English Illustrator Iain MacArthur has two very distinctive styles, one surreal and fantastical and the other photo-realistic; we talk to him to find out which is closest to his heart
Hi Iain, what are you up to at the moment?
Aloha, I’ve been rather busy with commission pieces and also some new stuff that I’m uploading onto my website. Been working on 2 projects this week. One for on a shirt commission for a dude in the Caribbean and the other one for Nike on a footlocker tee project for the summer. Whilst juggling that I’m also working on some more big scale surreal portraits.

All images © Iain MacArthur 2010
When and why did you first start making art?
I was a drawing maniac when I was a little whippersnapper, doing little doodles on the side of my schoolbooks in class. Though I always got told off for it, I couldn’t help it, it was a habit something for me to do when I was bored. I found it hard paying attention in a class that wasn’t interesting to me. I got into art passionately when I was in college. That’s when I wanted to do illustration and painting as a career. Artists like Max Ernst, Alfonse Mucha, and Bruno 9li where one of many artists that inspire me to do become an artist.
What inspires you?
I get inspiration from elements surrounding me, things that catch my eye like furniture patterns and geometrical patterns. I also like to look at birds or animals for inspiration; most of my work has animal reference.

You have two quite different styles, one quite surreal and fantastical and the other more photo-realistic, which do you prefer creating?
I do love drawing photo-realistic portraits in my spare time, just like making things look perfect when drawing faces or figures. Usually it takes me the whole day to finish drawing a portrait but when I’m finished I’m never satisfied from the way it looks. I’m my own worst critic. I guess some artists are like that with their pieces.
Though drawing realistic portraits are fun to do I also like integrating intricate patterns into the pieces to make it stand out more. Make it look like something is coming out of them like there inner self or it could be there emotion of happiness.

How do you go about creating your work?
When creating a piece it depends I mostly use pencil and pigment pens to construct my subjects. It’s a long process. When I do color images I use Photoshop and color it on there with a drawing tablet. I listen to music, which helps a lot when I’m drawing. It gets me motivated and focused on what I’m drawing. I like working on a big scale, at the moment I’m working on A2 or A3 but I’m pushing myself to go bigger.



What have you been listening to?
Anything with a good beat and rhythm gets me going in. At the moment I mostly listen to daft punk, beastie boys, battles and vampire weekend. I’m really getting into vampire weekend’s new album.
What’s next for you?
Hmm… possibly making big scale portrait pieces and getting them in exhibitions if I can. I would love to do that this year! And also want to do more commission work for magazines or poster designs, at the moment I’m doing shirt commissions which is good but want to broaden on doing different types of commissions, if I’m lucky (fingers crossed).
See more of Iain’s work at www.iainmacarthur.carbonmade.com
