5 Great Draftsmen: Chris Van Allsburg / Bill Sienkiewicz / James Jean
(part 1 in a series of 3)
The ability to evoke a narrative with great draftsmanship and a ’lively’ line is something most artists strive for – we’ll look at five illustrators that have it in abundance.
Gustav Klimt, Franklin Booth, Chris Van Allsburg, Bill Sienkiewicz and James Jean – all have been recognized as gifted artists with countless awards bestowed upon them. While they all have distinctive styles they share many qualities as artists. A strong narrative displayed throughout books or graphic novels is one commonality between these stellar artists. Another would be the strong sense of anatomy necessary when the work is reliant on the human figure. A sense of drama and mastery of composition and brilliant handling of color (even with the black and white work of Booth!) are evident in all of these artists.
Chris Van Allsburg
Chris Van Allsburg is another talented artist with an indentifiable style of linework. His books (Van Allsburg is also an author) have been entertaining children for decades and a couple have even been adapted into motion pictures (Jumanji and Polar Express). While many of the books are children’s books Van Allsburg has shown that exploring the darker corners of the human psyche is rich fodder for his work. There is an incredible stillness, a perfect snapshot of frozen reality that gives his work a unique signature. Unique vantage points and clever perspective along with deft-linework permeate every Van Allsburg piece.



Bill Sienkiewicz
Bill Sienkiewicz is known for his comic-art as well as his work in music industry (and characteristic style that, at times, has some echoes of Klimt). Slashes of color over sure-handed linework, a sense that everything in each piece has been filtered through the artist’s mind comes across as well…an internal consistency that all the artists here have, in their own, indelible style. Combining mixed media and collage continues to push the expressionistic qualities of his work as his career progresses.



James Jean
The envy of many creatives, James Jean is as one of the hottest artists at the moment. Another artist/illustrator who has risen to prominence from graphic novels/comics—initially from covers illustrated for DC Comics. Truly an artist of our time, masterfully bridging the traditional and digital realms, he has a moved from illustration to more of a fine art pursuit. His blog has a huge following and has to managed to transcend the stigma sometimes associated with ‘comic books’. As awards from the Society of Illustrator’s and a diverse client base counting the New York Times, Rolling Stone and Prada among them. Sharing his proces has become a part of his connection with the audience (one of his many web sites – Project Recess is an online destination that is ‘a book blog and a store designed by James Jean’.) Smooth brush work and and amazing use of color permeate Jean’s work. Influences from classical Chinese and Japanese aesthetics combine with both a humor and irony and that mark any piece by James Jean.




Peter has 15 years experience in graphic design and illustration. Exposure to various industries (and various creative roles) both inspires and invigorates the breadth of his work.
kimminsdesign.com / twitter: @pkimmins


Great post! Truly inspirational. I am totally blown away by James Jean…wow.
a pretty ridiculously talented crew.
It was fun to work on it—James Jean inspires a lot of people, myself included.