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Visual artist portfolio example

The first thing you notice on David Milan's site is movement: animated GIFs play unprompted in the portfolio grid, so the page feels alive before you click anything. The Barcelona-based artist uses a single long-scroll layout to present illustration, lettering, 3D work and animation side by side, letting the range speak without a word of explanation.

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Website design

Visual artist portfolio website design

The background is a warm blush-peach tone — a muted sandy pink closer to #E8D5C4 — that persists across every page and gives the site a tactile, almost print-like warmth. All text is set in condensed bold uppercase black type, stacked in a tight column at the top left of the page to list disciplines: MIXED MEDIA, 3D & 2D ANIMATION, LETTERING, TYPOGRAPHY. A solid black horizontal band separates sections.

The portfolio is a single long vertical scroll: photos, illustrations and animated GIFs are displayed at full width in a continuous column, each at its own natural aspect ratio — some square, some tall portrait, some wide horizontal. Navigation is minimal with only HOME, ABOUT and CONTACT in small uppercase at the top right.

The visual artist behind the portfolio website

David Milan is an independent artist, illustrator and designer based in Barcelona whose practice spans hand-crafted lettering, typography, illustration and 2D and 3D animation. His clients are international and his portfolio reflects someone equally at home with a brush and a 3D modeling tool. The breadth of the work, from ornate hand lettering to clean digital renders, is the site's strongest argument.

Who this website is a good example for

  • Illustrators and animators building a commercial portfolio: The gallery-first format puts the visual range front and center, which is more persuasive to art directors than a list of credentials.

  • Motion designers who need to show animation without a video player: Embedding GIFs directly in the scroll grid previews motion work at a glance, removing the friction of clicking into individual project pages.

  • Lettering artists who also work digitally: Presenting hand-lettered and digital pieces at the same scale in one uninterrupted scroll signals fluency across both worlds, rather than specialization in just one.

Visual artist portfolio website design ideas

  • Build your color scheme around a single warm neutral background: A blush-peach page color gives illustration and mixed-media work a natural, warm context that white or black backgrounds cannot — it reads closer to paper or canvas than a screen.

  • Use a single scrolling column to display work in a feed format: A full-width vertical stream with no grid or sidebar puts every piece at the same visual weight and lets animated GIFs and static images coexist naturally.

  • Keep the navigation to three links maximum: HOME, ABOUT and CONTACT in small uppercase at the top right adds structure without competing with the work below — the entire page stays image-first.

  • List your disciplines in stacked condensed bold uppercase at the top left: Stacking MIXED MEDIA / 3D & 2D ANIMATION / LETTERING / TYPOGRAPHY in a tight column tells visitors your full range in two seconds without a paragraph of biography.

  • Use a solid black horizontal band to divide major page sections: A full-width black stripe against a warm background creates a strong visual break that reads as a section divider without requiring a heading or any text.

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