http:\/\/www.bl.uk\/learning\/images\/21cc\/crime\/large7577.html<\/a>. I’m a big fan of technically correct and well-drawn illustration as long as it has an interesting twist or idea behind it. There’s something very satisfying about seeing brilliant draughtsmanship combined with a surreal or comical subject matter. A lot of vintage or older comics feature that. Other than that, I like the aged paper and offset-printed colours of old comics.<\/p>\nDo you end up scouring through back catalogues, Ebay, car boot sales and subscriptions for comics and bygone-era art or tend to look in the same places, such as specific blogs or zines?<\/strong><\/p>\nAll the True Crime magazines I have are from this shop I found in Surrey. It was basically an ex-costume rental shop that this old man owned and wanted to close down. In amongst all these old, stained costumes were loads of magazines from the 60s and 70s as well as comics and band posters from the 80s. Other than that I look in charity shops, but the internet has endless amounts off good stuff, too.<\/p>\n
Where do you source the photographs you use?<\/strong><\/p>\nDo you mean the ones I draw from? Quite a lot I take myself. Me and my flatmate photograph each other acting out various body positions to draw from. This has resulted in a lot of my characters resembling me and him, though. I’m probably the only person I know who doesn’t get offended if I make myself look uglier and fatter than I actually am. I use Flickr quite a bit, too; old family photo albums people upload. Sometimes I’ll take aspects of a certain person or the body shape or shadow from someone or something else and collage them together; then draw from that.<\/p>\n
You\u2019ve designed a few costumes \u2013 would you be keen to explore fashion design any further?<\/strong><\/p>\nI\u2019ve never really thought of it as costume designing, it\u2019s usually just me and my friends making outfits for Halloween, which is probably my favourite calendar event. It\u2019s the only day you can walk around looking like a foetus and nobody looks twice. The house I lived in at university was constantly recovering from Halloween parties. There were seven of us all studying creative subjects \u2013 by the end it turned into a massive mess of an open studio. My friend Lori is really into comedy horror; she went all-out decorating the house so it resembled an 80s horror film set. I think the bathroom had fake blood on a curtain and a blue light bulb for the majority of the time I lived there.<\/p>\n
How did you get involved with Super Superficial? Did you work there before your range was exhibited or vice versa?<\/strong><\/p>\nI applied for a job at SSF when I first moved to London. I really liked the simple concept and the amount of strong illustrators they work with. I started working in the store, but not long after my first t-shirt was printed, followed by three more. I was given the opportunity to have my first solo show at Gallery7 [below the Covent Garden store] which was an amazing experience. Now I work more behind the scenes, finding new artists for SSF to collaborate with as well as designing for them. We\u2019re a really small company – it\u2019s almost like a family now.<\/p>\n
How did you end up penning a band-commissioned portrait of The xx (which remains at the masthead of their Myspace page)? What kind of feedback have you had from this?<\/strong><\/p>\nI’ve been friends with Romy [Madley-Croft, lead singer] for about five years now – she\u2019s always been very supportive of my work and I\u2019ve followed her music even before The xx formed. We\u2019d spoken about me doing their portrait for a while and when they were on tour last year she emailed me over a photograph they really liked and wanted me to re-work as an illustration. The feedback\u2019s been positive, but the image only really exists in cyberspace. I’d really like to do a follow-up to it this year in maybe limited edition prints – something you can hold. \n \nYou\u2019re a prolific YouTube safari-ist. How do you stumble upon such obscure footage?<\/strong><\/p>\nWhen I want to draw a person or an animal from an odd angle, sometimes I\u2019ll YouTube it. For instance, if you YouTube \u2018Seagull\u2019, you\u2019ll find hundreds of videos of seagulls walking about. The same as if you type in \u2018me wearing gimp mask\u2019, you’ll get hundreds of home videos of people wearing gimp masks. There\u2019s something really interesting about videos of people recording themselves in \u2018fetish\u2019 wear. Obviously YouTube can\u2019t feature nudity or anything sexually explicit, so it\u2019s usually someone just sitting there, swinging about on their office chair in an inflatable rubber suit. It\u2019s hilarious and mesmerising. YouTube is one of those websites you can spend hours and hours going off into tangents of obscure footage on. Which is why I posted some of the videos I found most interesting on Dinge-Mag<\/a> – my Tumblr, although it\u2019s supposed to be anonymous \u2013 otherwise, I\u2019ll never find them again.<\/p>\nDo you have any career highlights so far? I personally love 2009\u2019s anti-smoking campaign.<\/strong><\/p>\nThat was probably one of the most bizarre commissions I\u2019ve done, for reasons I won\u2019t go into. No Brow and The Dubious Salvation of Jack V book cover were both hugely enjoyable to produce. Other than that, someone sending me questions to fill in for their GCSE art exam was flattering.<\/p>\n
louiseplease.blogspot.com\/<\/a> \n louise-z-pomeroy.co.uk<\/a> \nWords: Jack Mills<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"Shocking, sinister, darkly humourous and uniquely arresting, illustrator Louise Pomeroy\u2019s work draws in a broad range of influences \u2013 from obscure YouTube clips and animal portraiture, to the work of American avant-garde sculpture Shary Boyle and forgotten crime comics.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":4,"featured_media":3143,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"gallery","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[305],"tags":[1202,1204,1203,1107,1201,1134,1078],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n
Wonderkind: LOUISE POMEROY | Wonderland<\/title>\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n