Alan Aldridge
Alan Aldridge | |
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![]() Alan Aldridge (1971)
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Born | London, England |
1 June 1943
Residence | Los Angeles |
Nationality | British |
Occupation | artist, illustrator, graphic designer, creative director |
Years active | 1965–present |
Spouse(s) | Rita Laura Lyons |
Children | 8 |
Alan Aldridge (born 1 June 1943 in London) is an English artist, graphic designer and illustrator.
Contents
Personal life
Aldridge was born in East London and now lives in Los Angeles, California. Four of his children are fashion photographer Miles Aldridge[1] and models Saffron Aldridge,[2] Lily Aldridge and Ruby Aldridge.
Career
Aldridge first worked as an illustrator at "The Sunday Times Magazine.'' After doing some freelance book covers for Penguin Books, he was hired in March 1965 by Penguin's chief editor Tony Godwin to become the art director of Penguin.[3] Over the next two years as art director, he especially focused on science fiction book covers and introduced his style which resonated with the mood of the time. In 1968 he moved to his own graphic-design firm, INK, which became closely involved with graphic images for the Beatles and Apple Corps.[4]
During the 1960s and 1970s he was responsible for a great many album covers, and helped create the graphic style of that era. He designed a series of science fiction book covers for Penguin Books. He made a big impression with his illustrations for the Beatles Illustrated Song lyrics. He also provided illustrations for The Penguin Book of Comics, a history of British and American comic art. His work was characterised by a flowing, cartoony style and soft airbrushing – very much in step with the psychedelic styles of the times. In the theatre, in February 1969 he designed the graphics for controversial Jane Arden play Vagina Rex and the Gas Oven at the London Arts Laboratory, Drury Lane.
He is possibly best known, however, for the picture book The Butterfly Ball and the Grasshopper Feast (1973), a series of illustrations of anthropomorphic insects and other creatures, which he created in collaboration with William Plomer, who wrote the accompanying verses. This was based on William Roscoe's poem of the same name, but was inspired when Aldridge read that John Tenniel had told Lewis Carroll it was impossible to draw a wasp in a wig. Illustrations produced in collaboration with Harry Willock.
Aldridge also created the artwork for Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy by Elton John in 1975.
Honours and awards
A retrospective Alan Aldridge – the Man with the Kaleidoscope Eyes featured at the Design Museum in London from 10 October 2008 to 25 January 2009, and was reviewed as "The trip of a lifetime".[5]
"Aldridge was the 'Guv'nor'....no one comes close to matching his influence on illustration in the 20th Century!..." – Sir John Betjeman, The Times Literary Review, 1975.
"His Royal Master of Images to Their Majesties The Beatles." John Lennon in 1968.[6]
Nicknamed himself "The Man with the Kaleidoscope Eyes" after a line in the Beatles' song "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds".
Was known in the 1960s and '70s as "the Graphic entertainer".[7]
Over the years Aldridge has won many awards for his work, among them Whitbread Children's Book Award (1973).[8]
Selected works
- Cover for Boswell's London Journal 1762–1763, ed. Frederick Pottle, Penguin (1966).
- Cover design for A Quick One by The Who (1966).
- Poster for Andy Warhol and Paul Morrissey's film Chelsea Girls (1966).
- Covers for Penguin Science Fiction books (1967).
- The Beatles Illustrated Lyrics (US, Houghton Mifflin; UK, MacDonald Unit 75, 1969) editor, select illustrations.
- Ann in the Moon (1970), with story by Frances D. Francis.
- The Penguin Book of Comics (1971), with George Perry, published by Penguin Books.
- Famous Hard Rock Cafe logo (1971).[9]
- The Ship's Cat (1977), illustrated in collaboration with Harry Willock, with verses by Richard Adams.
- The Peacock Party (1979) and The Lion's Cavalcade (1980), sequels to The Butterfly Ball, based on anonymous sequels to Roscoe's version, both illustrated in collaboration with Harry Willock, and with verses by George E. Ryder and Ted Walker respectively.
- Phantasia: Of Docklands, Rocklands and Dodos (1981), illustrated in collaboration with Harry Willock.
- The Gnole (1999), with Steve Boyett (writer) and Maxine Miller (colorist).
- Illustrations and logo design for Everybody Loves a Happy Ending, the sixth studio album by British pop rock/new wave band Tears for Fears, 2004.
- Aldridge is also credited for Art Direction and Illustration on Light Grenades (2006), the sixth studio album for Incubus.
- The Man with Kaleidoscope Eyes (Thames & Hudson, 2008), 240 pp, ISBN 978-0-500-09342-9; also published as The Man with Kaleidoscope Eyes: The Art of Alan Aldridge (Abrams Books, 2009), 240 pp, ISBN 978-0-8109-0596-2
See also
References
- ↑ Artist profile on the Palazzo website
- ↑ Bio of Saffron Aldridge
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- ↑ Alan Aldridge in The Times, October 12, 2008.
- ↑ "Alan Aldridge". Archive edition of audio-video lecture by Aldridge(?) with brief preface. 17 September 2009. Bradley University Galleries, Bradley University.
- ↑ Costa Book Awards.
- ↑ Hard-rock-cafe-logo.
External links
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- Picture of Alan Aldridge @ The Design Museum
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- Alan Aldridge's science fiction covers for Penguin Books.
- Alan Aldridge agent website
- Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.. Alan Aldridge is one of six people interviewed during the 29-minute BBC2 program.
- Alan Aldridge at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Alan Aldridge at Library of Congress Authorities – with 19 catalogue records
- EngvarB from August 2014
- Use dmy dates from August 2014
- Articles with hCards
- Pages with broken file links
- Official website missing URL
- 1943 births
- Living people
- English illustrators
- English graphic designers
- Artists from London
- Album-cover and concert-poster artists
- English artists
- English expatriates in the United States