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Palesa Monareng Has Drawn Over 100 Self Portraits And Is Now Turning Them Into A Book
Palesa Monareng's journey as an illustrator emphasizes the importance of authenticity and a unique artistic voice in brand strategy. By focusing on her distinctive pencil-based practice and the emotional depth of her self-portraits, she showcases how personal storytelling can resonate with audiences and elevate brand identity, particularly in a digital-first world where engagement metrics often overshadow creative quality.
Creative Boom: News Illustration Palesa Monareng has drawn over 100 self-portraits – and is now turning them into a book The London-born illustrator has spent a decade building a distinctive pencil-based practice, and she's only just getting started. Written By: Ayla Angelos 8 June 2026 Candle, 2022 Ideas come to Palesa Monareng on long walks with her dog, Herzog. Not from scrolling – she is already fretting about how much the "near catatonic scrolling" she does shapes her creative output – and not, despite what her client list might suggest, from the briefing documents of the many major commissions that have come her way. Just the walks with Herzog.
Palesa is a London-born illustrator, a decade into a practice built on graphite portraiture, animated motion drawings and an ongoing body of self-portraits now more than 100 works deep. After a foundation year at Central Saint Martins, she grew her audience through what she describes as "irreverent sketch projects". This included influencer portraiture and Moleskine travel sketches, producing work that was playful, specific and shareable enough to reach art directors in the United States. Early commissions from Nike and The New York Times sprang up from this.
And since then, her client list has expanded to include Amazon, Netflix, ESPN, Forbes, The New Yorker, HarperCollins and Macmillan. What holds it all together is the pencil. Palesa's graphite portraits are precise and atmospheric, carrying weight and texture in a way that feels out of step with what typically fills our screens and feeds. She returns, again and again, to loops and to "arrivals as endings, slices of the surreal and all the fun textures you can arrive at with just plain pencil on paper".
Her reading list reflects the same sensibility and shapes the architecture of how she thinks and creates: Borges' short stories, Eduardo Galeano's illustrated Upside Down World, Jodorowsky and Moebius' The Incal, Hofstadter's Gödel, Escher, Bach. Amazon Alexa campaign Essence Power 40 Bleacher Report, NFL Work for The New York magazine Her motion portraiture, on the other hand, involves a slightly different labour of love. She uses old-school rotoscoping, which involves shooting video, cutting footage to the desired frame rate in Photoshop, hand-drawing each layer, scanning them back in, and generating the animation from the stack.
It is painstaking in a way that most digital workflows aren't, and the results bear that out. The Candle animation, in which she worked into a single sheet of paper with pencil layers scanned at intervals, produces a shadow play that feels almost alchemical. "I really enjoy building an animation on a single piece of paper," she says, "in conversation with the scanner." A more recent piece, Cube Study 2026, came after Palesa signed with literary agency Janklow & Nesbit to write her first book – a manuscript threading together those 100-plus self-portraits with the experience of her digital life.
It has her thinking about how identities are filtered and shaped through platforms. "Now that so many of us are in daily conversation with some kind of agentic Tom Riddle's diary," she says, "ruminating on consciousness doesn't seem as esoteric as it used to." The cube in Cube Study functions as a way into that – a moving, Rubik's Cube-like structure that holds the question of the self at a distance as it shifts and swaps around.
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The article highlights a unique artistic approach that emphasizes authenticity in branding, which is significant for brand strategy professionals looking to differentiate in a crowded digital landscape.
