The Journal (Association of Illustrators) - March 2004
The New Thirty
The AOI is thirty years old. Phooey, by the time that you read
this I'll have turned forty. Sure, I can remember thirty as if
it were only yesterday and as I recall it was a pretty big deal
at the time. But forty, how do you prepare for that one? What
consoles me, as I steadily approach the point of no return, is
just like the staying in is now the new going out and brown is
the new black so inevitably forty has become the new thirty. Which
means that the AOI and myself are sharing a birthday. Convinced?
Me neither.
Thirty, forty, whatever; the thing about getting older, particularly
hitting new decades, is that you just can't help but gaze back
at previous achievements, as well as peer forward at new goals.
A mid-life crisis starts simply enough, a
time-line of previous ups and downs are re-run, re-played and
re-enacted inside your head; where did things go right, go wrong
or go nowhere?
Thirty years ago I was a school-boy, waiting patiently for the
horrors being committed in the names of fashion, music, design
and popular culture to be killed off by punk rock. It was David
Carson, many years later that proclaimed 'graphic design will
save the world, right after rock and roll does...' but way back
then it was the combination of edgy do-it-yourself-cut-and-paste
graphics and speed-fuelled punk that pushed my ambitions towards
art school. Forming a band, playing a few awful gigs, cutting
a record and designing the sleeve was what art school was all
about. Fortunately I recognised my talents lie on the outside
rather than the inside of the sleeve and soon knuckled down to
the serious business of graphic design. That is, until I saw what
was happening in the not-so-serious illustration studio; a bunch
of pale, scrawny, leather jacket clad individuals were drawing,
painting, printing, Xeroxing, cutting-up and throwing-down some
seriously cool images. I was fixed.
Occasional sorties from the haze of (dope) smoke-laden studios
at Peckham Road's Camberwell School of Art, on board the infamous
number 12 bus, led me to a gallery-office-Mecca just off the Tottenham
Court Road. The AOI was not quite the cool hangout I longed it
to be but somehow every visit would inspire and impress. The floorboards
creaked, there was never anywhere to sit and background music
played out as if punk had never happened but there was always
a range of cards and mags to browse and the world of illustration
seemed to permeate the surroundings.
Around the same time I got stuck into a weekly programme chaired
by Dan Fern of the RCA, for the D&AD, at the ICA, with AOI illustrators
in attendance. By the end of the first session, I at least knew
what the abbreviations all stood for. What I didn't know, but
soon found out, was how talented the other students on day release
around me all were; the names of Gary Powell, Mick Armson, Andy
Lovell and Sarah Ball were all unknown and their talents as yet
untapped, this was nearly twenty years ago.
A few years later I started at the RCA and once again was surrounded
by a wealth of illustration talent; Jason Ford, Marion Deuchars,
Chris Draper, Patrick Thomas, Toby Morison, Dan Williams, and
Andy Baker the list goes on… Right place, right time perhaps,
but as a group of us hauled plan-chests, desks and other assorted
donated odds and sods from an RCA skip to the bright lights of
Hoxton, it felt more like wrong place, wrong time. Hoxton, fifteen
years ago, had a very different vibe to the cooler-than-cool-Banksy-scrawled-urban-chic
it is now, back then it felt less latte and panini, more rickets
and scurvy.
Big Orange, that first studio, still exists today; whole tribes
of illustrators have used it as a base-station on route to the
summit, but for me it was the starting point for something I was
unable to finish. Heart, first of the truly contemporary illustration
agencies, was created in a corner of the Big Orange studio almost
ten years ago by myself and, partner-in-crime, Darrel Rees. Illustrators
that stood on the edge of the discipline were part of the original
line-up of ten; Ian Wright, Andy Martin, Blaise Thompson, Nigel
Robinson joined key members of Big Orange in creating something
that felt genuinely, at least for a while, special. For me, though,
running an agency felt more like running an office than a studio,
and I left the leadership/partnership for the creative buzz of
education, although remaining a Heart illustrator right up until
my recent departure for pastures new.
Running the undergraduate course in Illustration at the University
of Brighton, I work with some of the best practitioners/educators
across the discipline; George Hardie, Ian Wright, Margaret Huber,
Gary Powell, Jasper Goodall, Graham Rawle and Martin Andersen.
Another piece of the jigsaw, another group of key people and throughout
the re-run of my own personal time-line I've recognised that during
my career thus far, the constant theme of inspiration has been
my very own association. An association with illustrators.
Forty may be the new thirty, if so the mid-life crisis can be
put on hold for another ten years, but with thirty now the new
twenty the AOI seems barely out of its teens!
© Lawrence Zeegen


