friend
Framed

Pleiadian

Friday, February 28, 2020

Artist of the day, February 28, 2020: Robert Hunt, an American illustrator and painter (#929)

Robert Hunt (1952) is an American illustrator and painter. Over the course of his illustration career, Hunt has created works for a wide variety of clients, including Bank of America, CBS Records, Criterion Collection, Dreamworks, Disney, Federal Express, MGM, The New Republic, Paramount, Random House, Rolling Stone, Universal Studios, The Wall Street Journal, Williams Sonoma, and many more.

Robert Hunt was born in Berkeley, California and attended High School at San Rafael High School in San Rafael, California. Hunt's grandparents lived a few miles from his family home and he would frequently visit his Grandfather who had suffered a stroke. The stroke left his grandfather with the use of only one arm and during visits, he often emphasized the importance of appreciating the ability to do things with one's hands and to try to make the most of your hands create things that solve problems.

Hunt attended university as an undergraduate at UC Davis, where he initially sought a degree in fine art and film making. With the encouragement of professor Wayne Thiebaud, he later switched his undergraduate major to art history.

In 1978 Hunt went on to attend The Academy of Art in San Francisco where he was one of two students in the graduate illustration program. The director of the illustration program at the Academy of Art when Hunt and Kazu attended was Barbara Bradley, one of the first women to pursue and succeed in commercial illustration. Bradley taught clothed figure drawing and heads and hands, and Hunt attended daily classes with her for one year. Hunt credits her with teaching him to turn off his ego while drawing. Hunt would graduate with an MFA from the Academy of Art in 1980.

Although the majority of work in illustration was coming from magazines and book publishers based in New York City in the early 1980s, delivering art from Hunt's home in San Francisco became a viable option with FedEx going nationwide to 90 cities in 1980. The San Francisco-based illustrator, David Grove had forged a successful career in illustration from the West Coast and Hunt, along with his friend Kazu decided that they could as well.

Hunt's first published work appeared in 1980, at age 28 for Listen Magazine. His first appearance in the Society of Illustrators Annual came in 1983, with a piece titled Hidden Victims for Listen Magazine. His first book cover assignment was with Bantam Books in 1984, under the art direction of Jerry Counihan.

In 1994 Hunt was commissioned by Steven Spielberg to create the DreamWorks logo. Spielberg originally imagined a CGI generated image of a man fishing from the moon. On the recommendation of Senior Visual Effects Supervisor, Dennis Muren that the image instead be an original painting, Hunt was called in to execute the final image on which the motion version was based. The final motion logo took Hunt three months to complete and features a boy fishing from the moon. The model Hunt used for the child was his own son, William Hunt.

Hunt was featured in an 11-year retrospective of New Republic covers by The Society of Publication Designers for his December 2, 2009 cover titled Trial By Fire picturing the back of President Barack Obama's head, art directed by Christine Car and Joseph Heroun.

In addition to Hunt's motion logo for DreamWorks, the artist has created motion logos for Random House Worlds, and Broad Green Pictures

© 2020. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Robert Hunt. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only


Mr. Robert Hunt in his studio
A Bad Idea
Broad Green Studio Logo
Obama
Same but Different for Plansponsor Magazine
Visual Reality for Saatchi and Saatchi
What in the world for Sketchpad Gallery
Say my Name
One possible future
Human trafficking for Freedom Magazine
In an Absent Dream Book Cover
Caged Bird
Conscientious Objector
killing jar Book cover

Dreamworks Logo
Petaluma Cemetery
The Heritage of Slavery, for Liberty Magazine
The Last of the Mohicans
Willie Nelson for Rolling Stone Magazine
The Tainted Saint doe San Francisco Weekly
Resist, 2017 Women's March Poster
Medusa
Alabama Shakes for Rolling Stone
First Nations for Indiana State Museum
Eric Clapton for Rolling Stone
Midnight Rider
Night over solomons
The Rolling Stones
Rick Perry for the New Republic
This is Just to Say
Tom Petty for Rolling Stone
Trump Lie Detector for Time Magazine