Saul Steinberg was an American artist whose magic lit up the pages and
covers of The New Yorker for six decades. Dulwich’s restrospective exhibition features more than a hundred drawings, collages and sculptural assemblages. This poster and flyer were among the internal and external graphics we created for the exhibition.
The Royal Academy of Arts presented the first major exhibition in Britain devoted to Lucas Cranach the Elder (c.1472–1553). The exhibition brought together some 70 works chosen to represent the quality and range of this important master. We worked closely with the exhibition designer Eric Pearson to create the graphics and with the curators to produce large-print guides for the visually impaired.
The Age of Enchantment: Beardsley, Dulac and their Contemporaries 1890-1930 is the latest exhibition to open at Dulwich Picture Gallery. It shows the dramatic change that occurred in the world of illustrated book after the death of Aubrey Beardsley in 1898. See it (and our graphics) before it closes on 17 February 2008.
Having worked with exhibition designer Eric Pearson at Dulwich Picture Gallery, we were excited to get the opportunity to work with him on an exhibition at the Royal Academy. Impressionists by the Sea explored the origins and development of the fashionable contemporary beach scene from the early 1860s to the early 1870s, in the work of Eugène Boudin, Manet and Monet.
This design is for the next exhibition to open at Dulwich Picture Gallery which features the Uffizi's legendary collection of Artist’s Self-Portraits. The fifty works are being exhibited in Britain for the first time, and include portraits by Velazquez, Filippino Lippi, Rembrandt, Tintoretto, Sir Joshua Reynolds, Pistoletto and Chagall.
In 1746, Canaletto visited England, beginning a nine-year stay that would completely re-launch his artistic career. This major exhibition brings together the paintings executed by Canaletto during this intriguing period. These invitations were part of the graphics scheme that we developed to promote the exhibition. "altogether this is one of the most satisfying exhibitions we've had at Dulwich: a joy from start to finish" - The Daily Telegraph