Hand

Hsinping writes:

“Hi Lilla,
I made a cover art and a illustration for Babybug April issue.
They are very kind to ask me to do a interview.
So I would like to share it with you.:) Thank you!”

Part of the interview excerpted below. Click here to read more.

Your visual style, with its clean lines and striking colors, is so distinctive! What (or who) are your influences? Are there any designers or illustrators who had an impact on your work?

I love colors and simple shapes. Also mostly my work is done on computers. When I draw on a computer, I use a software called Adobe Illustrator. It allows me to play with colors and shapes a lot. I can trying many color combinations till I am happy with it. It’s also easy to draw clean shapes in Illustrator. I think that helps me a lot. But in the end I always like to add some handmade texture to the drawings to make it more organic and playful.

My favorite artists are Paul Klee and Sara Fanelli.

Tell us about your path to becoming an artist.

I’ve loved drawing for as long as I can remember, but I didn’t think about becoming an artist until I went to college for business. I was really frustrated and confused by my classes and found my true passion was creating things. Now I really appreciate that I initially studied business, because it helped me make up my mind to become an artist!

What do you like about illustrating for children?

I like that I can draw something bright and colorful. I also like to tell a story through drawings. It’s always fun to draw the characters, too. It’s like creating an imaginative and playful world for kids.

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Monday, March 25th, 2013
Macrina Busato for Flow Magazine

Macrina writes:

“Hi, I have just received the new amazing magazine Flow, fresh from the beautiful Netherlands. For this special issue, they asked 9 illustrators to make an illustration that answered this question: “What makes life simple?” My illustration was about friendship, taking care of, and “growing” people we love. Hope you like!”

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Friday, March 22nd, 2013
What Susy Pilgrim Waters is up to

Susy writes:

“hello curious all,
I just wanted to share some of my personal work, as i feel it is quite different from many of my illustration assignments.
My personal aesthetic is surprisingly clean+simple.

Having taken a degree printed textiles in London, it is a medium I come back to time and time again. It’s very physical and rewarding to make prints on fabric – function and form rolled in to one.
In recent months my husband keith and I have teamed up (we met at art school and are now combining our talents) to launch spw textile designs on hand woven hand printed cashmere and merino scarves.
We are making head way as a few museums have bought our hand woven and printed scares (ica boston, gardener museum, and the peabody essex).

We are screen printing on wood leather and silk too. I am influenced by British artist, Barbara Hepwoth, Patrick Heron, and artists curated by Jim Ede in KettlesYard, in Cambridge England. http://www.kettlesyard.co.uk/

When is comes to painting, I full in to abstract expressionism and feel totally at home with less is more.I paint on wood panels as large as 5×5 ft or as small as 5×5 inches!
Keith is very adept at the techie side, he created our sites and is master printer. He whips us in to shape on FB. I find juggling many projects very challenging, but in fact they all feed on each other.
there are always new passions to pursue. Thanks for reading. Back to it.”

You can find Susy’s shop here.

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Friday, February 1st, 2013
Suzy Ultman blog feature on Chronicle

From Chronicle Books blog:
“This month, we take a peek inside the journal of Suzy Ultman, the wonder woman behind a cornucopia of adorable Chronicle stationery and gifts.

I asked Suzy how she uses her own, and it turns out she’s a die-hard list-maker. Here’s a look at the list of lists she keeps in her journal, all sprinkled with adorable Suzy doodles, of course!

I love making lists. Always have. As a teenager, I re-wrote my class notes in notebooks and journals just for fun, listing out science-y facts or bullet-pointing homework assignments.

These days, I like to keep my list-making creative and fun. My journals are a place where I can explore ideas and goals, keep track of thoughts, and organize concepts. It’s also a way to revisit places I’ve been, and think about the places I want to go.

The best things about lists…
1. They are easy to keep.
2. They are never-ending. You can always add bits, delete parts, and come up with ideas between the lines.
3. There’s no greater sense of satisfaction than adding something new to your list, or crossing something off of it.

The Storybook Journal has become my go to spot for list-making. The detailed cover is a constant source of inspiration. It’s almost like the quaint characters are suggesting lists for me to make.

INTRO LIST


I started my Storybook Journal with some brainstorming, by jotting down lists I’d like to begin. Hey, it’s a list of lists!

COLOR “LIST”

I have scraps and scraps of paper with color pencil markings. I decided to organize my color thoughts for a project where I need boy, girl and gender neutral color stories.

BOOK LIST

I sometimes I like to paste a little pocket into my journal. As my book list grows, I can add cards to the pocket.

BACKYARD SIGHTINGS LIST

My boys & I like to bird and critter-watch. We call our backyard the “Nature Channel”. I was actually reminded, by my oldest son, that I forgot to list banana slug on this list.

GROCERY STAPLES LIST

I keep a post-it like this in my wallet (minus the doodles) with our household grocery essentials. I add everyday lists like this to my journal, and use them for drawing exercises. Sometimes, nothing is more inspiring than a quick post-it list.

WORDS I LIKE LIST

This list is ever growing. It comes in handy for creative writing, and also sparks visual ideas.

MANTRAS LIST

I like to approach each day with thoughtful, positive energy. If I need a nudge in that direction, one or more of these mantras always helps. I love making additions to this list.

TRAVEL WISH LIST

Inside the giant clog is my very special travel wish list. It is especially fun to cross items off of this list!

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Wednesday, May 2nd, 2012
See Diane make a monoprint.

Here’s the monoprint Diane made with her press.
Primroses stenciled, inky layers.

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Tuesday, July 28th, 2009
BACK FROM JAPAN (日本)

Mike writes,

“Lilla,

Well, I’m back from Japan, which was amazing and exhausting. It was great to get caught up on my sodium and fish intake for the entire year in just 12 days. What I mean is, the Japanese are big fans of the salt. Don’t know what Japan looks like? Here is an aerial photo:

In between Karaoke and scouring the used book stores for Taro Gomi (五味太郎) books, I was able to get some drawing/journaling done and am hoping to post a few pages over the next few days. I’ll also post some images of the incredible books, stationary sets, ads, and other great stuff I saw. I’ve never been to a country that loves illustration so much (adorable characters are on everything from train tickets to dentist’s offices and banks), so it was great to go back.
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I took my friend Colin (who happens to be a rabbit) with me. Here he is getting ready for the trip (we later learned some of the characters he’d written were wrong):
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Here’s what we had for breakfast in the hotels and hostels:
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And here’s the progression of Colin’s facial hair while in Japan:
53.jpg

(A few small notes about this drawing. When Colin says “100?!” he’s talking about being overcharged for laundry services in Nagoya. Also notice the repeated v-neck shirt. I…oops, I mean..He wore that shirt a LOT in Japan.)

I’ll be sure to send more images soon!”

-Mike

Friday: Carolyn Gavin’s studio

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Just amazing work.

Jessica writes,
“Also, I just finished a short class at RISD that got the gears going and thought I’d send along a few sketchbook pages from the class. It was fun and I hope to keep it up!”

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Wednesday: Crocheted lampshades

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Where are you from?
Oakland, California.

Does your name mean anything you would like to tell us about?
My parents named me after my father’s mother, Sarah, who died before I was born. This is a Jewish custom. But my parents didn’t stop there. I don’t know where the “jo” came from, but thankfully they added it, as I don’t think Sarah would have cut it for me. I guess my name is unique enough that it has been mispronounced and misspelled my entire life. Additionally, I get mail addressed to “Mr. Sarajo Frieden” (even though I’m a female). Growing up in California, teachers always pronounced the “j” like the silent “h” in Spanish. I was teased about this constantly. Fortunately, I love my name and however I ended up with it, I think it suits me perfectly. My last name, “Frieden”, means “peace” in German, which is kind of fabulous.
First, I’d like to thank you very much for your interest in my work and your questions, which I have tried to answer despite wanting to change my responses every day.

When did you start painting (drawing, creating, etc)? How did your talent come about (evolve or develop) for you?
I’ve always drawn. When I was little, I drew about things that happened around me, about my family and the stories I was telling myself.

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On your website, it says your work was exhibited in North Carolina – what galleries / which cities?
I was part of the book “Dialogue: The Fine Art of Conversation” put together by Mark Murphy that features found written notes and their relationship to painted, visual narrative. An exhibition of the artwork from the book traveled to a number of places, of which North Carolina was one.

You speak of your diverse and multi-cultural surroundings in Los Angeles, tell us how this has benefited your artwork. What is your favorite part of this aspect?
The United Nations reported recently that by the end of 2008, half of the world’s 6.7 billion people will live in urban areas. In Los Angeles, there are some 53 different languages spoken in the public schools! In my neighborhood, signs appear in Korean, Thai, Armenian and Spanish as well as English. It isn’t possible to grasp Los Angeles easily, if at all. That’s strangely comforting to me. It’s a place that is tangibly in flux. Living here reinforces the sense of possibility that comes about when traveling. Perhaps it’s about keeping a sense of space, openness and tolerance. I like this quote from Eve Ensler: “We’re all displaced people. We’re all refugees. We all come from somewhere and we are all hopefully moving all the time to a new place”.

Explain the medium of your work.
I work primarily with paper–painting, cutting, collaging, sewing. Lately I’ve been doing these little shaped paper things. Sometimes I collaborate with Marci Boudreau, combining my drawings and Marci’s amazing embroidery (I do embroidery too). For my illustration work, it’s a combination of digital and analog, scanning drawings, or sometimes working solely within the digital world. I often brainstorm ideas for paintings by digitally cutting and pasting from scans. I find this to be helpful when trying to visualize entirely different ways of doing something.

The colors in your work are amazing and evoke a sense of peace; what brings you to your color choices?
Thank you! Color speaks when words fail. I think I made that up– I hope I did. At it’s most basic, color is energy. I think it’s the part of what I do that is the most closely related to music. I doubt that I’ve answered your question.

The color and characters of your illustrations seem at animate play in a child’s mind – are children an intended part of your audience?
I think children are a great audience, though I don’t think too much about who or even if I have an audience! Someone once said the grown-up world is divided between adults who are still in touch with their child-like selves and those who aren’t. I hope that isn’t true. I’d like to think that some of the grown-ups need to join a laughing club, like the ones they have in India. I need this club too.

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The titles of your pieces are just as creative and often as thought provoking as the pieces themselves. Do you name them before or after you start the piece?
Thanks! It works both ways. Usually I’m working on a number of pieces at once and I will scribble down ideas or thoughts as I’m working. Ideas that percolate from music, books, random thoughts, or conversations, that later turn up as an idea, a title, or the name of a show.

Natural elements including progression and growth seem to be running themes, along with the representation of jewels/ gems. What does all of this represent?
That’s a very good question– I’m not sure I have an answer. I am more interested in what happens at a subconscious level then in what I think I know or see. By the very process of working, I try to illuminate what is residing just below the surface of things. Minerals and gems and the whole physical world that we are seeing is not a stagnant thing, it isn’t even what we think it is. And everything can be broken down further and further into impossibly small bits, so I guess it’s that underlying structure which is very alive that I’m thinking about. Things grow then decay, and decay makes it possible for something else to grow.

Who are some of your favorite artists whose work you admire?
I admire and pull from different kinds of art and artists, from the world of dance, or film, even puppets. A short list: Paul Klee, Beatriz Milhazes, Jacques Tati, William Kentridge, Pina Bausch, John Cage, Federico Fellini, William Traylor, Hungarian folk art (my grandparents were from Hungary), Persian miniatures, Japanese Ukiyo-e, Shaker Trance Drawing, Dr. Seuss.

What artists are playing on your iPod when you’re creating pieces?
Music inspires me with its ability to convey abstraction and emotion at the same time. I listen to a lot of things: Tinariwen from Mali, Jazz, ragas, Lisandro Aristimuño, Tropicalia, Afro pop, podcasts of various kcrw dj’s, david byrne internet radio. Lately, I’ve been drawn to Chris Watson’s sound recordings: bird calls, ancient glaciers, and running rivers. Listening late at night in the urban setting of my studio heightens not only the stark beauty of these sounds, but also the awareness of their increasing vulnerability in the face of human activities.

What do you find to be extraordinary from you daily surroundings?
I think if you pay attention to what’s around you, it’s hard not to see something interesting. It might be a strange flower growing in the garden or an outfit on a dog. Sometimes when walking in the park at dusk, I’ll see an owl high up in a tree, silhouetted against the sky. Of course, I’ve seen owls before, but who does not love to watch an owl, and wait until it gives off its owlish call?

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Whether in your personal pieces or those that have been commissioned, your style is very distinctive. What can you tell us about this?
That’s interesting. Sometimes I think it’s very difficult to see one’s own work. It takes a long time, often a few years after I’ve done something, to decide whether I like it or not. But regardless of judging it, I try to see it as part of a whole. As for style, it comes into play in my illustration work because often someone is asking me to do something similar to another job and they send jpegs of things they like. For my personal work, I try to work away from sameness. I think that’s what taking a risk is all about, not being comfortable, working on the edge of discomfort. Maybe you’re hitting something or maybe you’re vastly not, but what really matters is the leap. I see the practice as working on the ability to take the leap.

When did you start painting (drawing, creating, etc)? How did your talent come about (evolve or develop) for you?
I’ve always drawn. When I was little, I drew about things that happened around me, about my family and the stories I was telling myself.

Recent commissions for Sarajo Frieden include Old Navy, Kellogg’s All-Bran, Macy’s, Target, and Chronicle Books.

To see more of Sarajo’s work, click here.

Monday: It’s always fun to see the artist’s process.

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Tuesday, November 11th, 2008
Greg Morgan says, “Texas is changing!”

Greg writes, “The victory speech by Obama Tuesday night summed up the entire picture. Moving from faith-based narrow thinking to ideas, vision and voice. Advancement of a society, not an individual and their beliefs.

Never has someone delivered such grace, humbleness, insight and inspiration to a nation. When have so many people in numbers and diversity been so excited, emotional and serious about their candidate? The faces in the crowd were of relief, hope and possibility. They were the future because someone let them believe on their own, choose for themselves and be inspired by an idea—an idea of change!”

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