© 2013 Don Arday. |
Abstract
Adjective
1. describing any illustration completed between 1965 and 1971;
2. an explaination for an illustration done in the style of the old masters.
Client: “Yeah man, abstract, far out, I get it, I really get it...I think...?” Illustrator: “I knew you’d catch my drift.” Client: “It’s one hell of a portrait, I think it’s one of your best.” Illustrator: “Aw man...it’s a sailboat on a lake.”
Usage: “How did you manage to illustrate that movie poster with so many heads and only one body? It looks like an abstract version of the Hindu God Brahma.”
Client: “Yeah man, abstract, far out, I get it, I really get it...I think...?” Illustrator: “I knew you’d catch my drift.” Client: “It’s one hell of a portrait, I think it’s one of your best.” Illustrator: “Aw man...it’s a sailboat on a lake.”
Usage: “How did you manage to illustrate that movie poster with so many heads and only one body? It looks like an abstract version of the Hindu God Brahma.”
Acrylic
Noun
1. a non-biodegradable
paint that dries faster than you want it to, and doesn't dry when you need it
to;
2. a molasses like substance that softens when applied fast,
and hardens when applied slow.
Usage: “Sure I’ll have
that illustration finished in ten minutes…I’m using acrylic.”
Usage: “It’s done in acrylic. Rest assured, that illustration will last as long as the paint on your house.”
Usage: “It’s done in acrylic. Rest assured, that illustration will last as long as the paint on your house.”
Accident
Noun
1. the way an illustration ends up looking like it does;
2. the way most illustrators ended up with a graphic design
career.
Usage: "All
painting is an accident. But it's also not an accident, because one must select
what part of the accident one chooses to preserve." - Francis Bacon
(1909-1992), English painter.
Acetate
Noun
1. an antiquated material that cannot be touched by the
human hand;
2. a clear protective film with static properties that
attracts finger prints, dust, and grime, to wit, it no longer appears to be
clear.
Usage: “I’ll cover it
with acetate, that way if the art director spills coffee on it again, I’ll be
able to wipe it off this time.”
Achromatic
Adjective
1. the way an illustrator that hasn’t had a commission for a
while works;
2. the way someone works who allows Adobe Illustrator to
select colors for them.
Usage: “I hope I get
that phone call soon, I’m down to my last tube of paint. I have to work achromatic.”
Usage: “Can somebody
tell me how I can add some colors to this achromatic Illustrator file?”
Acknowledgement
Noun1. something that no longer comes standard with every illustration assignment;
2. usually seen in the gutter of a magazine printed in 3 point type;
3. an award presented to an art director for an illustrator's work.
Usage: “Well its your own fault, if you hadn't used that dark blue in the corner of your illustration that black type would have shown up.”
Acquisition
Noun
1. when someone in a remote part of the world suddenly takes
an interest in your work and you’ve never heard of them;
2. when someone on the street is wearing a t-shirt with your
illustration on it and you don’t recall being paid for that job;
3. a freebie.
Usage: “Have you seen
my latest acquisition? My illustrator was influenced by Parrish, Wyeth, Leydendecker,
and Disney.”
Adhesive
Noun
1. the substance that adheres a UPC code on the one side, and
a price tag on the other side of an expensive piece of watercolor paper;
2. the uncanny state that happens to the lid of a matte medium jar that has been closed for more than four hours.
Usage: “I remember
when, not only did paste work as an adhesive, but you could eat it too.”
Adobe
Noun
1. the developer of an unspecified number of software
products, all looking somewhat similar, but turning out to be drastically
different;
2. a suite of software requiring a user to learn a different
set of keystrokes in each program to do the same thing;
3. the Walmart of software companies.
Usage: “If you’re
confused just go to Adobe Help, but be sure you tell them which software
program you’re using so they don’t get confused.”
Aesthetics
Adjective
1. a term not typically associated with illustration or
illustrators;
2. what an illustrator sees when his or her eyes are closed;
3. something usually experienced once or twice a day when
one is in a seated position.
Usage: “These days
aesthetics has nothing to do with beauty.”
Usage: “To study
aesthetics is to delve deeply into one’s innermost Ch’i, and listen intently to
one’s outer most Mp3.” - Thomas Richard Harry (1935-2001) American
curmudgeon.
Afterthought
Noun
1. a thought that sometimes occurs after an illustration job
has been accepted, and definitely occurs after the job is finished;
2. the next illustration produced.
Client: “I had an
afterthought, I mean a thought just came to me.” Illustrator: “That’s not an afterthought, it’s an
original thought.” Client: “Nope,
that’s impossible.”
Agent
Noun
1. an individual who mysteriously has the ability to obtain
an illustration commission so they can get a commission;
2. someone who can make money simply by answering a phone;
3. an illustrator’s better half.
Usage: “I’m really
lucky…I got a real bargain…my agent only takes 38% of my gross earnings.”
Usage: “When I call my
agent she’s at lunch…I guess they serve lunch in New York City from 9:00am
‘till 6:30pm.”
Airbrush
Noun
1. a rather unpredictable apparatus with a mind of its own
for simultaneously applying paint to an illustration and anything else in the
immediate vicinity.
2. a computer mouse or track pad.
Usage: “I spent twenty hours on that piece and in less than a second that damn airbrush ruined it.”
Alcohol
Noun
1. a substance used externally to wipe equipment and
surfaces clean, and taken internally to wipe memories clean;
2. a liquid responsible for reducing the net worth of an illustrator's income by 50%;
3. an art director’s only friend.
Illustrator A: “Can you
believe the nerve of that guy. Telling me that my Mick Jag…ger looked like
Steven Twy…Tsy…Tyler.” Illustrator B: “Boy,
that’s a lot of nerve. Any idiot can tell the difference from one from the
other. Bartender, more alcohol.” Illustrator A: “Yeah, I told…uh…told that guy where to get off. Do you want to hear
what I told him…huh…do you? Well do yooo? Illustrator B: “Uh…sure. I know what I would ‘ave told him.
Do you want to hear what I would have told that guy.” Illustrator A: “Uh…I don’t know. Illustrator B: “Uh…well that’s OK. Tell me what you told him.” Illustrator A: “I told him…well here’s what I told him…I
told him, I’ll do that illustration complete over again…and that really got
him…it served him right.” Illustrator B: “NOW THAT’S WHAT I’M TALKIN’ ABOUT…YOU REALLY GOT THAT BASTERD.”
Alkyd
Noun
1. a type of paint that even its manufacturers have no idea
what it’s made of;
2. a term sometimes confused with “alkie” by those who are;
3. a type of paint always on clearance at art supply stores.
Usage: “I’m trying out
these paints called alkyds. They are made from recycled war materials and
they’re manufactured in the Balkan Islands, or perhaps it's the Falkland Islands.”
Ambiguity
Noun
1. the most desirable form of conversation to use when
addressing a client;
2. what every sketch proposal should impart;
3. a tool used by clients to describe the whereabouts of the
check that was cut in payment for illustration services rendered.
Usage: “You know, after
an hour long discussion, I’m not really sure at all what they thought about the
illustration, the client was lost in ambiguity.”
Usage: “First they
said ‘approved’, then they said ‘stop’, then they said ‘revise’, then they said
‘stop the revise’, then they said ‘go with the revise’, then they said ‘stop
the revise’, and then they said ‘go with the original’. Oh, the ambiguity of it
all.”
Ambivalence
Noun
1. a state of mind inherent in a student who was forced by
parents to study graphic design instead of illustration;
2. the impression an illustration leaves when it had to be approved by a committee;
3. a sentiment that develops during the third round of
sketches.
Client: “I gave you hours
and hours of input for this assignment,
and all I see in this illustration is ambivalence.” Illustrator: “Ditto.”
Usage: “I’ll have to
channel my inner ambivalence to get through this assignment.”
Analogous
Adjective
1. how to describe your opinion versus the opinion of your
client;
2. a descriptive term for two colors that don’t look good
together;
3. the way you think things should be done as opposed to the
way Adobe wants you to do them.
Usage: “My gangsta
visuals are analogous with gangsta lyrics.”
Usage: “It may be analogous to
what you are seeing in this illustration, but it’s definitely a hand.”
Anatomy
Noun
1. knowledge that every illustrator cannot be without, but
many illustrators have yet to acquire;
2. the study of the separate parts of an organism to
ascertain their meaning and function, for example a clients brain.
Usage: “I though anatomy was all about drawing things you
can see like with naked models. I never realized it’s about drawing things you
can’t see like with overweight naked models. I take my hat off to Peter Paul
Rubens.”
Usage: “My talent is
such that no undertaking, however vast in size...has ever surpassed my courage.”
– Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640), Flemish baroque painter.
Animation
Noun
1. 120,000 illustrations of the same thing;
2. an illustrator with attention deficit disorder;
3. something that has nothing to do with a cartoon.
Usage: “So, you say
you like animation and illustration. Have you decided whether you want to be an
animator who animates, an animator who illustrates, an illustrator who
animates, an illustrator who illustrates, or an animator who does nothing?”
Anime
Noun
1. Japanese animation originating
in Japan, produced by Japanese artists, for a Japanese audience, about Japanese
culture, in Japan;
2. not animation or illustration created for an American
audience, by American artists, for American animation companies, or American
publications in America;
3. an animated character with either very large eyes or very
small eyes; and either very large mouths or very small mouths; and sometimes with
no mouth at all.
Usage: “If that
character isn’t a cat, then why does it have cat ears on top of its head…what’s
that…you say it’s anime?”
Anthropomorphism
Noun
1. the phenomenon whereby an illustration appears to
resemble the illustrator who created it;
2. an attempt by a client to become something they are not,
say, an illustrator.
Usage: “For this
assignment, I need you to conjure up some of your magical anthropomorphism…I
need you to make a hummingbird look like Cee Lo Green.”
Usage: “Why is it that
every living thing in all your illustrations looks just like you?”
Anxiety
Noun
1. something every illustrator should never be without;
2. the inspirational part of an illustrator’s creative
process;
3. a state one will soon be in when illustrating for
PepsiCo.
Illustrator: “Well
doctor, I have an anxiety attack every time I pick up a pencil.” Doctor: “Have you thought about using a computer,
that way you wouldn’t have to draw?”
Usage: "I don't
have big anxieties. I wish I did. I'd be much more interesting." - Roy
Lichtenstein (1923-1997), American painter.
Application
Noun
1. created with the use of a pencil, pen, palette knife,
brush, or an application;
2. a digital tool for use in place of a pencil, pen, palette
knife, brush, or skills;
3. a form of entertainment.
Usage: “With this application
I can create a set of brushes out of a head of lettuce…I’d like to see Winsor
& Newton do that!”
Usage: “I promise you
it will be done soon…I know it has been six weeks, but I’m waiting for the last
application of varnish to dry.”
Applied Arts
Noun
1. a term used by old timers and educators to refer to
illustration and design.
2. art that has a purpose;
2. an oxymoron according to some.
Usage: “You mean to
tell me you’ve signed up for an applied arts degree…what the hell is that?”
Appropriation
Noun
1. an extreme form of admiration by one artist for another
artist’s work;
2. an activity used to overcome a mental block;
3. fan art.
Art Director: “I used
the idea for the approbation.” Illustrator: “Umm…I think you mean appropriation.”
Usage: “I beg to
differ with you…I find your appropriation to be quite inappropriate.”
Archival
Adjective
1. any illustration that is two years old;
2. the one illustration an illustrator wishes he or she never did.
2. the one illustration an illustrator wishes he or she never did.
Usage: “That was a long time ago…I don’t even recognize that piece...I was a different person back then. All I know is that it was archival up ‘till now.
Arrangement
Noun
1. a contract that is used in place of a legitimate
agreement;
2. a bargain with and for the client;
3. something you understood as having one meaning while your
client believes it means another;
4. an understanding that never resulted in a payment of any
kind.
Usage: “The
illustrator and I have an arrangement…she does the work…and I make her do it
all over again...at no extra cost.”
Usage: “Will we get
you a contract? No, we don’t use contracts around here. They’re a waste of
resources, but we will make you an arrangement.”
Art
Noun
1. that which is not produced by an illustrator;
2. the thing referred to that an illustrator produces, but cannot
qualify as;
3. a popular game played at parties.
adjective
4. a descriptive form of a joke.
Usage: “If it ain't hangin’ in a museum than it ain't art.”
Usage: “Being able to hit that spittoon like
that is a real art”
Art Appreciation
Noun
1. a non-intuitive ability that must be taught to a
non-artist.
2. without or lacking the term illustration;
3. art history lite:
Usage: “First off, a nitwit
like you needs to learn some manners, and then you need to learn some art
appreciation.”
Artboard
Noun
1. a naked, white compressed paper rendering surface, that
illustrators stare at, and it stares back;
2. an uninteresting art class.
Usage: “Will you cover up that artboard...it’s indecent…for God's sake!”
Art Criticism
Noun
1. the self professed right of every citizen on the planet;
2. a profession adopted by failed social critics, literary
critics, food critics, movie critics, music critics, and undecided trolling
critics.
3. an occupation that sees art as being only black or white,
ignoring all the color in between.
Usage: “Strangely enough,
there are no critiques of art criticism.”
Usage: “If you look
back into the recent past of a
person who writes art criticism, you will find a drawing of a stick figure.”
Art Director
Noun
1. a person who takes orders from one person and gives them
to another person;
2. a person who occasionally tries to illustrate a project,
but with disastrous results;
3. someone who has lost the ability to listen;
4. an administrator.
Usage: “Even though
I’m just an acquaintance, the art director seems to think we are married.”
Usage: “He’s a well
respected art director for allowing other people do his work for him.”
Artgum
Noun
1. an eraser that makes nothing disappear except itself;
2. a sticky mass found underneath drawing tables in art
classrooms that can be used as an eraser in a pinch.
Usage: “I'll get rid of that pencil line if it's the last thing I do--hand me that box of Artgums.”
Artist
Noun
1. someone who cannot illustrate;
2. an illustrator that has never had a paid commission.
Classified Advertisement: “Artist available for commissions, paid offers only, illustration assignments acceptable.”
Classified Advertisement: “Artist available for commissions, paid offers only, illustration assignments acceptable.”
Artistic Temperament
Noun
1. an attitude that results in a cynical redefinition of
words that pertain to illustrators;
2. aesthetic high blood pressure;
3. a license to ignore the obvious.
Usage: “The artistic
temperament is a disease which afflicts amateurs.” - G. K.
Chesterton (1874-1936), English author.
Usage: “Artists of a
large and wholesome vitality get rid of their art easily, as they breathe
easily or perspire easily. But in artists of less force, the thing becomes a
pressure, and produces a definite pain, which is called the artistic
temperament.” - G. K.
Chesterton (1874-1936), English author.
Art Supply
Noun
1. an overpriced common tool used by an illustrator;
2. an object or set of objects that help an illustrator
remain in debt.
Usage: “But honey, I have to have those art supplies. The baby will have to go without for just a little longer.”
Usage: “But honey, I have to have those art supplies. The baby will have to go without for just a little longer.”
ASAP
Abbreviation
1. a term used to describe a commission when there is no
concern for quality;
2. referring to a deadline before the time the assignment
was even given out;
3. (a)lways (s)ecure (a) (p)aycheck.
Usage: “ASAP is
impossible.”
Usage: “You got lucky
on this deadline, it’s only ASAP. It could have been an ASAPASAP, or even an
ASAPASAPASAP.”
Asymmetrical
Adjective
1. the relationship between an illustrator’s effort and the
compensation provided for that effort;
2. a compositional arrangement whereby things an illustrator
has trouble rendering can be made much smaller;
3. a difference regarding what a client says and an
illustrator does.
Usage: “That
illustration is so asymmetrical that if you hung on a wall it would lean to the
right.”
Usage: “It’s making me
dizzy…it’s so heavy on one side I have to look at it sideways…I’m going to have
to take two asymmetrical pills to put it right.”
Attitude
Noun
1. something illustrators are not allowed to have, and
clients deny having;
2. the angle a client turns his or her head while viewing a
sketch proposal;
Client: “Do I detect
an attitude in that red you are using?” Illustrator: “It’s only a color.” Client: “Yes,
but I don’t like what it is suggesting.” Illustrator: “What’s that?” Client: “It is
clearly saying buy my competitor’s product.”
Audience
Noun
1. a fictitious group of invisible people;
2. a theoretical concept referred to over and over again by
a client;
3. a group of people who insist on talking instead of paying
attention to what they are looking at it.
Usage: “As an account
executive, I’ve spent hundreds of hours in focus groups, and I can tell you, when
it comes to sports, the audience won’t understand it. An illustration that has
an athlete in it is absurd. It’s all about the ball.”
I’d like to acknowledge the following individuals who
provided inspiration for this project. G.K.C., L.T., B.A., B.D., B.H., J.P.,
G.H., B.F., and T.L.
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