Born in London, raised in Hobart, and shaped by more than a decade in New York City, Australian artist and illustrator Anouk Colantoni has built a creative life that resists easy categorisation. Now based in Tasmania, she moves between fine art, illustration, fashion, interiors and live experience with a kind of instinctive ease – as though each medium is simply another way of telling the same story.
Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!At the centre of her practice is a visual language that feels both playful and deeply felt. Working across watercolour, paint, pen and written word, Colantoni creates images that lean into emotional contradiction rather than trying to resolve it. Femininity sits beside strength, intimacy alongside distance, humour threaded through vulnerability. Her work doesn’t simplify these tensions; it holds them gently, allowing space for ambiguity and feeling.
Her imagery carries a dreamlike quality but remains firmly connected to reality. Figures emerge and dissolve within colour, gestures feel caught mid-thought, and compositions often carry the sense of something remembered rather than observed. It’s a style that feels less like illustration in the traditional sense and more like emotional translation – an attempt to give shape to things that are usually hard to name.
In recent years, the Tasmanian landscape has begun to quietly surface through her work. Native flora, open skies and organic forms appear not as literal references, but as emotional echoes – grounding her otherwise fluid worlds in something elemental. The shift feels less like a change in subject matter and more like a deepening of tone, as though place has begun to gently press itself into the work.
While the work of Colantoni spans a wide range of collaborations, she treats each project as an extension of her visual world rather than a departure from it. She moves through fashion, editorial and immersive brand settings with ease, always anchoring her work in the same instinct – creating images that feel alive with feeling rather than polished distance.
With Alemais, she reinterpreted original artworks into textiles and objects for the Lucky Pace Pre-FW25 collection, where illustration became print, embroidery and form. The collaboration saw her work shift into wearable space, but the emotional language remained intact – loose, expressive and grounded in gesture rather than perfection.
For Monday Swimwear, she created bespoke illustrations for a global influencer trip and carried them across a series of touchpoints, including invitations, itineraries, stationery and small event details.Rather than sitting as decoration, the work became part of the atmosphere of the experience, quietly shaping how it felt to move through it.
Her live illustration work for Tiffany & Co. takes this even further into immediacy. Drawing in real time for guests and press, she translates personal stories and significant objects into intimate sketches. Each piece becomes less about representation and more about response – a fleeting exchange between artist, subject and moment.
Across projects with Paspaley, Bvlgari, Coach, Goldfield & Banks, Elle and Russh, the same thread continues: a focus on emotional tone over surface, and storytelling that feels intuitive rather than constructed. Even when working within commercial frameworks, her work tends to hold onto a looseness – a sense that it is being discovered rather than delivered.
Earlier commissions, including large-scale hotel works for the Agus Beekman Hotel, where original pieces now sit across a permanent installation in 165 rooms, speak to the scale her practice can hold. Yet even at that scale, the work retains a sense of intimacy – as though each piece is still being whispered rather than declared.
What ultimately defines Colantoni’s practice is not a single style or subject, but a way of seeing. Her work moves between observation and imagination without insisting on a boundary between the two. It’s in that in-between space – where memory blurs into invention and feeling leads form – that her visual world quietly takes shape.