Gregory Baldwin

Gregory Baldwin Illustration

Gregory Baldwin is a Melbourne illustrator who has developed a thoughtful and warm style wrapped in playful visual metaphors.

Hi Gregory, please tell us a bit about yourself, your environment, and background in art?
I am originally from the UK and live in Melbourne, Australia with my wife and children. My studio is a part of our house so I work on my own most of the day or look after the kids when they are home. I do have a dog, Ludo, for company when she pops out I listen to the radio.

I studied Fine Art and Art History at Canterbury College of Art. The years following art school was difficult time for an artist as it was the Thatcher years yet it was an optimistic time as there was a real sense of an artistic and design revolution happening. I was involved in small design partnership for a couple of years where I design and hand printed fabric which we turned into unique clothing, very early 80s kitsch. As for the rest of the 80s I continued painting and experimenting around with photography and digital art.

What did you enjoy doing as a child? 
I come from the seaside town Leigh-on-Sea situated on the mud flats of the Thames estuary in Essex, England, so I spent most of the time sailing and mucking around on the mud. When the weather was not so good, I would draw, read, listen to music or watch the dreaded TV (fortunately there was not much on TV which allowed me to more drawing). As a family we use to go for a lot of walks around the coast or go on sailing trips that usually meant being grounded up a marshy creek when the tide was out which gave time to explore the marshes, this was Great Expectations country and a respect for the environment and its history grew on me.

Gregory Baldwin Illustration

Were you always making art?
I always loved drawing, when I went on a family outing to London to visit the National Gallery and The Tate Gallery I was inspired in particularly with Op and Pop Art. I remember seeing Jasper Johns and Andy Warhol and thinking, “Wow, I wish I could do that.” I always enjoyed anything to do with art and loved the movies about artists especially “The Rebel” by Tony Hancock. It did not occur to me I could study art until I left school whilst studying computer science at the local tech college where I made new friends who were studying art.

What books did you like as a kid?
The books I remember enjoying as a child as far as I can remember was The Silver Sword, The Narnia Chronicles, Ronald Searle’s Molesworth titles and an old copy of Tanglewood Tales that had some really disturbing illustrations (well I thought so at the age of 9), I really enjoyed the tales though.

You used to work in a bookstore didn’t you? Did you read on the job?
Yep, it all started when I was working in the Royal Academy shop in London which had fantastic art books, I was a pig in mud. You do not get time to read when you work in a bookstore but you do get to discover books that you would not have normally read. It was the admiring the book jackets that inspired me to take up illustration, in particularly the work of Andrzej Klimowski and Jeffrey Fisher.


Gregory Baldwin Illustration

You have a knack of combining different elements together.
Tell us bit about your working process, inspirations and mentors?
Inspirations: Picasso (I believe “Guernica” to be the greatest illustration of the twentieth century) and late Matisse, Max Beckman, Gustave Courbet come to mind straight away. Generally I am like a magpie and learn by looking around the galleries, museums, art books, art mags, even street art. I like it when I discover something that really grabs me and gives me something new to think about or moves me.

Metaphors: I find them really useful in illustration they make the work more intriguing. Picasso and Courbet used the metaphor beautifully; Courbet’s “Studio” is full of them. Illustration has to be less mysterious after all you communicating the essence of a brief or story in a way that the readership can understand so the metaphor has to be more obvious, the challenge is to use the metaphor as a tool in an inventive way.

Mentors: I have not had any training or tutoring since art school where the teaching was inspiring. It would be nice to have a mentor alas I do not have one now.

Do you sketch ideas out, or got straight to the computer?
I sketch ideas out straight into the computer using a tablet, I only use pencil and paper to work out the composition which for some reason seems difficult to do on the screen.

Your style has evolved over time, how do you think it has changed?
It has changed considerably, my early illustration was using the same technique and approach that I had developed in my fine art work which was a very abstracted and ethereal use of found imagery, photography and the use of the computer. I was commissioned to do some illustrations for the science magazine 21C and from there I pick up more work. As I moved more into illustration I was being asked to produce more literal or pictorial illustrations so I had to adapt to suit the audience becoming more figurative using found imagery and scanned textures. Since then it has evolved to what it is today where the use of photography and found imagery is rarely used. Hopefully it will continue to evolve.

Do you have to give certain considerations to style when illustrating for the children’s market?
I simply try to make the images appealing but not too distracting and not too dowdy. I want the children to be engaged with the book.

What sort of creative leeway do you get with briefs?
It depends on the title; usually I think I get fair bit leeway, I do not get that “death by committee” that sometimes occurs with some educational or institutional jobs.

Gregory Baldwin Illustration

The pop-up book cover for Melbourne Child Magazine is a fun image and one of my favourites.
Yes, that was a nice one to work on, I usually come up with the concept but in this case they wanted a pop-up book and my job was to make it work which was the fun part.

What is inspiring you at the moment?
That is a tricky one, illustration wise I can think of anything in particular I must have been doing it for too long, I have been thinking of Patrick Heron’s late works. Otherwise where do I start there is so much to choose from.

Chatterbox no. 10

Freddy
Charlie: Mum? You know puppy school? Well, there is a big dog
there who teaches all the puppies to be dogs.

Mum: Charlie, I think it’s a person who teaches the puppies.
Charlie: Mum, that’s crazy. Dogs don’t teach babies how to be people…

Can’t really fault the logic.

Dog drawing: Matt Davidson

Anthropomorphism #4


rockwall2

rocksx9

There is a little rock climbing wall in a park near home that we like to visit sometimes.
While staring at the wall for too long one day, it transformed before me. If I was going to be all fancy I would say that it reminded me of an Yves Tanguy painting. This a Baker Smith blog post though and we see turtles in clouds and Charlie Brown‘s face in trivets, so what the wall really reminded me of that day was an exploding Mr Potato Head. I photographed some rocks with my phone then assembled them. Doubting Thomas here he is, half-baked – an alternate Mr Potato Head.

Rockwall_Mr Potato

Book Champion: Bailey

Book_champion_Warhorse
Bailey was our very first Book Champion. Now he is eleven years old, in grade 6, and spoke to us about a new favourite book, War Horse by Michael Morpurgo

Can you tell us what the story of War Horse is about?
The story of War Horse is about Albert Narracott and a horse named Joey. The book is set in the horse’s perspective, not in Albert’s perspective. Joey tells you his life, as if you were him. Albert’s father sells Joey to the cavalry to be ridden by Lieutenant Nicholls, who ends up getting killed in action. Then Joey ends up going to the Germans and being looked after Captain Friedrich Muller. Joey runs away after an attack by British, but ends up in no-mans land. The Germans and British wave the white flag, while they cut the barbed wire attached to Joey, then they toss a coin to see how keeps him. The British won the coin toss. They take Joey back to Devon, England and Albert Narracott buys Joey back.

What do you like most about the story?
It’s really good that it has been written in a horse’s perspective because most books are usually written from a human’s perspective. It was interesting to see what the life of a horse was like and what they went through in WW1.

There was a very strong relationship between Albert and Joey.
Could you understand the connection between a boy and a horse?
Yes, because I think everyone that has a horse always has a strong connection with it. It’s the same with anyone and their pet (even though Joey wasn’t really a pet). Albert goes to the war, not to fight, just to try and find Joey. I think this really shows how strong their connection was.

Did you find the story sad or scary at times?
I think it was sort of sad half way through when you didn’t really know what was going to happen. Then again at the end, because you think Joey is going to die.

Did you think the horses were brave during the war?
Yes very brave, especially in this book. The way the horses break through barbed wire to try and help the people that ride them is unbelievable.

Which did you like best: the book, the play or the movie?
I read the book first. I loved the book most definitely! I always think the book is best because it has so much detail that movies and plays just can’t add.

How different was the play or the movie from what you’d  imagined in you head?
I imagined the movie to be very similar, but there were a few bits that were like tearing out pages of the book and re-writing them again. The play was really really similar. Very little was different from the book.

What other Michael Morpurgo books would you recommend?
Butterfly Lion – A great book to read!

Caspar, the Prince of Cats – Great if you are into the Titanic

Alone on a Wide Wide Sea – Great book if you are interested in reading about a little boy being fostered to family in Australia

Toro Toro – Good if you are interested about the Wars in Spain

Farm Boy – If you loved War Horse, this is the sequel – you will love it! Great book!

Running Wild – This is an absolutely fantastic book! About the tsunami in Indonesia.

Little Manfred – Great story about friendship

This Morning I Met a Whale – A good short read.