Tag Archives: dominick santise

2021 Calendar

New Year's Time Square Animation
Animation by Veronica Lawlor

Happy New Year!

Studio 1482 would like to take this opportunity to thank every one of you that visited our site, liked our work, or just offered a note of support this year. It made a very difficult situation a little bit easier knowing you were there.

Because we couldn’t physically mail our annual calendars to you this year we have made them available as a FREE pdf download. We hope that our art brings you joy in the year to come.

DOWNLOAD THE CALENDAR HERE

If you prefer a print edition you can purchase it at cost here

 

Wishing you all the best in 2021!

Studio 1482 Drawing Event

Studio 1482 was proud to host our inaugural zoom drawing night on October 30th, as a way to say thank you to our clients and stay connected during these trying times.

Drawing from the model is close to our hearts, and we had a great time that evening working with our long-time collaborator, the performance artist Kika. She modeled for us in an dizzying array of stripes; closing out the 3 hour session by wearing a traditional Spanish mantilla.

Below are some drawings created that evening by our Studio members, with a few words about what drawing means to them:

GREG BETZA: Drawing is my way to confidently communicate, artistically. It allows me to share what I see, feel and think freely without hesitation.

SEE MORE OF GREG’S ILLUSTRATION WORK HERE

MARGARET HURST: Drawing is the visual communication of my feelings and thoughts.

SEE MORE OF MARGARET’S ILLUSTRATION WORK HERE

VERONICA LAWLOR: Drawing is my way to connect with others, tell a story, and hopefully bring a little beauty to the world. It’s an instinctive response to a moment, almost like breathing.

SEE MORE OF VERONICA’S ILLUSTRATION WORK HERE

DOMINICK SANTISE: Drawing is my constant. No matter what comes next, it starts with a drawing.

SEE MORE OF DOMINICK’S ILLUSTRATION WORK HERE

——

To find out more about future events, email us at info@studio1482.com

Formed in 2005, Studio 1482 is an illustration cooperative. Each illustrator works independently to bring their unique point of view and personal style to an assignment, or collaboratively to create a larger vision for our clients.

Our specialty is reportage and reportage-inspired illustration. We work traditionally and digitally to create unique and aesthetic visual solutions.

Together, Studio 1482 members have more than 25 years of collective professional experience in the areas of editorial, publishing, advertising, concept development, reportage, fine art, graphic design, and arts education. Awards and honors include American Illustration, Communication Arts, Latin American Ilustración, the Society of Illustrators, the Society of Illustrators of LA, the Rx Club, and the World Illustration Awards.

ARMCHAIR TRAVELS – BETHLEHEM, PA

I’m excited to introduce Armchair Travels, an invitation to travel around the world through the reportage illustration of Studio 1482. We have gathered art from our travels to share with you, in the hopes that while you can’t get out and see these places (yet), our experiences may bring some happiness and light to your day. Please check back often as we will be posting new adventures weekly.

Enjoy Bethlehem, PA…by Dominick Santise

I have had the fortune to walk the grounds of the Colosseum in Rome, where emperors watched alongside the general public as gladiators fought and the floor of the great amphitheater was flooded for naval battles. Just outside a train station a few hundred miles away, in an alcove under an awning across the street from what would pass for a tiny traveling carnival in the US, I waited without an umbrella for a storm to pass so I could fulfill a 15 year fantasy of wandering the streets of Pompeii, nearly two millennia after it was buried by volcanic ash. Six years of Latin rushing back as I remembered the lessons of ancient engineering and I hopped across the stepping stones in the middle of the street.

This is a story of a great American ruin.

The first time I drove into Bethlehem, Pennsylvania I was looking for a ghost—some still living remnant of a time past. I got off the highway outside the city and made my way along what looked like any other American strip. Diners, gas stations, mini malls and McDonalds—standard American culture where dreams have faded and time has moved on. The further off the highway I ventured, the more I came to terms with the idea that I wouldn’t find what I was after. A spur of the moment trip in a time before smart phones, I had no guide for what I was searching for. As I rounded a bend and came over the last hill my eyes fell upon the valley before me.

If the ruins in Italy were symbols of the long ago fallen Roman Empire, the ruins along the Lehigh River were a marker of the more recent fall of what may be the first period of the Industrial Empire. We are living through its evolution as we speak. Year by year, decade by decade, we become further removed from the machine that built the modern world we live in today, forged not by solitary hands of blacksmiths of a bygone era but by giant titans and blast furnaces that are already a thing of the past. In just a century those blast furnaces have been replaced by sub-atomic collisions and molecular engineering. A few now produce what took the strength of an army.

It was a chance occurrence that I was within an hours drive of Bethlehem Steel that day. I would return twice over the years following to draw and shoot the relics—the source of iron for much of the mighty skyline in Manhattan and so much of the country. Those visits stay with me to this day. Our culture and history became clearer each time I went out. From folk songs and pop anthems to labor movements and the blue collar working class, there is so much to discover when we have the chance to travel across this great landscape.

To see more Armchair Travels from the reportage artists of Studio 1482, please click HERE.

Thank You Card to Our Heroes

Dear Friends and Colleagues,

We hope that you and your loved ones are safe and well in this time of crisis.

Here at Studio 1482, we want to thank the medical professionals, first responders, and essential workers who are out there working for us every day. So we each created an illustrated thank you card for them.

To give to the heroes in your life, click the links below each illustration to download the images as either shareable digital files or for print on Avery 5315 note cards:

Dominick Santise: Prevailing Spring
Link to HiRes Digital File
Link to LoRes Digital File
Link to Print-Ready Avery 5315 File


Greg Betza: Stay Home
Link to HiRes Digital File
Link to LoRes Digital File
Link to Print-Ready Avery 5315 File


Margaret Hurst: Heart Angels
Link to HiRes Digital File
Link to LoRes Digital File
Link to Print-Ready Avery 5315 File


Veronica Lawlor: Love Has No Boundaries
Link to HiRes Digital File
Link to LoRes Digital File
Link to Print-Ready Avery 5315 File


Be safe, be well.

Kind Regards,
Studio 1482 Illustration
Dominick Santise • Greg Betza • Margaret Hurst • Veronica Lawlor

Navy Pier Ferris Wheel Chicago | Greg Betza

Chicago

Navy Pier Ferris Wheel Chicago | Greg Betza

Last week, Studio 1482 illustrator Dominick Santise and I attended the Workbook Creative Carnival in Chicago. We then spent the next 2 days creating reportage drawings around the city. Now I love NY, but Chicago is like a friendly, clean, slightly more relaxed version…which frankly is nice from time to time. We navigated the city by foot, walking from landmark to landmark, checking out the wonderful public art all along the way, Picasso, Chagall, Dubuffet, etc. It was an inspiring few days and I’m excited to share of few of my drawings with you.

Navy Pier Chicago | Greg Betza

Chicago Bean | Greg Betza

Chicago Theater | Greg Betza

Chicago People | Greg Betza

Chicago River | Greg Betza

Willis Tower Chicago | Greg Betza

Picasso Chicago | Greg Betza

Chicago Theater | Greg Betza

Trump Chicago | Greg Betza