illustratore

Pep Carrió

Pep Carrió (Maiorca 1963) is a graphic designer but not only: he draws notebooks; he illustrates his own and other people's books; he publishes books that didn't exist before; he builds the objects he dreams about; he shares his knowledge and his doubts in courses, workshops and blogs.

Paolo Ventura

Paolo Ventura is one of the most original Italian photographers. His works have been exhibited in galleries and museums all over the world, and in the last few years he has mostly focused on painting. Among is books,:War Souvenir (2006), Winter Stories (2009), L’Automa ( 2011), Short Stories (2016), Quarantine Diary (2020) and Paolo Ventura. Photographs and Drawings (2020).

Andrew Knapp

Andrew Knapp is a graphic designer and photographer currently living in Vancouver who has traveled to over 30 countries with Momo the border collie. Along with his commercial photography and design work, he has filmed a TEDx Talk, and worked on projects with brands like Target, Canon, Starbucks and Volvo. He’s amassed a social media following of over a million followers. Andrew continues to live a life devoted to his dogs and the people around them.

Giulia Orecchia

Giulia Orecchia has always lived in Milan. She studied Visual Design at Scuola Politecnica del Design, where, among her teachers, she met Bruno Munari. She mainly illustrates picture books, many of which by renown authors, as well as covers, short stories, novels, poems. She is also a toy designer. She was awarded the Italian Andersen Prize, at its 16th edition. 

Massimiliano Tappari

Massimiliano Tappari was born in 1967. He imagines the world like a big book to flip through, with plenty of characters and plots hidden in everyday objects and landscapes. He published Oooh! Inventario di fotografia and Coffee Break (Corraini). Among his most recent books, created with Chiara Carminati, are A fior di pelle (Nati per leggere Award 2019), Ninna No and Occhio ladro (Italian Andersen Award 2021 for Best Artist Book), Lapis editions. 

Jeugov

Jeugov (Jacopo Riva 1981), a failed lumberjack, was cast away in the field of fashion. Saved by a mermaid, he marries her. They live together in Milan, he misses the woods, she misses the sea, but they have six wonderful children who keep them busy. Now he invents and draws stories for them.

Crockett Johnson

Crockett Johnson was the pen name of the cartoonist and children’s book illustrator David Johnson Leisk, born in New York City in 1906, who first came to prominence as author of the groundbreaking comic strip, Barnaby. Besides illustrating his wife Ruth Krauss’s The Carrot Seed and The Happy Egg, Crockett Johnson created Harold and the Purple Crayon, and six other Harold adventures, which have sold more than two million copies worldwide. Crockett Johnson died in 1975.

Giulia Bernardelli

Giulia Bernardelli, "Bernulia", è nata a Mantova, e cresciuta nella libreria e galleria d'arte di famiglia. Diplomata all'Accademia di Belle Arti di Bologna, ha lavorato con bambini e ragazzi in diversi musei prima di cominciare, quasi per caso, a mischiare illustrazione, fotografia e grafica. Ne è nato un lavoro che definisce su misura per sé.
Ama la natura e tutto ciò che è selvatico e sincero. 

Lucio Schiavon

Lucio Schiavon illustrator and graphic designer born in Venice. He has collaborated with Fabrica, La Biennale di Venezia, Armando Testa Agency. He illustrates books for the publisher Nuages in Milan and exhibited at Fondazione Bevilacqua La Masa, in Venice. He won International Motion Art Award in New York and Berlin Interfilm Festival Short Movie 2015 with two different short films in animation. 

Photo © Carta Carbone Milano

Francesca Biasetton

Francesca Biasetton, illustrator and calligrapher, worked in the fashion industry for magazines, catalogues, commercials. Her work has been displayed in the solo exhibition Cento disegni per la moda, and the collective exhibition Favolose – 15 illustratrici italiane per l’infanzia. She collaborates with cinema, theatre and publishing projects. Among her picture books, Abbecedario (Panini, 2009) was awarded with Premio Andersen 2003 and Premio Stregagatto 2004, and Chi ha rapito Giallo Canarino?