Roger Dean (artist)
Template:Short description Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox artist
William Roger Dean (born 31 August 1944) is an English artist, designer, and publisher. He began painting posters and album covers for musicians in the late 1960s, most notably the English rock bands Yes and Asia.
The covers often feature exotic fantasy landscapes. His work has sold more than 150 million copies worldwide.
Early life
William Roger Dean was born on 31 August 1944 in Ashford, Kent.Template:Sfn His mother studied dress design at Canterbury School of Art before her marriage and his father was an engineer in the British Army. He has three siblings, brother Martyn and sisters Penny and Philippa. Much of Dean's childhood was spent in Greece, Cyprus, and, from age 12 to 15, Hong Kong, so his father could carry out army duties.Template:Sfn Dean was very keen on natural history as a child, and Chinese landscape art and feng shui became particular influences on him during his time in Hong Kong.<ref name=longlivevinyl2017/> He has cited landscape, "and the pathways through it", as his greatest influence and source of inspiration.<ref name=bbc2002/>
In 1959, after the family had returned to England, Dean attended Ashford Grammar School followed by his entry in 1961 to the Canterbury College of Art studying silversmithing and furniture design and graduated with a National Diploma in Design.Template:Sfn He was removed from a life drawing class by the principal for being "young and impressionable", and was informed he could not take it due to maths and physics being his other subjects, leading a switch to studying industrial design. As the school was trying to become accredited in the subject, Dean bypassed its foundation level course but disliked the way the subject was taught and questioned the teachers as to why people had to live in "boxes" and their response in that "form follows function".<ref name=cgs2013>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=mcall2012/>
Towards the end of the course at Canterbury, Dean was faced with the option of pursuing either architecture or industrial design; one of his tutors thought neither were for him, and recommended that Dean study at the Royal College of Art in London. He enrolled at the college in 1965 to study furniture design and became a student of Professor David Pye.<ref name=cgs2013/>Template:Sfn Among his research was the "psychology of architecture" and what made people feel comfortable in buildings.<ref name=cgs2013/> He did a thesis about "producing a sense of tranquillity in domestic architecture".<ref name=bbc2002/> He graduated from the college in 1968 with a masters first degree honours, and won a silver medal for "work of special distinction".<ref name=isleofman2016>Template:Cite news</ref> By this time, Dean was interested in "designing the future [...] boxes for people to live in".<ref name=longlivevinyl2017/><ref name=greensboro2004>Template:Cite web</ref> He considered Rick Griffin's artwork for Aoxomoxoa (1969) by the Grateful Dead as his "first big visual shock" and bought the album prior to owning a record player.<ref name=bbc2002/>
Career
1960s
Among Dean's first successes was his sea urchin chair design which spawned from his research at the Royal College and completed in 1967.<ref name=cgs2013/> He filed a patent for it in the following year. It has been considered to be a predecessor to the bean bag, whereby the chair compresses and fully adapts to the shape and size of the user.<ref name=longlivevinyl2017/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The design was completed when Dean was one of the few students picked from the Royal College to design and make objects in famed designer Cherrill Scheer's factory. The chair remains one of Scheer's favourite pieces. It is now a part of the permanent collection at the Victoria and Albert Museum.<ref name=longlivevinyl2017/>
In 1968, during his third year at the Royal College, Dean was assigned a project which involved the design of a contemporary landscape seating area of the upstairs disco at Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club in Soho. This led to the design of his first album cover, Gun (1968) by rock band The Gun, after owner Ronnie Scott and business partner Jimmy Parsons asked him to use a demonic-themed design that Dean originally made in his sketchbook for his thesis, for the album's cover.<ref name=cgs2013/>Template:Sfn<ref name=greensboro2004/><ref name=bbc2002>Template:Cite web</ref> Dean revisited the original design and was paid around £5,000 for his work,<ref name=mcall2012>Template:Cite web</ref> which was more than he had earned with architecture, and with much less effort. He decided to venture into cover design not purely for the money, but its wider audience and its use "as a propaganda tool [...] showing people what might be and what could be".<ref name=bbc2002/> Dean picked up work where he could, including covers for various jazz artists for Vertigo Records which he disliked, calling them "austere exercises" and too restrictive for the ideas he wished to convey.<ref name=bbc2002/> The experience led Dean to establish a commission before starting work he wanted to do, leading to a short period of financial hardship.<ref name=bbc2002/> At the same time he wanted to release a book on architecture, but faced rejection from 27 different publishers.<ref name=greensboro2004/><ref name=bbc2002/>
1970s
Dean designed the logo to the independent label Fly Records in 1970. This led to a single for their musician Marc Bolan, which involved typesetting the liner notes and lyrics, but Dean had not performed typesetting before and completed the inserts by hand with the assistance of a graphic designer, in order to show the printing staff where the text was to be placed. The positive reaction Dean received from his style of writing led to him handwriting the text for further Bolan singles.<ref name=cgs2013/> This was a similar case for Dean's design for Clear Blue Sky (1970) by Clear Blue Sky, where a painting had been completed except the typesetting, "So to bluff my way through the meeting I had to handwrite it all and hope they would never ask about it".<ref name=gilmour2007/> The label's staffers were enthusiastic, which gave Dean the confidence to pursue more handwriting, logo, and graphic work.<ref name=gilmour2007>Template:Cite web</ref>
By 1971, Dean's desire to produce artwork for rock bands had grown though he continued to pursue architecture and headed a small exhibition of his work in Florence.<ref name=isleofman2016/> Following discussions with A&R man David Howells, who had assigned Dean the sleeve for The Gun, Dean agreed to work on the cover of Osibisa (1971) by Afro-rock band Osibisa. The design is a result of a brief that Dean described as "credible African fairytale imagery" and features "flying elephants and not architecture", which became an early representation of the style he later achieved fame with.<ref name=longlivevinyl2017>Template:Cite web</ref> Dean considered the job a breakthrough for his career as the design was made into a poster by the Big 'O' poster company which sold a large number of copies.<ref name=longlivevinyl2017/> He later said, "From that point on I could do what I wanted".<ref name=bbc2002/>
In mid-1971, during his search for work affiliated with rock bands, Dean sent a portfolio to numerous executives including Phil Carson, the European General Manager of Atlantic Records. Carson took an interest in using Dean for one of his rock acts, Yes, and hired Dean for the cover of Yes's fourth album, Fragile (1971), which marked the beginning of an association with the band to the present day.<ref name=longlivevinyl2017/> Dean pitched a story on a creation myth rather than a particular image for it, "about a child who dreamt they were living on a planet that was breaking up, so they had to build a space ark to find another planet to live on. And they towed all the little bits of the planet with them".<ref name=longlivevinyl2017/> In 1972, he designed the band's logo while travelling on the Brighton Belle train, which has been used on most of their albums since Close to the Edge (1972).<ref name=longlivevinyl2017/> In addition to their covers, Dean and his brother Martyn worked on the stage design for Yes from 1973 to 1976, 1980, 1989, and 2004.<ref name="storm">Roger Dean (1984). Magnetic Storm. Template:ISBN. Template:Oclc. Reissue: Pomegranate (1993), Template:ISBN. Template:Oclc.</ref> The tour for Tales from Topographic Oceans (1973) featured a nationwide merchandising campaign including posters and t-shirts that led to the creation of the production company Brockum.<ref name=gilmour2007/>
In 1972, Dean designed the logo for Richard Branson's newly established Virgin Records label, following several labels and designs he produced for Branson's Virgin record shop in London, such as the carrier bags.<ref name=gilmour2007/><ref name=CBS2022/> A photographic variation of Dean's Virgin logo was used for its subsidiary label, Caroline Records. In 1973, Vertigo Records changed the design of its record labels from a spiral pattern to a pictorial one by Dean that featured two spaceships.<ref name=CBS2022/> While working on the art for Yessongs (1973), Dean and his printers Tinsley Robor secured a patent for "a way of going from gatefold to any number of pages, folded out of one piece of card".<ref name=bbc2002/> In the late 1970s, Dean had an idea for Living in the Third Millennium, a thirteen episode television show about the designs and technological challenges of the future, yet it never made it to production due to budget constraints.<ref name=longlivevinyl2017/>
1980s–present
In the 1980s, Dean's output focused on other areas, including stage design, architecture, and video game art. He was approached by Italian film producer Dino De Laurentiis to design the costumes for Flash Gordon (1980), but declined as film work required him to relinquish the ownership of his designs.<ref name=CBS2022/> In 1981, he collaborated with his brother Martyn on the Tectonic House, an environmentally-friendly and economic home that was displayed at the annual International Ideal Home Exhibition in Birmingham. The idea spawned from two ideas–Dean's earlier designs for a bedroom intended for the safety of children, and Martyn's "retreat pod" from 1970 that Stanley Kubrick borrowed for his film A Clockwork Orange (1971).<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The project has developed into its current name, Home for Life, and the non-working prototype contains no straight edges or right angles. In the early 2000s, the cost to produce one was estimated to be $75,000–$80,000. Although several local British governments have expressed interest in the project, none have come into fruition.<ref name=NYT03>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=C13>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=greensboro2004/> In 2003, a project involving the construction of 264 villas, chalets, and apartments designed by Dean on a 65-acre site near Stourport-on-Severn, Worcestershire had entered the planning stage.<ref name=NYT03/>
In 1982, readers of Rolling Stone voted Dean's cover for Asia's debut studio album as the second greatest album cover of all time, behind Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967) by the Beatles.<ref name=NYT03/> His logo for the band featured hard edges and sharp corners on purpose, as a contrast to the logo he had produced for Yes.<ref name=CBS2022/>
Dean's first design for a video game was The Black Onyx (1984), which was a collaboration with comic artist Michael Kaluta. It marked the beginning of a series of designs Dean produced for Henk Rogers, who designed the game. The project involved Dean and Kaluta producing an estimated 4,000 drawings for the game, including ideas for its animation, story, music, and motion capture.<ref name=bbc2002/> Dean went on to produce the cover artwork for several Psygnosis games, including Obliterator (1988) and Shadow of the Beast (1989).<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Dean redesigned the Tetris logo which led to the design of the cover art for Tetris Worlds (2001).<ref>Template:Moby developer. Retrieved 17 August 2011.</ref>
In 1996, Dean produced artwork for a poster distributed nationwide to commemorate the 25th anniversary of Starbucks.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Dean received an honorary doctorate from the Academy of Art University in San Francisco in 2002, and an honorary fellowship from the Arts University Bournemouth in 2009.<ref name=isleofman2016/>
In 2013, Dean filed a $50 million lawsuit in the U.S. District Court in New York, alleging that director James Cameron had plagiarised 14 of his original images in the film Avatar (2009).<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Although the filmmakers admitted to being influenced by his work, a judge dismissed the case.<ref>Couch, Aaron. "James Cameron Wins Avatar Idea Theft Lawsuit Against Artist", The Hollywood Reporter, 17 September 2014</ref> Dean felt the judge failed to properly examine the evidence provided. "I showed half a dozen different details that they copied specifically from it that didn't occur in nature. But the judge, reverting to this idea that the work has to be taken as a whole and you don't go into detail, he took all my evidence out. Then when he came back to the concept that I'm saying they copied in detail things that they claimed I'd taken from nature, my evidence was gone."<ref name=CBS2022/>
In 2013, Dean received a Gold Badge of Merit from the British Academy of Songwriters, Composers and Authors.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In March 2021, Dean released his first artwork on the digital art auction platform Nifty Gateway, featuring non-fungible token art pieces.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 2022, an exhibition of works by Dean and his daughter Freyja was displayed at the Haight Street Art Center in San Francisco, entitled The Secret Path.<ref name=CBS2022>Template:Cite web</ref> Later in 2022, an immersive exhibition featuring Dean's artwork presented in high definition 4D audio and video with laser projections was held at the Gray Area Foundation for the Arts, also in San Francisco.<ref name=CBS2022/>
Dean has two permanent galleries, his largest at Trading Boundaries, East Sussex in the UK and the other at The San Francisco Art Exchange. Both galleries display original works and limited edition prints, sketches and drawings.
Album covers
Known primarily for the dreamy, other-worldly scenes he has created for Yes, Asia, Budgie, Uriah Heep, Gentle Giant and other bands, Dean has described himself primarily as a landscape painter.<ref name=villagevoice2013/> Characteristic landscapes show graceful stone arches (as shown in Arches Mist) or floating islands, while many paintings portray organic-seeming habitats, such as on the cover of Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe. Though he primarily works with watercolour paints, many of his paintings make use of multiple media, including gouache, ink, enamel, crayon and collage. In addition to his cover paintings, Dean is respected for his calligraphic work, designing logos and titles to go with his paintings.
Dean was friends with album cover designer Storm Thorgerson of Hipgnosis and the two lived in the same building after leaving university. He recalled a time when they collaborated on an album cover, but it turned out to be "a complete failure".<ref name=villagevoice2013/> The rise of the compact disc in the 1980s led to what Dean described as a decline in combining music with art, with the jewel case looking "tacky" and a way for record companies sacrificing quality to save money.<ref name=itsnice2015>Template:Cite web</ref> He cites the early CD reissue of Close to the Edge by Yes as one that particularly affected him as his inner sleeve artwork was missing, replaced with black and white text.<ref name=villagevoice2013>Template:Cite news</ref>
Personal life
Dean lives in Lewes, East Sussex.<ref name=longlivevinyl2017/> He has a daughter, Freyja, who also an artist and designer and is the inspiration behind Dean's 1987 painting Freyja's Castle. The pair have collaborated on work, exhibitions and stage productions. She produced the cover art for Osibisa's album Osee Yee (2009).
Recognition in other media
Dean is mentioned in the 1986 song "Dickie Davies Eyes" by English band Half Man Half Biscuit.
On 19 August 2016, the Isle of Man Post Office issued a series of 6 stamps featuring Dean's artwork:<ref name="iompo-1">Template:Cite web</ref>
- "Meeting Place" – produced exclusively for the stamp issue
- "Blind Owl Late Landing" – features the unreleased Blind Owl album artwork
- "Pathways" – cover artwork from Yes triple album Yessongs
- "Green Parrot Island" – derived from The Studio Albums 1969-1987 box set by Yes
- "Tales from Topographic Oceans" – from the Yes album of the same name
- "Sea of Light" comes from the Uriah Heep album of the same name
Dean has had a long relationship with the Isle of Man, and especially with its long-term resident Rick Wakeman, keyboardist of Yes, for which Dean has designed several pieces of album artwork.<ref name="iompo-1"/>
The First Day Cover (FDC) was also issued in a limited 750-issue run which were signed by Dean (this cover was issued on 2 September 2016).
On 20 August 2016, an exhibition of Dean's masterpieces went on display at the Manx Museum.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
A special FDC was issued on 25 March 2018, to celebrate 50 years of YesTemplate:Sndthis was a different cover to the August 2016 one, and was postmarked in Gold to record this historic event and signed personally by Dean who has created a special 50th Anniversary logo. A limited edition of 1000 signed covers were issued.
Dean's artwork was featured in a collaboration with Italian fashion house Valentino for their spring/summer 2020 men's collection.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In the manga JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Stone Ocean the stand Dragon's Dream is named after Roger Dean's art book of the same name <ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Dean Venture from the Adult Swim television show The Venture Bros. is named after Roger Dean.<ref>Template:Cite AV media</ref>
Covers
Albums
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Video games
- The Black Onyx (1984)
- Brataccas (1986)
- Super Black Onyx (1987)
- Barbarian (1987)
- Terrorpods (1987)
- Chrono Quest (1988)
- Obliterator (1988)
- Shadow of the Beast (1989)
- Stryx (1989)
- Shadow of the Beast II (1990)
- Amnios (1991)
- Fatal Rewind (1991)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- Shadow of the Beast III (1992)
- Agony (1992)
- Faceball 2000 (1992; in-game background art only)
- Tetris Worlds (2001)
- Tetris Splash (2007)
Publications
Books of Roger Dean art
Books edited by Roger Dean
- The Flights of Icarus (1977) by Donald Lehmkuhl. Edited by Roger & Martyn Dean. Large format colour book with paintings by Alan Lee, Patrick Woodroffe, Jeffrey Jones, Ian Miller, Bernie Wrightson, Melvyn Grant, Peter Jones, Syd Mead, Barry Windsor-Smith, Michael Kaluta, Roger Dean, Jim Fitzpatrick, Bruce Pennington, Chris Foss, and others
- Album Cover Album: The Book of Record Jackets (1977; with Storm Thorgerson, Dominy Hamilton)
- Album Cover Album Vol. 2: The Second Volume: The 2nd Book of Record Sleeves (1982; with David Howells)
- Album Cover Album Vol. 3: The 3rd Book of Record Sleeves (1986; with David Howells)
- Album Cover Album Vol. 4: Ultimate Album Cover Album (1987; with David Howells)
- Album Cover Album Vol. 5: The 5th Book of Record Jackets (1989; with Storm Thorgerson)
- Album Cover Album Vol. 6: The 6th Book of Record Jackets (1992; with Vaughn Oliver, Storm Thorgerson)
- The Album Cover Album (2008; reissue of 1977 book with additional prefaces, forewords, etc., by Storm Thorgerson, Peter Gabriel, John Wetton)
Sources
Books
External links
Template:World Fantasy Award Best Artist Template:Authority control
- Pages with broken file links
- 1944 births
- Living people
- Alumni of the Royal College of Art
- Alumni of the University for the Creative Arts
- Artists from Kent
- English album-cover and concert-poster artists
- English speculative fiction artists
- English illustrators
- People educated at The Norton Knatchbull School
- People from Ashford, Kent
- World Fantasy Award–winning artists