Pete Fowler

Pete Fowler (born 1969 in Cardiff) is a Welsh artist best known for his artwork for the Welsh band Super Furry Animals and his Monsterism toys and goods.[1] He is a freelance illustrator and "monster maker"[2] inspired by animals, music, folklore, myths, psychedelia and super nature. He has also worked on a number of other projects in the UK and Japan, such as television advertisements (Kia Picanto), as well as having art exhibitions in the UK and abroad. Fowler works in a variety of media, including drawing, painting, animation, printmaking and sculpture.

Pete Fowler
Born
Pete Fowler

1969
Known forillustration, drawing, painting, animation, printmaking, sculpture
Notable work
Artwork for the Welsh band Super Furry Animals, Monsterism toys and goods
Websitewww.monsterism.net

Monsterism

The majority of Fowler's art is made in a postmodern cartoon style and often revolves around a central narrative and features a recurring set of characters. The "monsters" Fowler creates all reside on "Monsterism Island". Fowler invents extensive back-stories for his characters; each has its own specific traits and levels of "monsterism". Fowler is most known for his designer toys of his characters, which he himself manufactures with his own company.

A CD called The Sounds of Monsterism Island was released in 2005 by Heavenly Records.[3] According to the press release, "The record is a compilation album that works as a soundtrack to the world of Monsterism. The album features psychedelic music from the '60s through to today, much of it unearthed and put on CD for the first time." In 2006, Fowler created a set of comics about Monsterism Island which have been featured in Vice Magazine. The second soundtrack to Monsterism Island, A psychedelic Guide to Monsterism Island, was released in 2009[4] and features mostly new compositions by a host of contemporary musicians.

Notable Events

Fowler is one half of the deckshoegaze/cosmic disco outfit Seahawks who have released extensively on vinyl, CD and download since 2010 and have remixed a variety of bands as well as regularly DJing, with Fowler commonly playing the genres of 70’s smooth rock, discoid and balearic debris[5].

Fowler's solo exhibition 'The Needle and The Damage Done' took place at Beach London in Shoreditch, running from August to September 2013.[6]

During the lockdown crisis of 2020 Pete set up a side line in pet decorating.

gollark: Libraries for the specific random stuff I need are already scarce in Rust. I don't want to use what's probably a less supported language.
gollark: What are good Rust web frameworks these days? I'm rewriting my project in Rust (the backend part is only 50 lines, so it should be easy) but don't really know the current state of things.
gollark: They're completely different except that the name is mildly similar
gollark: Turns out nodejs packages *really* love compiling C(++) dependencies from source. So now `npm` is doing that, on my *phone* CPU.
gollark: The backend bit is only 50 lines, so I could probably rewrite it in a cool language like Rust eventually.

References

  1. Christgau, Robert (1998). Grown Up All Wrong: 75 Great Rock and Pop Artists from Vaudeville to Techno. Harvard University Press. p. 177. ISBN 9780674443181. Retrieved 7 September 2016.
  2. "SHIFT | PEOPLE | PETE FOWLER". web.archive.org. 2012-03-12. Retrieved 2020-08-14.
  3. "Various - The Sounds Of Monsterism Island Volume One". Discogs. Retrieved 2020-08-14.
  4. "Various - A Psychedelic Guide To Monsterism Island". Discogs. Retrieved 2020-08-14.
  5. "Pete Fowler & Ian Sargeant". Soho Radio London. Retrieved 2020-08-14.
  6. London, Beach (2013). "Pete Fowler: The needle and the damage done".


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