Stepping from the world of graphic design or animation into freelance illustration will be daunting for a complete vary of causes. One of many hardest issues about it’s discovering your individual particular person model – a recognisable visible language, or a universe, even, that units you aside. A glance that distinguishes your work from all the opposite illustrators on the market, to not point out the image-making machines which are reshaping the trade.
Liverpool-based illustrator Craig Boylan approached this problem in a singular method, creating a personality known as Baumann who exemplifies his model and will be positioned in nearly any illustration. Baumann seems like a plastic toy and is designed for unbelievable flexibility, with tubular limbs and swappable options. He is a bit like a Playmobil determine, however he is been crafted to Craig’s personal splendid.


Baumann demo photos

“The character initially got here from some Bauhaus-style character exploration and was actually the beginning of my entire model. The limbs and head have this look as a result of I wished the method to be so simple as attainable,” explains Craig.
Again within the Nineteen Twenties, the Bauhaus motion in Germany explored methods to mix inventive craft with the probabilities of industrialisation and mass manufacturing. In lots of circumstances, minimalism was the reply – eradicating any element that the equipment couldn’t replicate. Craig adopted an analogous methodology, creating the Baumann type as an archetype to which sure components will be added, leading to one-off illustrations.
“I’ve labored in 3D movement design for years, so I am conscious of simply how advanced and time-consuming 3D will be, and I wished to maneuver away from that,” he says. “Although the model has progressed from these early levels, I really feel the essence remains to be in there, with the characters having a really manufactured really feel. You can even have the character develop into anybody by including totally different components similar to hair, hats, glasses, et cetera, like shopping for an add-on pack for a toy.”
A You Want a Drink spot for BBC Science Focus

Craig’s model is integral to the Verdant model
Not solely will you see a model of Baumann in Craig’s illustrations for BBC Science Focus Journal’s article You Want a Drink, however he is centre stage in Verdant Brewery’s Putty IPA branding and within the firm’s Be Bizarre marketing campaign. In each initiatives, he additionally seems in animated type.
Don’t be concerned, although, Baumann can do greater than drink, and sooner or later Craig plans to show Baumann variants into artwork toys. He is already experimenting with 3D-printed statuettes.
Together with playfulness and a way of physicality, Craig’s work typically has a intelligent, refined angle. He enjoys juxtaposing the light-hearted enjoyable his characters and first color palettes counsel with somewhat darkish humour.


Human evolution, noticed by AI, in Midjourney Menagerie

“For example, there’s the illustration Midjourney’s Menagerie, the place we see robots taking a look at people in a cage, like a zoo, and all they’re doing is taking a look at telephones. That is concerning the AI takeover and the potential that people aren’t essentially the most clever beings on Earth,” says Craig.
His Glad Drugs picture is one other instance the place idea and commentary come to the fore. “With the Glad Drugs blister pack, it is fairly a daring and evocative picture, and the emojis are fairly actually a manufactured method of expressing emotion. While you look somewhat nearer at this picture, you see the grimace capsule, and I believe it offers a barely uneasy feeling,” he provides.

Glad drugs. Which emoji would you swallow?

Craig’s espresso ritual, illustrated
Craig has VJed, labored in movement design at an advert company and freelanced for 10 years, however has spent the final two of these resolving his model round Baumann. Now he feels he can take it additional.
Maybe the subsequent step shall be to carry Baumann into the true world, at scale – a bit just like the inventive duo Craig and Karl, who create epic installations from their bases in New York and London. And, when you’re in Liverpool, look out for Craig’s free illustration and artwork zine, Agog!, which highlights creatives from around the globe.

