Abigail Larson | |
---|---|
Born | Virginia, US |
Education | Bachelor of Fine Arts |
Alma mater | Virginia Commonwealth University |
Known for | Illustration, mixed media |
Abigail Larson is an American illustrator. She creates mixed media original artwork in the dark fantasy genre, drawing on themes from Gothic and horror literature. Her illustrations often feature Victorian fashion and fantasy or horror elements such as ghosts. She uses a combination of traditional sketching and digital coloring to complete her illustrations.
Larson works primarily as a freelance artist. Her credits include coloring books, tarot decks, comic books, and television shows. She has illustrated for several major publishing and production companies, including DC, Dark Horse Comics, Netflix Animation, and Disney Books. She has also served as a character designer on several projects. She won the Hugo Award for Best Professional Artist in 2016.
Larson was born and raised in Virginia. [1] Her father is an archaeologist and her mother is a cultural anthropologist. [1] At one point in her childhood, her mother worked as a seamstress — this inspired one of Larson's first drawings, a self-portrait of her future self in a wedding dress. [2] As a child, she dreamed of becoming an opera singer, but suffered from severe stage fright; she also dreamed of joining the circus. [2] [3] Larson's family has been supportive of her career as an artist. [1] [4]
Larson attended Virginia Commonwealth University, graduating in 2010 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Communication Arts. Her concentration was Drawing and Illustration. [5] She credits her high school art teacher with being an early supporter of her work and encouraging her to apply to art school. [4]
Larson was the character designer for The Huntsman: Winter's Curse, a video game created in 2016 by Universal Pictures and Desert Owl Games as a companion to the film Snow White & the Huntsman. While the game itself received poor reviews, the art was praised by reviewers. [6] Larson has contributed artwork to several games by Choice of Games. [7] She has also designed a loading screen for Fortnite. [8] Beginning in 2020, Larson was a character designer on the Netflix Animation original series Blue Eye Samurai. [9] [10] She worked full-time on the series, and was particularly involved in designing the show's costumes. [10] [9]
As a freelancer, Larson has accumulated 20 comic book art credits from companies including DC, Dark Horse, Image, and Titan. Many of these credits are for single issues of longer runs. In 2020, Larson did the covers for the mini-series Lady Baltimore: The Witch Queens, written by Mike Mignola and Daniel Golden with artwork by Bridgit Connell. [11] [12] [13] In 2021, Larson worked on the first issue of rock band Evanescence's graphic anthology series Echoes from the Void. [14] The series featured stories inspired by the band's music. Larson contributed both cover art and interior illustrations. [15] [16] Her cover for issue #1 was later turned into an NFT as part of a project by the band. [17] In 2023, Larson returned to do the cover art for the one-shot sequel to the mini-series The Witch Queens, Lady Baltimore: The Dream of Ikelos. [18]
Other projects that Larson has worked on include book cover art, tarot decks, coloring books, sticker books, illustrated re-publications of classic stories, children's literature, and tabletop RPGs. [19] Larson is an Official Fluevog Creator, as the advertisement she designed for their "The Queen of Prussia Ludovika" shoe won their FleuvogCreative contest in 2014. [20] [21] The advertisement ran in print in Vice and Bust. [20] In 2021, Larson published Crimson, a 248-page art book containing a selection of her pieces spanning a decade. [22] [23] The project was funded through Kickstarter. [24]
Between 2010 and 2015, Larson contributed artwork to multiple events at The Poe Museum in Richmond, Virginia. [25] At a 2014 Halloween event, her illustrations were used on a wine bottle label for the Vincent Price Signature Wine Collection and the can for a local craft brewery's red ale. [26] [27] She also illustrated posters for Richmond's annual Zombie Walk. [28] [29]
Larson lives in Turin, Italy, with her husband. [5] She works primarily out of her home studio there. [1]
Larson is known for her Gothic style. She often works within the dark fantasy genre; her illustrations contain macabre themes and are heavily influenced by horror movies and literature, sometimes depicting creatures such as vampires and ghosts. [1] [30] [28] She frequently centers women and femininity in her illustrations, and has emphasized the importance of storytelling in her process and finished pieces. [30] [31] [32] Larson often exaggerates perspective and proportions in her work. [20] She describes movement as important to illustration, and therefore favors dynamic poses. [31]
Larson works in mixed media — she does her initial sketches, line work, and coloring on paper, and finishes her coloring digitally. [1] She completes initial sketches on Canson paper with mechanical pencil, then transfers her final sketch onto watercolor paper. [33] She then inks the drawing and does a watercolor wash, which adds depth and texture to the final piece. Finally, she scans the drawing and does the final colors in Photoshop. [32] Larson has stated that although she has tried digital drawing, drawing on paper "feels better" to her, and she likes the way ink on paper looks. [1]
Larson has cited several artists as influences on her work, including Golden Age illustrators such as Arthur Rackham, and Kay Nielsen. [2] [3] She has also named filmmakers Tim Burton, Hayao Miyazaki, and Guillermo del Toro as influences. [2] [5]
Larson describes " fairytales, folklore and ghost stories" as her "greatest inspirations". [5] Ghosts sometimes appear in her work, as do other fantasy and horror creatures. [34] Some of the inspirations that she has discussed include the work of Edgar Allan Poe and H. P. Lovecraft; Bram Stoker's Dracula and Mary Shelley's Frankenstein; novelists Charlotte Brontë and Shirley Jackson; and classic fairy tales such as those by the Brothers Grimm. [5] [3] She also draws inspiration from Victorian aesthetics, often depicting Victorian fashion and other period clothing in her illustrations. [20]
In 2016, Larson won the Hugo Award for Best Professional Artist. [35] Also in 2016, she received an honorable mention in the Society of Illustrators of Los Angeles's 55th annual Illustration West competition for her Penny Dreadful #1 variant cover. [36]
In 2022, her art book Crimson was a finalist in the Prix Imaginales Illustration category. [37]
Larson's skillfully drafted images feature rich, mossy colors and angular, eerie beasts that are more charming than truly scary.
The pictures have a quality of Disney animation about them, lively and familiar-looking without much verve.
Larson's illustrations are eerie and beautiful, and they also help readers track the threads of the storyline.
...with art by the incredibly talented Abigail Larson...the artwork is incredible on them...
Tim Burton's beloved '90s characters are captured by Abigail Larson-a veteran of Gothic Fantasy illustration-in artwork that manages to be both spooky and sweet, like the source material.
As an art piece, it's also spectacular, with beautiful illustrations by Abigail Larson on every single card and in the guidebook.
Abigail Larson | |
---|---|
Born | Virginia, US |
Education | Bachelor of Fine Arts |
Alma mater | Virginia Commonwealth University |
Known for | Illustration, mixed media |
Abigail Larson is an American illustrator. She creates mixed media original artwork in the dark fantasy genre, drawing on themes from Gothic and horror literature. Her illustrations often feature Victorian fashion and fantasy or horror elements such as ghosts. She uses a combination of traditional sketching and digital coloring to complete her illustrations.
Larson works primarily as a freelance artist. Her credits include coloring books, tarot decks, comic books, and television shows. She has illustrated for several major publishing and production companies, including DC, Dark Horse Comics, Netflix Animation, and Disney Books. She has also served as a character designer on several projects. She won the Hugo Award for Best Professional Artist in 2016.
Larson was born and raised in Virginia. [1] Her father is an archaeologist and her mother is a cultural anthropologist. [1] At one point in her childhood, her mother worked as a seamstress — this inspired one of Larson's first drawings, a self-portrait of her future self in a wedding dress. [2] As a child, she dreamed of becoming an opera singer, but suffered from severe stage fright; she also dreamed of joining the circus. [2] [3] Larson's family has been supportive of her career as an artist. [1] [4]
Larson attended Virginia Commonwealth University, graduating in 2010 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Communication Arts. Her concentration was Drawing and Illustration. [5] She credits her high school art teacher with being an early supporter of her work and encouraging her to apply to art school. [4]
Larson was the character designer for The Huntsman: Winter's Curse, a video game created in 2016 by Universal Pictures and Desert Owl Games as a companion to the film Snow White & the Huntsman. While the game itself received poor reviews, the art was praised by reviewers. [6] Larson has contributed artwork to several games by Choice of Games. [7] She has also designed a loading screen for Fortnite. [8] Beginning in 2020, Larson was a character designer on the Netflix Animation original series Blue Eye Samurai. [9] [10] She worked full-time on the series, and was particularly involved in designing the show's costumes. [10] [9]
As a freelancer, Larson has accumulated 20 comic book art credits from companies including DC, Dark Horse, Image, and Titan. Many of these credits are for single issues of longer runs. In 2020, Larson did the covers for the mini-series Lady Baltimore: The Witch Queens, written by Mike Mignola and Daniel Golden with artwork by Bridgit Connell. [11] [12] [13] In 2021, Larson worked on the first issue of rock band Evanescence's graphic anthology series Echoes from the Void. [14] The series featured stories inspired by the band's music. Larson contributed both cover art and interior illustrations. [15] [16] Her cover for issue #1 was later turned into an NFT as part of a project by the band. [17] In 2023, Larson returned to do the cover art for the one-shot sequel to the mini-series The Witch Queens, Lady Baltimore: The Dream of Ikelos. [18]
Other projects that Larson has worked on include book cover art, tarot decks, coloring books, sticker books, illustrated re-publications of classic stories, children's literature, and tabletop RPGs. [19] Larson is an Official Fluevog Creator, as the advertisement she designed for their "The Queen of Prussia Ludovika" shoe won their FleuvogCreative contest in 2014. [20] [21] The advertisement ran in print in Vice and Bust. [20] In 2021, Larson published Crimson, a 248-page art book containing a selection of her pieces spanning a decade. [22] [23] The project was funded through Kickstarter. [24]
Between 2010 and 2015, Larson contributed artwork to multiple events at The Poe Museum in Richmond, Virginia. [25] At a 2014 Halloween event, her illustrations were used on a wine bottle label for the Vincent Price Signature Wine Collection and the can for a local craft brewery's red ale. [26] [27] She also illustrated posters for Richmond's annual Zombie Walk. [28] [29]
Larson lives in Turin, Italy, with her husband. [5] She works primarily out of her home studio there. [1]
Larson is known for her Gothic style. She often works within the dark fantasy genre; her illustrations contain macabre themes and are heavily influenced by horror movies and literature, sometimes depicting creatures such as vampires and ghosts. [1] [30] [28] She frequently centers women and femininity in her illustrations, and has emphasized the importance of storytelling in her process and finished pieces. [30] [31] [32] Larson often exaggerates perspective and proportions in her work. [20] She describes movement as important to illustration, and therefore favors dynamic poses. [31]
Larson works in mixed media — she does her initial sketches, line work, and coloring on paper, and finishes her coloring digitally. [1] She completes initial sketches on Canson paper with mechanical pencil, then transfers her final sketch onto watercolor paper. [33] She then inks the drawing and does a watercolor wash, which adds depth and texture to the final piece. Finally, she scans the drawing and does the final colors in Photoshop. [32] Larson has stated that although she has tried digital drawing, drawing on paper "feels better" to her, and she likes the way ink on paper looks. [1]
Larson has cited several artists as influences on her work, including Golden Age illustrators such as Arthur Rackham, and Kay Nielsen. [2] [3] She has also named filmmakers Tim Burton, Hayao Miyazaki, and Guillermo del Toro as influences. [2] [5]
Larson describes " fairytales, folklore and ghost stories" as her "greatest inspirations". [5] Ghosts sometimes appear in her work, as do other fantasy and horror creatures. [34] Some of the inspirations that she has discussed include the work of Edgar Allan Poe and H. P. Lovecraft; Bram Stoker's Dracula and Mary Shelley's Frankenstein; novelists Charlotte Brontë and Shirley Jackson; and classic fairy tales such as those by the Brothers Grimm. [5] [3] She also draws inspiration from Victorian aesthetics, often depicting Victorian fashion and other period clothing in her illustrations. [20]
In 2016, Larson won the Hugo Award for Best Professional Artist. [35] Also in 2016, she received an honorable mention in the Society of Illustrators of Los Angeles's 55th annual Illustration West competition for her Penny Dreadful #1 variant cover. [36]
In 2022, her art book Crimson was a finalist in the Prix Imaginales Illustration category. [37]
Larson's skillfully drafted images feature rich, mossy colors and angular, eerie beasts that are more charming than truly scary.
The pictures have a quality of Disney animation about them, lively and familiar-looking without much verve.
Larson's illustrations are eerie and beautiful, and they also help readers track the threads of the storyline.
...with art by the incredibly talented Abigail Larson...the artwork is incredible on them...
Tim Burton's beloved '90s characters are captured by Abigail Larson-a veteran of Gothic Fantasy illustration-in artwork that manages to be both spooky and sweet, like the source material.
As an art piece, it's also spectacular, with beautiful illustrations by Abigail Larson on every single card and in the guidebook.