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  • I always wanted to be an artist and make stuff.  I didn't quite know exactly what I would end up  

  • doing but I always wanted to make things and I've  got really nice memories of my parents and my  

  • grandparents helping me to make castles and  drawbridges out of cardboard and I had a great  

  • childhood of making and drawing and painting and  I knew that that was what I would end up doing.

  • My name is Luke Edward Hall and I'm  an artist and designer and columnist  

  • and I am the artist behind this year's English  Heritage handbook cover design. I look to the past  

  • for inspiration but I'm really trying to bring in  a comtemporary edge. I'm not trying to create a  

  • pastiche of anything and I'm never really sure  about that word 'nostalgia'. I love looking  

  • to the past for inspiration and then it's just  about creating work that feeling contemporary.

  • I was thrilled when English Heritage got in  touch because I'm majorly inspired by the past  

  • and I love visiting old houses and gardens and  getting inspired and learning about their history  

  • and so it felt like an amazing fit and also  a chance to do something maybe a bit unusual  

  • for them so it was really exciting that  English Heritage were really up for me using  

  • bright colour and they'd always be saying add more  colour in and that was really nice. The idea was  

  • to work on the handbook design for 2022/2023 so  that involves the front cover and the back cover  

  • and the little spine, and then also the  membership card and a couple of other things.  

  • And it's inspired by celebrating Roman Britain so  I was looking up to Hadrian's Wall for inspiration  

  • and on the cover that's what we see: Hadrian's  Wall, Hadrian himself, interpreted in my own way.

  • [interviewer] "How would you  describe your work in three words?"

  • Colourful, irreverent and romantic.

  • My style I'd say is very colourful, playfulinspired by the past but hopefully brought up to  

  • date and made contemporary. I think there's a real  DIY element to it as well, it's very handmade,  

  • because a lot of my work is  based around my drawings.

  • I buy a lot of handmade paper. It has this really  lovely texture. I love buying old paper as well  

  • and actually people give me  old paper. I use a mixture.  

  • Definitely handmade and old paper  with character is what I love.

  • I'll use printer paper if I have to.

  • Window.

  • Both.

  • Velvet.

  • Do I have a favourite board game?

  • Articulate.

  • Oh my dog. My whippet.

  • Probably 1980s English pop music  like Soft Cell and New Order.  

  • I love music but I can't play anything. I played  the keyboard, I played the piano, I've played the  

  • guitar really badly when I was younger  and I can't do it and I wish I could.

  • Too much beige. I love colour. But green I like  because green I think I like most of its shades.

  • I wear all colours, apart from black.  I don't own any black clothing.

  • So many good bits. I love... I live in the  Cotswolds and I have to say, I miss the sea,  

  • yes, but I do love the Cotswolds. The West  Country I love. I love Dorset, Devon, Cornwall.  

  • All the villages are so beautiful. There are so  many amazing houses to visit, amazing gardens.  

  • The food is great here. And I love  London. So, too hard to choose.

  • I think with all projects, because I work across  a broad range of disciplines, all projects usually  

  • begin with research. So that's going into my  library of books. I have some books here, some at  

  • home as well. Old magazines. I often do research  online looking through museum collections as well.  

  • What's really great about a lot of our museums is  that you can view their entire collections online  

  • so I do that. And often I'll go and visit a museum  or a gallery as well and then I start sketching.  

  • As you've probably seen in my studio it's filled  with piles of sketches so I start just sketching,  

  • sketching and I'll see what comes out.  I'll start experimenting with different  

  • techniques and materials, it sort of builds  from there until I get to the end result.

  • When we first started talking about the cover  design it was decided that Hadrian was always  

  • going to feature but it has been through various  stages. The temple was always going to feature as  

  • well, the pediment and columns. We tried Hadrian  shown as a full figure, we did a shoulders-up  

  • bust, we did just a head, we tried various things  out. On these preliminary sketches I've drawn  

  • Hadrian's Wall as a kind of border but we ended  up actually making for the final design a border  

  • with a kind of rope motif inspired by a fragment  that we saw in the collection at Corbridge.  

  • With the text at the bottom that says Handbook, I  hand-wrote it, I tried a Roman-inspired typography  

  • moment. So it's been through various stages  until we finally decided on the final version.

  • When you go to a museum or whatever and you  see the white classic idea of Roman sculpture  

  • it's beautiful, but it's a sort of myth isn't it  that they were made like that and actually they  

  • were painted in these amazing colours, very  vivid bright colours. So I suppose actually  

  • working on this project it does feel  like it's quite a nice fit actually to  

  • reinterpret them in my own way that does feel like  it's how they were actually made in the beginning.

I always wanted to be an artist and make stuff.  I didn't quite know exactly what I would end up  

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