Pete McKee

Pete McKee
Born Peter Robert McKee
(1966-02-01) 1 February 1966
Sheffield, England
Nationality English
Known for Painting, Cartoons
Patron(s) Noel Gallagher

Pete McKee (born 1 February 1966) is a painter and commercial artist from Sheffield, England. He is a cartoonist for the Sheffield Telegraph's sports section.[1] He has exhibited regularly around the North of England. Using bright colours his larger than life and often humorous characters inhabit a world of working men's clubs, bingo halls and family trips to the seaside. Football is also heavily featured in his work although he regularly depicts fans from both halves of the footballing divide in Sheffield: Sheffield United and Sheffield Wednesday, the team he himself supports.

Biography

Peter Robert McKee was born on 1 February 1966 in Sheffield to steelworker Frank McKee and Marjorie McKee (née Bullas) and grew up on a council estate in the Jordanthorpe area of the city with two older brothers and one elder sister. McKee lost his mother to cancer when he was eight years old.[2][3][4]

Educated at Rowlinson Comprehensive School McKee's ambition was to go to art college however he ended up working in a factory. McKee instead was able to find a creative outlet through music (his current band is a ukulele group under the name of 'The Everly Pregnant Brothers') as well as designing logos and similar pieces of art although at the time his main focus was to try to find a record producer.[3][4][5]

McKee started sending drawings to a Sheffield Wednesday fanzine for which they offered him £50. Encouraged by this McKee started drawing for the Sheffield Telegraph and continues to do so.[5]

McKee decided to concentrate on his painting in 2004 and began by painting with emulsion on MDF boards.

McKee opened his first London show, entitled ‘Lost Weekends’ in 2007 and has also exhibited in Birmingham and New York since then. Subsequently he was commissioned by Acme Studios to interpret characters from US TV shows The Simpsons, Family Guy and Futurama.[5]

In 2007 McKee was commissioned by Oasis guitarist Noel Gallagher to paint him as part of Gibson Guitar’s “Guitar Town” show. McKee painted a portrait of the guitarist onto a 10-foot fibreglass guitar which was displayed as part of the open air exhibition on London’s South Bank.

In early 2010 McKee was invited to design a limited edition pair of Clarks Desert Boots, using the original style template and giving it a McKee makeover. To celebrate the heritage of the original boot Pete created a striking pair of images featuring a groups of Mods, for the men’s boot, and Modettes for the women's. The boots were sold worldwide in selected Clarks stores, specifically in Paris, New York and Japan.

Later in 2010 McKee was approached by fashion designer Sir Paul Smith with a view to staging an exhibition of his work at Smith's flagship Tokyo store. This saw the development of Teenage Kicks – a beautifully produced limited edition book that celebrates the influence a musical awakening had on Pete. This McKee retrospective takes in several musical genres; Goth, Punk, Rock, Hippies and Rap are amongst the styles featured in this coffee table tome. And as it comes complete with a very special 12” etched piece of white vinyl Pete has finally realised a dream of having a successful, critically acclaimed record (of sorts). To commemorate this collaboration selected images were reproduced on Paul Smith clothing and bags specifically for the Japanese market.

In June 2010 McKee opened a dedicated art gallery "A Month of Sundays" on Sharrow Vale Road in Hunters Bar, Sheffield.[4]

2012 saw McKee being invited to take part in a special project from Warp Films, celebrating its tenth birthday. Pete was asked to re-create ten posters from ten of their iconic films, including Dead Man's Shoes, Submarine and This is England.

Exhibitions

References

  1. "Pete McKee". Sheffield Telegraph. 16 September 2008. Retrieved 15 March 2016.
  2. "Index entry". FreeBMD. ONS. Retrieved 15 March 2016.
  3. 1 2 "About Pete". Pete McKee. Retrieved 15 March 2016.
  4. 1 2 3 Jeeves, Paul (14 April 2013). "A city full of characters". The Yorkshire Post. Retrieved 15 March 2016.
  5. 1 2 3 Givans, Laura (22 September 2005). "'Coolest job in the world'". BBC South Yorkshire. Retrieved 15 March 2016.

External links

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