//=time() ?>
Illustrators who take mentorships and workshops with us are invited to showcase one of their assignments on our site.
The newest addition is from Julia Vasileva!
See her work at https://t.co/zpV2H7OE4P.
To check out our Illustrator Showcase, visit: https://t.co/NEXQf7Lhhi
❝I believe that art shouldn’t belong only in museums and the elite, but also the common folk. It is something special that people should be able to relate too.❞
This is our #arthistory post on the great Jamini Roy. https://t.co/t8UeEZKTWB
Called “The Godfather of Graphic Design”, this son of Japanese immigrants revolutionized book and album covers.
If you listen to jazz, or watch “The Godfather”, or read “In Cold Blood”, you’ll see his work.
This is our #arthistory post on S. Neil Fujita. https://t.co/2hSbHvJfHl
❝It's just so important that time that parents spend with their children just reading a book. Magic.❞
—Helen Gillian Oxenbury, born on this day, June 2, in 1938
During World War I, this captain contributed his artistic abilities to the U.S. war effort. His focus, however, was on exposing the cost of “winning” a war.
This is our #MemorialDay #ArtHistory post on Harry Everett Townsend. https://t.co/cwELtqAh5i
This artist was born in North Dakota; she trained soldiers in intelligence during WWII; and, she worked prolifically during the 1950’s and ’60’s.
Very little else is publicly known about this illustrator.
This is our #arthistory post on Frances Eckart. https://t.co/qmdxTOeuVU
This illustrator inspired George Lucas’s vision for #StarWars.
There’s Tatooine in his “Arizona”.
Naboo in “Romance”.
Cloud City in “Dinky Bird”.
This is our #MayThe4th #arthistory post on Maxfield Parrish. https://t.co/bfRGxC3Tv4 #MayThe4thBeWithYou #StarWarsDay
The ID community is the greatest.
Illustrators on our Forum made some cake to celebrate the 100th Episode of The Illustration Department Podcast!
To listen to the episode, visit: https://t.co/pu0WdLnFCT
❝You have to be dedicated down to your bones. You must believe in being an artist… and in yourself.❞
—Trina Schart Hyman, born on this day, April 8, in 1939
This Caldecott-winner said, “disgracefully incompetent” book reviewers would either:
• lavish “wild acclaim on a piece of artistic trash”
or
• destroy an illustrator’s career
This is our #arthistory post on Trina Schart Hyman. #WomensHistoryMonth
https://t.co/TbJaJVb5WO