This article's tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia.(November 2022) |
Kat Reeder is a Peruvian-American illustrator, portrait artist, and graphic designer. Her work combines elements of pop art, animation, art nouveau, and Latin American art styles. Reeder was born in Lima, Peru, grew up in Miami, Florida, and now lives in Honolulu, Hawaii. [1] Michael Bierut, famed graphic designer and partner at Pentagram, has described Reeder's poster art as "brilliant," calling it "...the kind of delirious synthesis of concept, style and execution that got me crazily excited when I first became aware of graphic design as a teenager." [2] Reeder has been profiled by The Los Angeles Times, El Comercio and La Republica in her native country, Peru, and other media in Japan and around the world. [3]
Kat Reeder’s works have been shown in galleries in Hawaii, Japan, Australia, and throughout the American mainland from Southern California to Miami. She has worked with major corporate clients including Starwood Hotels, Sony, The PGA Tour, Vans, and LeSportsac. Her illustrations have been published in both local and national publications, including Hawaii Magazine and Exotica Moderne. [4] In 2021 she was also commissioned for a private fashion illustration event by Louis Vuitton Hawaii. Her work can be seen in album and poster designs for musical acts such as Hirie and Raiatea Helm in her home state of Hawaii, as well as Grammy nominees Ozomatli.
Reeder began work as an illustrator shortly after moving to Honolulu in 2009. She scored her first solo show in August of that year. Her show caught the attention of the organizer of The Van’s Triple Crown of Surfing, who commissioned Reeder to illustrate the poster for the upcoming event. [5] Due to the poster’s vintage vibe that expressed Hawaii’s surfing heyday in the 1970’s, it became a popular local image. Reeder’s work began selling in Hawaii, Australia, Japan, and California shortly thereafter.
In 2012, she was tapped to design a line of Hawaii-exclusive bags for LeSportsac. [6] [7] The project led to a number of write-ups in the local press. This allowed Reeder to expand her business to include more illustration work for major hotel chains such as Fairmont, Sheraton, and Westin, as well as the famed historic Waikiki hotels, The Royal Hawaiian and The Moana Surfrider. She has continued to work with corporate clients and expanded her repertoire to include highly sought-after custom portraits, with waiting lists sometimes extending well over a year.
In 2021, Reeder was commissioned by filmmaker Paul Thomas Anderson to create poster art and other key art for his film Licorice Pizza, starring Alana Haim, Cooper Hoffman, Bradley Cooper, Sean Penn, Bennie Safdie, Tom Waits, and Maya Rudolph. Reeder’s work was used as the primary movie poster, and as advertising throughout Los Angeles, New York, and cities world-wide.
Reeder lives in Honolulu, Hawaii with her son and her husband Adam Reeder.
Tiki culture is an American-originated art, music, and entertainment movement inspired by Polynesian, Melanesian, and Micronesian cultures, and by Oceanian art. Influential cultures to Tiki culture include Australasia, Melanesia, Micronesia, Polynesia, the Caribbean Islands, and Hawaii. The name comes from Tiki, the Māori name for the first human, often represented in the form of hei-tiki, a pendant and important taonga. The hei-tiki was often appropriated by Europeans as a commercialised good luck charm, hence the name of Tiki culture. Despite spanning over 10,000 miles and including many different unrelated cultures, religions, and languages, Tiki aesthetic is considered by some to be amalgamated into one "fantasia of trans-Pacific cultures" and "colonial nostalgia". Because of this, and the simplistic view of the Pacific taken by the aesthetic, Tiki culture has often proved controversial.
A cartoonist is a visual artist who specializes in both drawing and writing cartoons or comics. Cartoonists differ from comics writers or comics illustrators/artists in that they produce both the literary and graphic components of the work as part of their practice.
Martin Denny was an American pianist, composer, and arranger. Known as the "father of exotica," he was a multi-instrumentalist and could play a number of percussion instruments. In a long career that saw him performing up to 3 weeks prior to his death, he toured the world popularizing his brand of lounge music which included exotic percussion, imaginative rearrangements of popular songs, and original songs that celebrated Tiki culture.
Arthur Hunt Lyman was a Hawaiian jazz vibraphone and marimba player. His group popularized a style of faux-Polynesian music during the 1950s and 1960s which later became known as exotica. His albums became favorite stereo-effect demonstration discs during the early days of the stereophonic LP album for their elaborate and colorful percussion, deep bass and 3-dimensional recording soundstage. Lyman was known as "the King of Lounge music."
Robert M. Peak was an American commercial illustrator. He is best known for his developments in the design of the modern film poster.
Barbara Nessim is an American artist, illustrator, and educator.
Ethel Reed was an American graphic artist. In the 1890s, her works received critical acclaim in America and Europe. In 2016, they were on exhibit in the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Museum of Modern Art in New York, the National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C., the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, the Frederick R. Weisman Art Museum of the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, and the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City.
Surf art is visual art about or related to the sport of surfing, waves, and the culture that surrounds beaches.
Dean Cornwell was a left-handed American illustrator and muralist. His oil paintings were frequently featured in popular magazines and books as literary illustrations, advertisements, and posters promoting the war effort. Throughout the first half of the 20th century he was a dominant presence in American illustration. At the peak of his popularity he was nicknamed the "Dean of Illustrators".
Jerry W. McDaniel is an American heterogeneous artist; graphics artist, illustrator, communication designer, educator and modernist painter. He distinguished himself by doing advertising work for numerous large corporations, creating posters, doing book and magazine illustrations, and influencing numerous students of advertising and communication design. In parallel with his commercial career he was a prolific multimedia artist, painting in acrylic and in watercolor, in various fields such as landscape, portraits, sports, and political graphics. He also designed sports stamps. He was one of the first illustrators to embrace computer graphics.
Donny Gillies is a San Francisco artist and designer best known for his work with metal band Metallica and Stern Pinball. Donny’s early career started with gig posters for local underground Ottawa bands and sign painting for local bars that eventually led to painting, airbrushing, design and illustration work with a large selection of clients including Swedish rock band The Hellacopters and later Metallica, Snap-on Tools, Stern Pinball, Fender Guitars, Dunlop, Powell Peralta, Vans, Creature skateboards, Kid Robot and Pabst Blue Ribbon. His influenaces include: Frank Frazetta, Jack Kirby, Chris Foss, and Ed Roth.
Edward Penfield was an American illustrator in the era known as the "Golden Age of American Illustration" and he is considered the father of the American poster. His work has been included in almost every major book on American Illustration or the history of the poster. He is also a major figure in the evolution of graphic design.
Fernand-Louis Gottlob was a French graphic artist whose caricatures appeared in many humorous magazines.
Bradley Parker is an American cartoonist and painter. His works have been shown at the Kona Oceanfront Gallery and the La Luz de Jesus Gallery in Los Angeles. Prior to his career as a painter, Parker was an illustrator in the film industry and a cartoonist, working for mainstream publishers such as DC, Marvel, and Chaos! Comics. He is also known for his LGBT-themed comics, sometimes published under the pen name Ace Moorcock.
Naiad June Einsel was an American commercial illustrator and artist. Over the course of her career, Einsel completed artwork for magazines, newspapers, and brands. Einsel, along with husband Walter, was inducted into the Society of Illustrators' Hall of Fame in 2008.
Licorice Pizza is a 2021 American romantic comedy-drama film written and directed by Paul Thomas Anderson. It stars Alana Haim and Cooper Hoffman in their film debuts, alongside an ensemble supporting cast including Sean Penn, Tom Waits, Bradley Cooper, and Benny Safdie. Set in 1973, the film follows the relationship between a teen actor (Hoffman) and a directionless young woman (Haim).
Kirsten Ulve is a graphic artist who resides in New York City. She is best known for her caricatures of notable people and editorial illustration for newspapers and magazines. Ulve has also designed for an array of other mediums including a marquee for Broadway and stamps for the United States Post Office. Kirsten is married to WFMU radio personality Clay Pigeon.
Carol Mintum Barker is an English artist-designer, author and illustrator who is notable for her poster designs, postage stamps and book illustrations, many of them for children.
Beverly Kauiokanahele Noa was a Hawaiian hula dancer. Noa was the 1952 winner of the Miss Hawaii contest and was inducted into the Hawaiian Music Hall of Fame in 2014.
The Tikiyaki Orchestra is a seven piece modern exotica band that combines the sounds of traditional exotica with the Music Of Hawaii, surf music, crime jazz, lounge music and space age pop to create a soundtrack for the Tiki sub-culture.