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Julia Kluge illustrated twenty book reviews. What emerged was a single vision.

A look at how one illustrator turned a full section of literary criticism into a cohesive visual experience
Readers of Germany’s Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung opened the newspaper’s celebrated Literatur supplement and found themselves enveloped in color. Across a full special section timed to coincide with the Leipzig Book Fair, twenty illustrations by Julia Kluge accompanied reviews of the season’s most anticipated titles. One artist threading an entire literary landscape together through a single, unmistakable visual language.

Aaron Fernandez Puts Productivity Panic to Bed
An isometric wireframe bedroom traps a sleepless coder among looming green hands, turning AI’s always-on pressure into something claustrophobic and physical for Bloomberg Businessweek.
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Xinmei Liu Draws the Future with a Visual Grammar Mined from the Past

Four illustrations for MIT Technology Review’s feature on the US-China Mars race show what happens when an illustrator lets the visual language carry conceptual weight.
Commissioned to illustrate a feature on NASA’s defunded Mars Sample Return program and China’s advancing Tianwen-3 mission, Shanghai-born, US-based illustrator Xinmei Liu chose to render the entire series in the visual grammar of mid-century Chinese state propaganda.
Can a Maximalist Composition Have a Hierarchy?

James Clapham packs a new dimension into his work for New Internationalist
James Clapham fills rooms. Bars, city blocks, entire neighborhoods. He packs them with interest until every square centimeter is pulling narrative duty. His compositions for The New Yorker, Bloomberg Businessweek, and The Washington Post are visual stockpiles where you keep finding new jokes. The tradition comes from Bruegel’s peasant panoramas, or even Richard Scarry’s Busytown. But Clapham’s flat digital color and comedic sensibility makes his work entirely contemporary.
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What Happens When You Illustrate a Monthly Column For a Whole Year?

Inside Carmen Casado’s illustrated takeover of the Guardian’s “How To Start” column
The fashion items scattered across the composition read like a thrift store haul from 1987. It’s the kind of image that makes you want to rummage through it. Casado has been illustrating this column since January 2025.
Pete Gamlen Draws a Standoff from Above

Forced perspective turns a failed protest into a commanding composition for The New Yorker
You’re above everyone. Below, tactical officers mill about in helmets and camouflage vests. Gamlen positions us forty feet up in a tree and from there the entire operation shrinks to the scale of a board game.
