This personal series blends expressive distortion with the clarity of vector illustration. Choosing three iconic figures — Salvador Dalí, Queen Elizabeth II, and Albert Einstein — I reinterpreted their faces through bold geometric simplification and minimalistic contrasts.
Each portrait acts as a visual dialogue between cultural legacy and contemporary aesthetics. By reducing facial features to essential contours and shadows, I aimed to preserve recognizability while creating a striking, stylized image.
Created during my design training, this project explores how grotesque abstraction can convey character, emotion, and identity — even without realistic details.
Format: Series of illustrated portraits
Style: Vector stylization with grotesque distortion and reductive form
Tools: Adobe Illustrator
Mockups: Merch design (book, clothing tag, shopping bag, posters)
Type: Self-initiated / experimental work
Style: Vector stylization with grotesque distortion and reductive form
Tools: Adobe Illustrator
Mockups: Merch design (book, clothing tag, shopping bag, posters)
Type: Self-initiated / experimental work


Book Cover
“Reimagining Royalty: Queen Elizabeth II on a stylized book cover.”
“Reimagining Royalty: Queen Elizabeth II on a stylized book cover.”

Clothing Tag
“A surreal twist: Salvador Dalí featured on a fashion tag.”
“A surreal twist: Salvador Dalí featured on a fashion tag.”

Retail Paper Bag
“Thinking outside the bag — Albert Einstein as a bold visual on a retail paper bag.”
“Thinking outside the bag — Albert Einstein as a bold visual on a retail paper bag.”

Poster Series
“Icons in print: all three portraits united in a minimalist poster set.”
“Icons in print: all three portraits united in a minimalist poster set.”
Thanks for watching — let’s create something together.