The making of ‘Stardust’, collectable silver coin, commissioned by The Bank of Latvia.
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Full spread Illustration for the Firewords magazine for the poem 'Grackles are back in town' by Ann Howels.
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For Ukraine
Series of works created to support and help the people suffering in Ukraine.
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The Illustration for Where the leaves Fall magazine Issue 10.
“…The winter just gone was the windiest and snowiest of the three winters I’ve spent at Rothera.
Although we can’t label any one season as being the result of climate change, it does give us an indication of the types of weather the Peninsula could see in the future.”
John Law is an Antarctic atmospheric scientist for British Antarctic Survey.
He has spent three winters at Rothera Research Station, where he continues the long meteorological record from Rothera.
For the Issue 10 of @wtlfmag I illustrated an article where John Law describes his work at Rothera Research Station.
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Drawings of people, created as commission for a colourful home.
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A full page illustration for “Where the Leaves Fall” magazine dialogues, written by Tania Roa. About re-inventing the meaning of an adventure, rediscovering home and falling in love with its landscape.
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The cover artwork for kids magazine Pikolo Issue13.
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This time Pikolo talks about the importance of our oceans and its inhabitants and how we are all connected.
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One of my main aims when art directing, creating content and illustrations for this magazine is to inspire and to educate the youngest people (and their adults) of this planet how to love, care for and bring change through small, achievable actions.
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people & places
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A book of poems by Latvian poet Inga Pizāne, published by Janis Roze publishing house, art directed and illustrated by me.
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Each page holds a poem, a thought, that continues in an illustrated mark, a note.
On the cover there are many bodies, seemingly intertwined but separate, each doing their own thing, living in their own worlds, passing but not connecting. Lonely planes in overpacked airports. A little bit like us all, sometimes.
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Through the pages of the book, those intertwined bodies come apart, each with their own story, wanting to be heard, felt and seen
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