hadley_portrait

Hello Rob and thank you for doing this interview with Colovision Magazine.

1 – To Start, tell us a bit about yourself where you were born and where you live…

I grew up in the D.C. area, and I’ve lived in NYC for about 15 years, working as a web designer, illustrator, and animator. I am married with children, and I like tea.
hadley_02

2 – How did you get started in the arts?

Art was a big part of my life growing up—I was always drawing, taking art lessons, and I did cartoon illustrations for my high school newspaper. I went to Cornell University and majored in painting. After school, I wasn’t quite sure what to do. I wasn’t interested in going for an MFA, and I had a hard time finding work in the fine art field. So, I started working as a junior designer for a New York book publisher, and within a few years I was familiar with graphics software. Then, the web started to take off, I got a job as a web designer, and I’ve been doing it ever since. I’ve been lucky to have had a lot of great opportunities over the years to use my illustration and animation skills, both at the places I’ve worked and for freelance projects.

hadley_03

3- Where do yo draw your inspiration from?

Lately, I’ve been sketching a lot of trees. It’s inherently more intuitive process than designing a web site or a logo. It’s not conceptual, it’s direct. Drawing more regularly in my sketchbook has influenced my cartoon and animation work, and even my web design work.

hadley_04

4- Can you describe for us what a regular day is like for you?

Oh jeez. Well, I wake up, tell my kids it’s only 5:45 and go back to sleep, then wake up for real at 6:30, make breakfast for the kids, eat my own breakfast, take the kids to school, or some days I hit the gym and my wife takes them… Get to work at about 9, make myself a cup of tea, do some web designing, go to a meeting, eat lunch, more web design, more tea, go home, read the kids a story and sing them a song, eat dinner with my wife, clean up the dishes, take out the trash, work on whatever project I have going on for an hour or two (longer if it’s a deadline), sometimes I watch a little TV, usually geeky PBS stuff, read, go to bed.

hadley_05

5- What is your most common approach for completing a project?

I try now to talk it through with the client, to understand completely what they actually want before I start. After this initial ‘discovery’ phase, I do a quick and dirty design, character sketch, or animation, and get it in front of the client, to confirm that we’re on the same page. Then, I will do a more finished version, and there will be a few rounds of tweaks. But it’s the up-front discussion and rough drafts that really are essential for making sure there are no surprises later on.

hadley_01

6- Out of all your work what is your favorite piece and why?

A quick sketch I did of a swimming pool out in Montauk NY is my favorite piece right now. It amazes me that I can look at a scene, drag a marker around my sketchbook, and the essence of that place somehow gets recorded onto the piece of paper.

hadley_09

7- Is it easy to make a living in the work that you do?

I am a web designer full-time, doing animation and illustration on the side. So, I wouldn’t say that it’s been easy, but probably easier than doing just illustration or animation. For me, I enjoy the mix.

hadley_10

8- Who is your biggest influence?

For the last few years, my drawing has been hugely influenced by Gary Panter.

9- How important is technology for the work that you do? What tools could you not live with out?

I use Flash to animate, usually drawing right in Flash. For illustration, I like to work on paper with pencil, colored pencil, ink, markers… so technology doesn’t really come into play (though I do sometimes make minor photoshop adjustments if it is going to be used for digital media).

hadley_08

10- How important is color in your work and why?

It really depends on the project. A lot of times I keep my illustrations black and white, or with very minimal color. I like keeping things pared down to the essentials, and maintaining a loose, rough feel. But when color is called for, I like to use a limited number of bright colors. So, it is important, but you might say that I sometimes use the lack of color for effect.

11- Whats your favorite color?

blue

12- Where can people get in contact with you?

www.robhadley.com

Similar Posts:

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Buzz This
Vote on DZone
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Kick It on DotNetKicks.com
Shout it
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

 

This website uses IntenseDebate comments, but they are not currently loaded because either your browser doesn't support JavaScript, or they didn't load fast enough.

Leave a Reply