Rory Dobner

The imaginative mind behind fantastical ink portraits and more

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Smoking fish, gun-toting octopuses, cupcake-eating lizards—these are just a few of the anthropomorphic animals portrayed in the intricate ink drawings by the eccentric British artist Rory Dobner. His ingenuous penchant for animals and maximalist approach to art come together in a series of wildly imaginative characters easily adored by children and adults alike. The industrious artist, now represented by Opera Gallery, also lends his talents to sculpture, painting, tattoos, home furnishings and graphic design.

Liberty London began stocking a small amount of Dobner’s work 18 months ago, after seeing one of his hand-drawn portraits in the background of a photo of his wife Claire, who was featured in a news article. At the time, Claire tells us, Rory had been a stay-at-home dad who worked incessantly on his art, as her job with British Telecom moved the family to places like Amsterdam, Hong Kong, LA, India, Sydney and Taiwan. Since Liberty phoned the couple, his collection has become so widely appreciated by the creative community—and several celebrities—the 34-year-old artist can barely keep up with the requests for his work. In addition to Liberty, Dobner’s quirky animals and typographic initials can be found on ceramics and textiles at Bluebird in London, Via Bus Stop in Tokyo, Agent Provocateur shops and soon at Maison 24 in NYC.

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We recently caught up with Dobner’s wife of 16 years—the artist himself seems to be almost constantly working—to learn a little bit more about her husband’s motivation and plans for the future, which currently include working with renowned neon artist Chris Bracey and preparing for a personal appearance at Liberty on 10 February 2012. To show his support for the company that catalyzed his career, Dobner will be in-store all day drawing personalized portraits for fans of his work, or those looking for a customized Valentine’s Day gift.

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What brought about the idea of working with initials?

When they started, Liberty took about 10 of his ink portraits and hung them in all these Victorian frames. They starting selling well, too well actually, and since each one is done by hand he had to keep replacing them. They finally gave him a six-week break, and suggested he do a product so he wouldn’t have to keep drawing. So he came up with doing the alphabet because it’s very iconic, and he made drawings and printed them on the tiles, and people could still frame them or they could play with them and spell out words. He will frame them all together too if you want a word. For example, Robbie Williams bought “Fuck me, blow me”.

He started doing commissions for bespoke coat of arms that include very specific stuff like childrens’ names, marriage dates, etc. Kate Moss created one with Ray Bans and The Rolling Stones references for her husband. Making it personal is very important for Rory, he’s always drawn, it doesn’t sit well to sell his art so if he can personalize it that makes him feel better.

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What attracts Rory to Victorian times?

We’ve always sought out antique things, we’ve traveled extensively so our house is filled with loads of stuff we’ve picked up along the way or salvaged and given a new life in a current time. Rory also likes the invention of Victorian times—the materials are so amazing and there’s so much heritage and character.

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How much time does one drawing take to complete?

Every single thing is hand-drawn, the only thing we’ve done print-wise is the products. Something like Ol’ Smokey takes about a day, but a new idea (like a bespoke idea) takes more like 2 days to think, design and draw. Rory just goes straight onto the paper without penciling it in first. Like his paintings on brushed steel, the fluid way he does them means he can only come off the painting at certain points and he can’t make a mistake or the paint will fuck up—he’s very intuitive, it’s very interesting to watch.

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What’s his preferred material to work with?

We have a piece of land out in the countryside, and there’s a sexy garden down the driveway. I would say Rory’s happiest when he’s there making his massive wire sculptures. They are really smooth on the inside—models have worn them in shows for Dior and McQueen—but they are really quite sharp on the outside so we have to put them in open spaces to keep from accidentally injuring the children. They take about six months to make and people appreciate them for their artistic merit. At Babington House (the Soho House in Somerset), he created a massive horse that is standing up on its hind legs and the front legs are above you.

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What is something people might not know about Rory?

He’s one of three boys, and he grew up on a tiny island off the UK which is more like a waiting area for old people to die. His parents sent him to an all-boys military boarding school at a young age, where he learned to march and shoot guns—it’s kind of a scary school system to be in, you’re expected to go to the military. He was always drawing, and rather than bash it, they encouraged him and allowed.

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We have two children, Huxley and Louie, and he’s very good at playing and thinking like children. He’s really in it though, he’s making his characters come alive and gives them little personalities. He has a bit of taxidermy, and sometimes dresses the animals up in vintage Vivienne Westwood accessories. But he’s so humble, so gentle, and very knowledgeable about history. He mounts every picture himself, he does everything from start to finish. He’s very much an artist, just genuinely interested in what people are telling him, and I sometimes have to wrestle his work off him.


Lindzine #2

First look at the second issue of the Lindsay Lohan-focused zine by Bibiru and The Wormholes

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The 25-year-old actress-singer-jailbird Lindsay Lohan has attracted as much publicity off-screen as she has for her roles in slasher films and family comedies alike. The hijinks that have led her in and out of rehab centers and through the criminal justice system has always left us wondering whether she’s a celebrity trainwreck or a brilliant self-publicist—or both.

Late last year Mexican-American artist Bibiru and his cohorts The Wormholes put together a 56-page zine dedicated to Lohan, a brilliantly titled, vaguely tongue-in-cheek tribute that captured massive attention and prompted renewed reflection on her undeniable beauty.

Bibiru is following up on the black-and-white zine’s success with a second issue dropping in the coming days, and a third in the works. “We The Wormholes love Her Majesty and we believe she’s here to teach humanity about love,” says Bibiru. “She has a naturally ability to cast a spell over millions.”

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Bibiru jokes that the images were beamed down from extraterrestrial friends but then, in a brief moment of serious reflection, admits the project seems to be running away with itself, seemingly fueled by Lohan’s controversial stronghold on pop culture. He’s not surprised, though—“We felt its power but didn’t know what to expect.”

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The second issue is due to drop this week, and will sell for $7.


Line Illustrations

Coup de coeur pour l’illustrateur russe Vasilj Godzh qui maîtrise à la perfection ses traits et propose des créations toutes en lignes et en formes. Des travaux et des illustrations splendides à découvrir dans cette sélection, disponible en images dans la suite de l’article.

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Art + Design in Miami: Painstaking Process

Our collection of the most beautifully detailed and maniacally constructed works from the Miami fairs

In our third selection of the goods from Art Basel and the surrounding Miami fairs, we focus on the meticulously detailed and painstaking work of artists who tend to get romanced by the details. Below you’ll encounter precise and repetitive line drawings, lottery ticket collages and sticker-composed Hindu deities that explore the complicated inner-workings of the creative mind.

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This aerial of an imaginary golf community from Clay Ketter reminded us of a bit of a Rorschach test in its creative use of symmetry. Dubbed “Spider Woods” 2010, this piece comes from the Wetterling Gallery in Stockholm.

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Tom Friedman displayed “Untitled (Broadway Boogie)” 2011, a complex circuitry of colors and lines from Luhring Augustine, New York. Meanwhile, the Kashya Hildebrand gallery at Art Asia presented Aghighi Bakhshayeshi’s “Untitled” 2011, a dazzling calligraphic composition that had viewers in a trance.

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“Veil From Oceanus” 2011 is part of Sam Messenger‘s “Six Veils” series, a set of ink-on-paper pieces that accomplish rich monochromatic textures through razor-thin intersecting lines. This piece came from the Davidson Contemporary gallery.

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Also from the Davidson Contemporary gallery, Ghost of a Dream‘s “5 Times Daily” 2011 takes discarded lottery tickets and rearranges them on a panel to make geometric patterns reminiscent of Navajo tapestries.

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Seen at Pulse, Joan Linder‘s hyper-detailed drawing “Purple Weed (71st Street D Line MTA left and right)” 2011 uses old school quill-and-ink techniques to record a fascinating natural subject—shown by Mixed Greens.

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Adam Fowler cut and layered graphite renderings to create “Drawing One (trilogy)” 2010, which we caught at Pulse through Margaret Thatcher Projects.

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We loved the radial design of Dean Smith‘s “Untitled (a18)” 2011, a work of graphite on paper on view through Gallery Joe. His short, slender marks create hypnotic movement that belies the static medium.

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This fun and colorful take on ritual Hindu iconography uses a multitude of stickers to compose a distinct take on a timeless image. Called “A World of Joy” 2009-11, we were lucky enough to catch this piece by Ye Hongxing at Art Asia.

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Building off of the minute fragments of broken LCD displays, Josepha Gasch-Muche’s “17.2.2011” is a luminous piece that combines ethereal abstraction with gritty construction. Seen through the Heller Gallery at Art Miami.

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Marco Maggi’s “Graph” 2011 is a graphite-on-graphite drawing from Nara Roesler at Art Nova. The industrial geometric forms are endlessly complicated and multidirectional, giving the piece many distinct points of interest.

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Sticking nickel-plated pins into gatorboard, Tara Donovan’s “Drawing (Pins)” 2011 further develops the artist’s dedication to simple compositions rife with tactile innovation. The Stephen Friedman Gallery exhibited this famed American’s work last week.

Contributions by Josh Rubin, Jonah Samson and Karen Day


Semblance: Collector’s Edition Box Set Giveaway

Exclusive Twitter giveaway of a collection of works by one of London’s most remarkable contemporary artists
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Even at first glance it’s apparent that London-based artist Von has reason to keep his works in short supply. The level of detail that goes into his original works continues in the production of his limited edition prints, which are masterfully executed by one of England’s oldest printmakers, a family-run studio that dates back to 1880. Since commingling his commercial success with the fine art world a half-decade ago, Von has been producing remarkable reproductions of his work and selling them in small runs—but the latest offering is arguably the most impressive yet.

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Semblance” is a box set of five of Von’s striking prints, restricted to just 50 editions. While the packaging and material provide reason enough to purchase the collection, fans and discerning buyers have another cause for excitement: Von has randomly placed five original works within the lot.

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Officially on sale tomorrow, those with quick fingers can still pre-order the set online, but one lucky CH reader could also win one in our Twitter-based giveaway. The five pieces included in the “Semblance” box set are quintessential Von works, slightly ambiguous in composition but ultimately invigorating. The way he challenges the eye intrinsically draws the viewer in, creating a heightened experience with this powerful contradiction of balance.

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Those in London will have a chance to see the Semblance Collector’s Edition Box Set in person tomorrow at Protein’s 18 Hewett Street Gallery, where the works will be on display for the evening. Be sure to arrive early, a signed print will be given to the first 100 people through the door.

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Semblance: Collector’s Edition Box Set is available for pre-order from ShopVon for £225. For a chance to win the set, follow Cool Hunting on Twitter and simply retweet the link to this story. Winners will be chosen at random on 25 November 2011 at 10am EST.


The Eyes of the Skin

A conceptual artist’s first solo show explores the duality of human nature using hairnets, fish hooks and more
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Rubber dairy hoses, human hair, fish hooks and other oddities serve as standard materials for Manchester-based artist Susie MacMurray, who explores the human condition with a beautifully eerie approach. Curious about life’s delicate balance, MacMurray explains she is fascinated by “how amazing and successful we are” and yet how “fragile and weak” we can be, and her unsettling compositions and shapes poetically express this duality.

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MacMurray often experiments with concepts in her studio, but much of her work is site-specific, making her current London exhibition at Agnew’s Gallery the first to encompass a range of her talents in one location. “The Eyes of the Skin” showcases various drawings, sculptures and large-scale installations which give physical form and emotional context to her questions about seduction and repulsion.

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The symmetry in her work seemingly serves as a metaphorical seesaw, representing the ability we have as humans to easily shift from one point to another, from calm to chaos. It’s this type of tension that captivates MacMurray, and from her thoughtful nature comes meaningful, striking work. Household gloves turned inside out, hairnets and Saran wrap are transformed to make ethereal statements about what it means to celebrate life when death is an inevitable outcome.

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Her painstaking production methods and theatrical executions mark the upshot of her former career as a professional bassoonist, during which she gleaned insight on the importance of creating a piece that reaches people viscerally, not just as an intellectual narrative. In an effort to explore her own concepts instead of following the lead of a conductor, MacMurray retrained as an artist and struck out on her own in 2001.

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Ten years later, MacMurray’s oeuvre contains an impressive array of works that turn banal objects into elegant displays of thought. “The Eyes of the Skin” is on view at Agnew’s Gallery from 09 November through 04 December 2011. Those in London can also check out her piece entitled “Widow”—an evening gown made of black leather and nearly 100 pounds of dressmakers pins—at the Victoria and Albert Museum in the group exhibition “Power of Making” through 02 January 2012.


Disintegration and Sprawl

Gallery show explores urban ruins and the problem of the built environment
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A new gallery collection at Christina Ray takes a look at the ruins of urban spaces in an age of sustainability and waste reduction. Artists Amze Emmons and Kevin Haas present imaginary landscapes as the potential for progressive living, juxtaposed against a background of deterioration. As Haas explains in the exhibition catalogue, “Now the building spree has changed gears, yet we will have to live with it for decades to come.”

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Emmons’ work colorfully portrays industrial settings with a vivacity that belies their dilapidation. His representations of refugee camps are serene and desolate, and reminds one of the fragility of community that plagues conflict zones. Emmons concentrates on themes of space and dislocation, citing a lifetime of movement and resettlement as inspiration.

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Haas draws hypothetical blueprints of the industrial space, showing the potential for creation while recognizing the inadequacy of our habitats. “I have been focusing on locations just off major interstates, and their seemingly infinite potential for sprawl,” says Haas. “When confronted with places like these, I am aware of my own tenuous complicity with them, and the repetitive displacement they create through their ubiquity.” Starkly contrasted with deserted locales, Haas’ monochromatic cityscapes are at once enticing and foreboding.

Disintegration and Sprawl can be seen now though October 30 at the Christina Ray gallery in New York.


James Boast

Retour sur le travail de James Boast, un illustrateur talentueux vivant à Londres. Avec un style très simple et des jeux de couleurs très bien pensés, ce dernier parvient à nous plonger au coeur de ses créations artistiques. Plus d’images dans la suite de l’article.



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Disegni e illustrazioni di Hannah Richards per il progetto personale Your opinion is irrelevant.
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