• Advertisement
  • Sitemap
  • Privacy Policy

Molayem ART MagazineMolayem ART Magazine International Art Magazine

  • Home
  • Biography
  • Interview
  • Download
  • About us
  • Contact us
Breaking News
  • The week in wildlife – in pictures
  • RHS Chelsea flower show 2023 and its visitors – in pictures
  • Sexual subcultures, fetish on film and banned books: Kenneth Anger – a life in pictures
  • Perfect Days review – Wim Wenders explores a quiet life in Tokyo
  • Last Summer review – Catherine Breillat’s all too safe version of a dangerous romance
  • ‘Older straight men hated my films with a vengeance’: how 90s queer film-makers shook up cinema
  • The Resurrection of Charles Manson review – evil-hippy horror looks for chills in desert
  • Dexter Fletcher: ‘I sat on Diana Dors’s knee and she said: “Aren’t you lovely!”’
  • Sisu review – grisly feast of extravagant violence as Finnish hero slaughters Nazis
  • Def Leppard & Mötley Crüe review – from the pathetic to the sublime
Home/ART/An illustrator’s memories of meals gone by – in pictures

An illustrator’s memories of meals gone by – in pictures

2 weeks ago ART

Post Views: 17

An illustrator’s memories of meals gone by – in pictures

 Pass the salt: colourful memories captured by the illustrator Maggie Cowles.

“Food is a big thing in my family,” says illustrator Maggie Cowles. “Growing up in New York, we’d to go to Chinatown all the time; family gatherings always happened in the kitchen.” She tries to capture that warmth of community and cooking in her elaborate dinner-table illustrations, evoking what she calls “food memory”. Cowles designed fashion textiles before turning to illustration during the pandemic. “In fashion, when you design the main print of the season, it incorporates all the colours of the palette. It’s called a roadmap or hero print. That word pops into my mind when I draw sushi. Black, white, orange, green, red … the whole rainbow in a dish!”

  • Franklin to Degraw

    Photograph: All images © Maggie Cowles

    Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
    Franklin to Degraw  by illustrator Maggie Cowles.
  • Miso

    Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
    Miso by illustrator Maggie Cowles.
  • ‘Your Shit Is Everywhere’/‘They’ll be here any minute’

    Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
    “Your Shit is Everywhere” / “They’ll be here any minute”  by illustrator Maggie Cowles.
  • Kid’s Table

    Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
    Kid’s table  by illustrator Maggie Cowles.
  • Between Hudson and Greenwich

    Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
    Between Hudson and Greenwich  by illustrator Maggie Cowles.
  • The Odeon, Christmas Eve

    Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
    The Odeon, Christmas eve by illustrator Maggie Cowles.
  • A Summer in Manhattan, 1996

    Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
    A Summer in Manhattan, 1996 by illustrator Maggie Cowles.
  • ‘We spilled $15,325’

    Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
    “We spilled $15,325”  by illustrator Maggie Cowles.
  • Barcelona

    Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
    Barcelona  by illustrator Maggie Cowles.
  • Seabird

    Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
    Seabird  by illustrator Maggie Cowles.
Share
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Stumbleupon
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest

Tags apple art gone illustrators meals memories pictures

Previous The big picture: birth of the Pyramid stage at Glastonbury, 1971
Next London’s Liverpool Street station redevelopment: on the wrong track?

Check Also

The week in wildlife – in pictures

Post Views: 8 The week in wildlife The week in wildlife – in pictures  A …

Download Molayem Magazine #01

Summer (August, 2022)

.
  • Recent
  • Popular
  • Comments
  • Tags
  • The week in wildlife – in pictures

    2 days ago
  • RHS Chelsea flower show 2023 and its visitors – in pictures

    2 days ago
  • Sexual subcultures, fetish on film and banned books: Kenneth Anger – a life in pictures

    2 days ago
  • Perfect Days review – Wim Wenders explores a quiet life in Tokyo

    2 days ago
  • Last Summer review – Catherine Breillat’s all too safe version of a dangerous romance

    2 days ago
  • Jeff Bezos

    June 2, 2022
  • Hafez

    September 6, 2022
  • Rūmī

    September 6, 2022
  • Vincent van Gogh

    October 6, 2022
  • From ‘Terrifier 2’ to ‘Watcher’ here are the scariest under-the-radar horror films you can see right now

    October 20, 2022
apple the movies review art music and radio for best this with pictures how from new 2022 ‘i you: was that its film World your

Advertisement

https://molayem.art/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/molayem-video.mp4

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Popular Posts

  • Jeff Bezos

    June 2, 2022
  • Hafez

    September 6, 2022
  • Rūmī

    September 6, 2022
  • Vincent van Gogh

    October 6, 2022
  • From ‘Terrifier 2’ to ‘Watcher’ here are the scariest under-the-radar horror films you can see right now

    October 20, 2022

Random Posts

  • Why should Santa be white or cis? The camp where anyone can learn to be Father Christmas

    December 11, 2022
  • ‘She drunkenly asked me to do her a rudeness’: painting’s most baffling titles

    December 27, 2022
  • Deborah Meaden: ‘There is a Dragons’ WhatsApp chat. But we don’t ping each other cat videos!’ Michael Hogan Deborah Meaden. Deborah Meaden: ‘I’m not a regret kind of girl’ Photograph: Suki Dhanda/The Observer As Dragon’s Den returns for its 20th series, the long-serving panellist talks optimism, Brexit and why she used to get called ‘Swampy’ Sun 8 Jan 2023 09.30 GMT Deborah Meaden, 63, was born in Somerset and left school at 16 to study at business college. She set up her first company aged just 19. At 29, she joined the family business, Weststar Holidays, before leading a management buyout a decade later. She now has an estimated net worth of £40m and is a full-time investor with a wide-ranging portfolio but a particular passion for sustainability. She’s best known as a panellist on BBC One series Dragons’ Den. Dragons’ Den is back for its 20th series. What’s the secret of its longevity? It’s one of those rare programmes that all generations can watch and have a view, from young kids who like the inventions, through to great-grandparents who like the human stories. We’re a nation of entrepreneurs. Everybody’s got a good idea so they watch the show thinking: “I could do that.” It’s an inspiring show that turns business from this dull, grey thing into something creative, opportunistic and fun to be in. You need to register to keep reading

    January 8, 2023
  • Vermeer will never look the same after Amsterdam exhibition

    February 3, 2023
  • The 50 best albums of 2022 – 50 to 11

    December 9, 2022

Latest Posts

  • The week in wildlife – in pictures

    2 days ago
  • RHS Chelsea flower show 2023 and its visitors – in pictures

    2 days ago
  • Sexual subcultures, fetish on film and banned books: Kenneth Anger – a life in pictures

    2 days ago
  • Perfect Days review – Wim Wenders explores a quiet life in Tokyo

    2 days ago
  • Last Summer review – Catherine Breillat’s all too safe version of a dangerous romance

    2 days ago
an Global Art Roma
© Copyright 2023, All Rights Reserved