Tag: art

  • Made By Hand by Tatanja Ross

    Made By Hand by Tatanja Ross

    Made By Hand is a mini documentary by Tatanja Ross, which discusses the revival of handmade approaches in the art world. The director showcases a glimpse of this movement through work of emerging artists based in Melbourne, Australia. The portrayed illustrators, paper crafts, screen printing and textile artists discuss how the handmade movement inspires and benefits their work.

    As Tatanja mentions in the documentary, “the DIY culture is less of a simple art trend but a lifestyle that many makers encompass and put back into the world”. In the world of mass manufactured products, the director hopes to inspire other young artists to work with their hands and show that supporting local artists and makers is important and worthwhile.

    madebyhand-mezzo.tumblr.com

    [x_video_embed no_container=”true”]

    Made By Hand from Tatanja Ross on Vimeo.

    [/x_video_embed]

  • Evie Cahir

    Evie Cahir

    We recently discovered the work of Evie Cahir, a Melbourne-based illustrator who has worked for clients the likes of Vice and Neon Magazine and is inspired by drawing on public transport.

    Evie says that there isn’t a technique as such in her work. She simply layers coloured pencils, applies weak watercolour washes and peels off strips of masking tape until she feels that the work is complete.

    We especially like her project Mapping Melbourne – developed on her many trips across the city – and also her self published zines.

    www.eviecahir.com

  • Christopher Tuyay: The Cool Kids Series

    Christopher Tuyay: The Cool Kids Series

    Christopher Tuyay is a creative designer based in New York City, passionate about fresh, stylish, and smart design. His professional background has been in graphic design for fashion and lifestyle brands such as Toms Shoes, Cisco Home or SCOTTxSCOTT. On the side, he develops his style with projects involving illustration, typography, plant photography, amateur furniture design, and he even shares mixes on Soundcloud, which we really like.

    The Cool Kids is a series of portraits of the people who Christopher admires for the cool they do and are. It started as an exercise to improve his painting skills and find his illustration style, however the selection of subjects itself has turned into its own expression of taste.

    As a designer, Christopher’s inspiration comes from many places and these are the people who influence his style and creative perspective.

    The portraits of Sofia Coppola and Geoff McFetridge are our definite favourites. Which ones are yours?

    christophertuyaydesigns.com

  • Bookshelf: Métier, Small Businesses in London

    Bookshelf: Métier, Small Businesses in London

    Métier, Small Businesses in London, is a book by Laura Braun about small-scale independent and specialist businesses in the capital and the people who run them. In a time when the high streets of London are taking on a more and more corporate character, this book offers an unusual and interesting perspective on the city and an insight into the working lives of people who strongly identify with their occupation.

    The book was published by Paper Tigers Books – an independent publisher of limited edition artists’ books also founded by Laura in 2011.

    Read on for our short interview with Laura where she tell us about the process of creating Métier and what interested her in small businesses in the first place.

    The book was 6 years in the making – could you please tell us about the process of creating Métier? 

    LB: I started the project in 2007 really not thinking that I’d be working on it for 6 years. I wanted to add some more portraits to my portfolio and on the look-out for interesting sitters I stumbled upon this project about small businesses and the often very passionate and a little eccentric people who run them. Early on in the project The Photographers’ Gallery in London commissioned me to photograph a few businesses in Soho as part of their Soho projects when they were moving the gallery from Covent Garden to Soho. Those photographs became part of Métier as well and over the years I just kept adding to the project slowly whenever I came across another interesting business. I never set out to create any kind of index of London businesses. I found them all by chance, by walking around, through recommendations from friends and people who knew about my project and quite a few just because I needed their products or services. So the selection in the book is very personal. It’s to do with my interests and the parts of the city that I move around in my daily life.

    What interested you in independent businesses and their owners?

    LB: I spent a bit of time with each of the people in the book. I got to know them a little and heard how they ended up doing what they do. I don’t want to romanticise them. Their day to day lives are often difficult and of course also very mundane. Nonetheless for the most part they have a strong personal connection to the work they do. Their biographies are very closely intertwined with their profession or their business. The people are shaped by their work and the work and workplaces are shaped by the people in a way that is more and more the exception in our current corporate consumer landscape. The people running such small businesses have knowledge and often manual skills which you don’t find in employees of many large companies who are just much less personally invested in their work.

    Again, without disregarding the down sides of running a small business on one’s own, over all, how the people in this book engage with their work, seems to me in many ways preferable to the kind of career focus that is common in a more corporate environment.

    Also I think this small commerce, where a real exchange takes place, is really important for the life of this city, London, – and by extension any other place where people live. It’s what distinguishes one street from another, one area from another… I wanted to show and celebrate this.

    Métier – Small businesses in London is available directly from the publisher as a numbered edition of 500 for £18.

    www.papertigersbooks.com

  • Interview: Oamul Lu

    Interview: Oamul Lu

    Oamul Lu is a Chinese illustrator whose colourful, adorable drawings and animations have been shared all over the internet in the past few months.

    We were lucky to meet Oamul during his recent trip to the UK a couple of weeks ago. He had just arrived in Edinburgh after spending a few days in London and was ready to explore the Highlands and find some new ideas for his work.

    During our meeting, Oamul told us about his main inspirations, took us through the Chinese tradition behind his project “The 24 Solar Terms
    and showed us his first book, “I Found a Star“, which he’s planning to publish in English really soon. We also asked him a few questions to find out more about his work.

    What are the main inspirations in your work?

    I think everything I see in my life is an inspiration, including this recent journey.

    You do a little bit of everything: GIFs, animations, paintings… what do you enjoy doing the most and why?

    I like all these formats to present my ideas, I think they are all connected somehow. When I draw a painting I want to make it more lively and that’s why sometimes I turn my illustrations into GIFs. After that, I also hope they can become longer animations with a whole story behind them.

    Could you name a few artists you like?

    Two of my favourites artists are Van Gogh and Oliver Jeffers.

    What has been your favourite thing from your trip around the UK? Do you think this trip will influence some of your future work?

    I really liked all the galleries and exhibitions. I also went to see the musical “The Lion King” and it was really interesting and moving. Of course, I was also impressed by the delicious desserts and the beautiful scenery. This trip has had a great influence on me and I’m really eager to create some illustrations inspired by this lovely country.

    www.oamul.com