Talk about your education and how it shaped you as an illustrator.
I was 16 when I went to the local technical college It didn’t shape me as an illustrator - apart from the fact I avoided doing any projects, but I never missed a life class and the bar was a pretty good place.
Aside from your formal education, what were other important learning processes for you?
To keep drawing and observe from life
Briefly describe your working process. What is your approach conceptually, and what media/techniques do you use?
I need a deadline - and then I leave it until the last moment I have an inbuilt timing mechanism that I rely on and I can’t work unless I’ve had a coffee or tea
I use many tecniques and media
What have been some of your favorite projects or clients?
The last one..........because it’s over.
Favourite projects include:
Walking The Dog published by Jonathan Cape commissioned by Dan Franklin. 2009
The Hunchback of Notre-Dame published by Walker Books 2006
Shakespeare’s Othello published by Alibaba Verlag 1997
among the editorial clients I would single out
The New Yorker
Esquire(USA)
The Observer magazine 1990-92 and a series of illustrations for ‘A Dr. Writes’
What artists/illustrators have influenced your work the most?
hundreds..........Diane Arbus, Egon Schiele, Edvard Munch, George Grosz,George Herriman, George Remi, Richard Avedon, Maurice Sendak, Heath Robinson, David Hockney,Francis Bacon, Peter Blake, Toulouse-Lautrec, Holbein, Paul Klee, Push Pin Studios are some that spring to mind but I reckon Hockney is the major influence
Besides visual art, what else inspires you?
Death sex alcohol cricket walking running Ry Cooder Neil Young Camille O’Sullivan One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest Dexter my wire hair fox terrier
the birds in my garden, Brighton Sussex
What do you think is the best strategy for marketing yourself as an illustrator?
Commit a Murder
Right now we're seeing an incredible amount of change in illustration and the way images are distributed. How has this affected the way you work, and what do you see for the future of illustration?
For the last 5 or so years a lot of my work has included digital techniques, it’s quicker
it cuts out Fed Ex or UPS and the work has shrunk in size and my paints have all dried up.
I don’t see any future for illustration just more illustrators ( a very limiting term)
What is something you've learned that you wish you had known earlier?
Not to be so trusting
If you had one piece of advice to give to a student in illustration, what would it be?
Dear Mr. David Hughes,
I am working toward an MA in Illustration at FIT (Fashion Institute of
Technology) and my thesis topic is:
Lure of the Naïve: An exploration of the naïve, faux-naïve and expressive
illustration styles of James Thurber, Lorraine Fox, R.O. Blechman, Faith
Ringgold, Sue Coe, Maira Kalman and Roz Chast
I was hoping you could answer a few questions for the current field, state
of the art section.
1. What/who influenced your illustration style?Diane Arbus, Egon Schiele, Edvard Munch, George Grosz,George Herriman, George Remi, Richard Avedon, Maurice Sendak, Heath Robinson, David Hockney,Francis Bacon, Peter Blake, Toulouse-Lautrec, Holbein, Paul Klee, Push Pin Studios The Beano Lord Snooty The Bash Street Kids
Death sex alcohol cricket walking running Neil Young Camille O’Sullivan One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest Dexter my wire hair fox terrier the birds in my garden, Brighton Sussex
2. Is there a period in history that influenced/inspired you?
every day influences me but now you ask I suppose the 1940's 50's 60's 70's so that would be latish middish 20th century
3. Is there a geographical location that influenced/inspired you?
The River Thames London
4. Did any of the illustrators named above influence/inspire you? If so,
how so? In your list? I confess that 4 of those listed I haven't heard of, Sue Coe is the artist who came out of the RCA in the mid 70s an era that was profoundly influential and in London I was in my early 20s that whole period was in retrospect extremely exciting so exciting I was a postman and had given up being an illustrator for three years I was so disgusted with the crap I had found myself producing Sue Coe wasn't really an influence, Chloe Cheese was probably more influential.
Thanks so much for taking the time to answer these questions.
I look forward to hearing back from you.
I have no idea 'what makes a great freelance illustrator'
Someone who has a thick skin. someone who doesn't have the desire to be an artist
someone who is pliable someone who works for little money.
Breaking into the industry? I think that line sums it up , it is an industry and I have never broken into it. Illustrators at best are used like a plumber they are used as service personnel brought in at the end to fill in another 'creative's' idea....................working in design or advertising as an illustrator is so different from working in publishing or editorial. Advice to a budding illustrator? Use your wit and talent and get a job as an art director.
Dear David Hughes,
I very very much like your drawings. I suffer from the terrible affliction that is self criticism... I rarely like my drawings or see meaning in them as I do in other peoples work such as your own. Is it possible to overcome this? Or is that just part of spending one's life cowering behind a rotring pen?
I especially like your unpublished works, those Jane Eyre stamps would make such luck of the postman should he ever see one.
Dear Zsa-Zsa
Thank you for your email.
Stamp on your rotring pen - chuck them in the river. Use a knife. Use a broad brush. Use a lump of charcoal.
regards
David Hughes