It’s always a euphoric feeling to meet great people whether you know them by their work or in person. Although when you discover someone’s work, it builds common ground. Mark Sneddon’s Instagram profile or the Sneddonist website is one of them. It says many things about him, yet you only know his art and perspective. When we started to dig deeper and see his other works, I felt connected. Obviously, he is very creative and productive because most of the work on his website shows that he has an urge to create artistically. And when you see the about page, it all makes sense.
“This is the website of designer, artist and all round creative imposter Mark Alexander Sneddon.
I’m a graphic designer who was frustrated by many aspects of the industry and needed to find another way to express myself creatively and unconditionally, free from overthink and design baggage.”
Mark Sneddon and his artistic works
London-based artist and designer Mark Sneddon has experience in many areas such as branding, brand guardianship, corporate, engineering, state government, architecture. And his corporate work shows his expertise as well.
Mark Sneddon worked at Tate Modern between 2003-2005. This experience enabled him to love and do art again. After that, he moved to Australia and lived there for eight years. He claims that this time period has a significant influence on him. And we can see that in his work created in this timeline. Sneddon uses pencil, ink, and ideas in this project to remember and strive through his passion for art. His website is a collection of of doodles, sketches, visual outputs of his consciousness.
French-born, Chicago-based Julia Dufossé is a self-taught designer & illustrator. Combining the inspiration from the airbrush aesthetics of the 70s and 80s with her own style in digital, she creates dazzling, dreamy, glowy, and slightly hazy illustrations.
Sebastian Cestaro’s style has a surreal side with a colorful cartoon-like color palette, abstract faces, and big eyes that he uses as a repetitive design element in most of his works also we can call them his signature.
Mark Sneddon Builds a Safe Space for His Stream of Consciousness
It’s always a euphoric feeling to meet great people whether you know them by their work or in person. Although when you discover someone’s work, it builds common ground. Mark Sneddon’s Instagram profile or the Sneddonist website is one of them. It says many things about him, yet you only know his art and perspective. When we started to dig deeper and see his other works, I felt connected. Obviously, he is very creative and productive because most of the work on his website shows that he has an urge to create artistically. And when you see the about page, it all makes sense.
“This is the website of designer, artist and all round creative imposter Mark Alexander Sneddon.
I’m a graphic designer who was frustrated by many aspects of the industry and needed to find another way to express myself creatively and unconditionally, free from overthink and design baggage.”
Mark Sneddon and his artistic works
London-based artist and designer Mark Sneddon has experience in many areas such as branding, brand guardianship, corporate, engineering, state government, architecture. And his corporate work shows his expertise as well.
Mark Sneddon worked at Tate Modern between 2003-2005. This experience enabled him to love and do art again. After that, he moved to Australia and lived there for eight years. He claims that this time period has a significant influence on him. And we can see that in his work created in this timeline. Sneddon uses pencil, ink, and ideas in this project to remember and strive through his passion for art. His website is a collection of of doodles, sketches, visual outputs of his consciousness.
You can see his work by visiting his Sneddonist website, freethinking graphic design research entity Snedlab and Instagram profile.
Source: sneddonist.com
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