portrait
illustration
01:00
2026
Andrew Knives is a Texas-based motion designer, animator, and visual artist known for creating surreal, cinematic imagery that blends nostalgia, texture, and movement. Drawing inspiration from vintage design, music culture, film, and analog collage techniques, his work combines bold graphic compositions with dreamlike storytelling.
With over a decade of experience, Andrew has developed a distinct visual style that merges handcrafted aesthetics with contemporary motion design. His animations often feature layered textures, retro influences, atmospheric landscapes, and unexpected visual narratives that feel both familiar and otherworldly. Working across animation, design, and visual art, Andrew creates immersive worlds that balance mood, emotion, and striking visual storytelling. His work explores the space between the analog and digital, resulting in imagery that feels timeless, transportive, and distinctly his own.
Throughout his career, Andrew has worked with a diverse range of clients- from agile startups to Fortune 500 companies- delivering tailor-made solutions that truly resonate with their target audiences. Collaborating alongside world-renowned designers within a leading agency, he has guided high-impact projects from initial conceptualization to final delivery, ensuring utmost quality and design coherence. His portfolio highlights include Levi’s + Cactus Tears, an animated campaign blending 2D graphics with dynamic motion design, and “Kendall” for VOGUE Italy, a series of luxury animated digital designs that infused traditional motifs with a modern twist. Additionally, he led the motion graphics for Good American's "Born To Boss" campaign, masterfully combining a compelling narrative with visually engaging animations centered around a retro, 90s aesthetic.

Bloom presents a still life suspended in time, where quiet beauty and restless motion exist side by side. This hand-drawn and digitally animated piece explores the relationship between stillness and movement, permanence and freedom, and the natural tension between rooting oneself and racing forward. It draws its inspiration from traditional ceramic motifs, western iconography, botanical studies, and the visual poetry found in contrasting states of being. By placing peaceful, unmoving flowers in a vase alongside galloping horses depicted on the ceramic surface, the artwork creates a quiet paradox: growth does not always require movement, and motion does not always lead to growth. Ultimately, it reflects the delicate balance between finding contentment where you are and carrying an untamed longing to run toward something more.
illustration
portrait
01:00
2026