Sketchbook #145 - Nothing is more personal than a brush stroke

I love drawing in my sketchbook. When I think about it, it’s incredible how much time I’ve spent drawing traditionally, even if the results have often been slow to appear.

In 2014, I moved to Paris with the idea of settling down and working remotely after years of traveling around the world. At that time, driven by my desire to explore the world of concept art for film and television, I decided to return to fine art school. My background was mostly rooted in photography and heavily focused on 3D-based design, but I felt the need to go back to the basics — to refine and strengthen my fundamentals.

That journey into traditional work never left me. Despite the daily use of technology in my professional life, it gradually became more and more important in my artistic path.

The struggle, the frustration, but also the passion that fuels the discipline required to show up every day eventually became almost addictive to me.

I can hardly express how difficult this journey has been, especially for someone like me, who sometimes feels as though he was born with no natural predisposition for it. And yet, at the same time, it has also become a form of therapy — a space of silence, honesty, and meaningful hard work where I can slowly find myself again, stroke after stroke.

Marco Iozzi

I've been working in the Entertainment industry since 1999 after studying Visual Communication Design.
Today i work as a Concept Artist / Designer and Key Art Illustrator in Art Departments or for VFX after many years as a Matte Painter and 3D Artist.

In my spare time i love to practice traditional drawing and painting, and experiment with image making, music and sound design.


In 2008 i was honored to receive a VES AWARD in Los Angeles for leading a team of VFX artists on a BBC TV Series.

http://www.marcoiozzi.com
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