Category: Exhibitions

House Style 2019

The Edinburgh International Book festival is in full swing and the Illustration department is on board too, proudly presenting ‘House Style 2019’.

This project saw every student, from Stage 1 to MFA2, and all members of staff choose a book published in the UK in the past 20 years and creating one illustration in response.

Everyone was asked to work in black and white as well as one out of 4 available spot colours which were randomly distributed after choosing a book, and part of the challenge was to work with this allocated colour. 

The master-list of 150 books was assembled by literary critic Stuart Kelly,  who helped us launch the project by giving introductory talk to the department. A big thank you goes out to him for his support.

The resulting works have been printed as postcards and exhibited at the Edinburgh Book festival as a full set, to represent the range of work coming from this Programme, in all its considerable variety.

All postcards are on sale now – grab one while you can! 

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A-Z

A-Z is a first year Illustration project celebrating the 250th anniversary of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, which was first conceived, compiled, printed and published in Edinburgh on 10 December 1768.

The project began with a visit to the archives of the National Library of Scotland, where library staff introduced the student group to the original Encyclopaedia Britannica.

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After being inspired by the original books, students were asked to each choose one entry and create two pieces of artwork in response:

#Britannica250

In support of the library’s appeal to digitise ‘Britannica’, students created short animated gifs, which are shared across the ECA Illustration and National Library of Scotland’s social media accounts. Use the Twitter and Instagram hashtag #britannica250 to find these lively interpretations of words you may be unfamiliar with. Here are a few examples:

 

 

 

Risograph print

In addition to the animated gifs, the A-Z is a collective book featuring the eighteen chosen Encyclopaedia Britannica entries in the form of risograph prints. The focus of this project was to get students to think about image and text layout and the imaginative interpretation of texts. It also served as an introduction to risograph printing and an exercise in working with a limited colour palette.

This work is currently on display at the National Library of Scotland throughout June, alongside the original Encyclopaedia Britannica.

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Degree Show 2019

IT’S DEGREE SHOW TIME AGAIN and we have a lovely eclectic mix of Undergraduate and Master students’ work on display. Don’t miss the chance to see it! The show is open daily from 11.00 – 17.00 until Sunday 9 June. Tonight is Late Night so we’ll be open until 20.00! Looking forward to seeing you on the 4th floor of Evolution House!

And here’s a wee sneak peak of what’s on display..

New Blood Festival 2018

We just returned from the D&AD New Blood Festival in London where 17 of our recent graduates presented their work to the world. In preparation for the event the group designed their own stand with a ‘Pick n Mix’ concept, which reflected the variety of styles and approaches within their work. Apart from the opportunity of seeing what the rest of the UK’s fresh Illustration, Graphic Design and Animation graduates are up to, this annual event is also an opportunity for them to get valuable advice from industry professionals. Adobe offered portfolio surgeries and there were many other events to attend throughout the 5 days.

The show was a real success with many visitors picking up postcards and business cards and having conversations with our Illustrators about their work and future aspirations. Terri Po and Jo Ruessmann made it onto the ‘One to Watch’ list and were offered a place in the New Blood Academy for this week where they will learn more about how to start their careers as new professional creatives. We are very proud of all of our 2018 graduates and wish them the best of luck for their creative careers!

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Alumni news – Sarah Bissell

Over the last few months Sarah Bissell, an ECA alumni and one of last years artists in residence has been working with Edinburgh Collage Collective on an international submission of collaged based work themed around the subject of envelopes. Setup in 2016 by collage artist Rhed Fawell, the collective has been working on exhibitions and events over the last year and currently is showcasing their latest exhibition, G.L.U.E. in our very own Tent Gallery.

The collective (comprising of seven members including Sarah Bissell and another of our previous artists in residence Megan Elizabeth Taylor) believes that it is important to reach out and link to other like minded artists globally particularly in this turbulent political climate. Through their most recent project they have connected with over 70 other artists and gathered over 140 artworks for display in the gallery and the feedback has been incredibly positive with plans to travel the exhibition and future open submissions on the horizon. To get involved check out the instagram page and keep and eye out for future eventshttps://www.instagram.com/edinburghcollagecollective/

Sarahs work is part risograph and part collage as she runs risograph printers The Gutter Press https://www.instagram.com/thegutterpress/ . Collage has always been a focus of her work but since starting her business late last year she has also been making risograph prints created from her original collages. Her work for this exhibition was looking at the excitement and intrigue you have when receiving post and she wanted to celebrate this and inject an element of fun to her subject.

The exhibition is open until the 28th so pop by if you’re in the area. If you have an interest in risograph have a look at The Gutter Press website and contact Sarah with any printing projects you want to get produced. Also watch out for the Edinburgh Collage Collectives future open submissions, they would love more people to get involved and to connect with more lovely collage loving people.

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http://thegutterpress.org/

http://www.edinburghcollagecollective.com/

Where are we?

Mapping the World

This collaborative project is inspired by and closely linked to the current exhibition ‘You are Here. A journey through maps’. The students from first year Illustration and Graphic Design worked in small groups and were asked to challenge what they know about maps, how they are made and how we understand them. They were encouraged to consider maps as a basis for storytelling beyond the attempt to represent factual information and investigate how maps may, for example, communicate emotional involvement in a place.

Each collective was given a series of tasks; this involved mapping a randomly allocated bus journey throughout Edinburgh, mapping their own personal journey from home to Edinburgh as a place to study, mapping a designated room at the National Museum of Scotland and lastly documenting the creative process of other students.

Throughout the 5 week project students were asked to attend a series of workshops and lectures led by Printmaker Jonathan Gibbs, Author Vivian French and Artist/Illustrator David Lemm to further enrich their skill set.

The group collaboration has been beneficial to our students who have been able to learn from their peers and experience their creative process. Skills were shared and tasks delegated amongst the group; for Illustrators and Graphic Designers this provides an invaluable learning experience building a solid foundation for their professional careers.

A selection of the work displayed at the National Library of Scotland until the end of May. 

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Table Work

In my Scottish studio, I work on a table. Constructed in pine, it is rather battered but stable and came from a farmhouse in Gloucestershire. It was given to me by Lily Messenger, who had lived in Rodmarton before moving to Amberley, the village where we lived at that time. As our next-door neighbour, Mrs Messenger also lent me an attic room in which I worked for several years until we moved to Scotland in 1990. Before marriage, she had been Lily Bucknell, from a family of blacksmiths and wood-workers and who belonged to the Guild of Gloucestershire Craftsmen. This is only significant because my own Guild membership led to meeting highly skilled artists and craftsmen from whom I learned much concerning materials and ways of making things.

Vessels

Mrs Messenger owned a set of finely worked fire irons made by her cousin Norman Bucknell. These irons had a subtle, dotted motif to decorate their articulated forms, without appearing as superficial embellishment. They are excellent examples of craftsmanship, being both beautiful and useful.

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At the present time, my work table is beside a south-facing window to the Lammermuir Hills. This location is somewhat distant from the Cotswolds, but is a deeply inspiring vantage point from which to paint, draw, and engrave various woodblocks. These prints in the Rowley Gallery show a range of subjects which connect to the origins of my work immediately following graduation, hence recollections of Mrs Messenger’s attic at the time when I began to seriously apply myself to wood-block printmaking.

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Blair Hughes-Stanton taught relief printmaking at the Central School of Art & Design, but my principal education came at an earlier time from Donald Potter, who taught us sculpture at school. DP had worked as an apprentice to Eric Gill, and he gave me the fundamental grounding in how to conceive and express ideas in three-dimensional form. Of course, this was also very much about working in wood or stone; how to make something well.

Also, when arriving at the school, Eric Rennick had said to my mother, “I cannot teach this boy how to be an artist, but I can teach him how to draw”, which was true, certainly.

My time as a lecturer has caused me to work out what can be taught or demonstrated to students, in relation to what I actually learned after leaving school and during six years at art college. At some point I realized that the study of sculpture deeply enhances knowledge about drawing.

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Many of these images begin as a simple division of the picture space, with a horizontal or vertical line, which is then subdivided or interrupted. This is a cross-like motif that supports or frames imagery of various kinds.

It may be of interest to note that this tactile and crafted process, allied to whatever philosophical or intellectual aspects it may have, completely liberated my mind’s eye in the way of making an image. When allied to the smooth surface of an end-grain woodblock, the fine sharpness of particular tools allows me to create and invent pictures as much as I have ever wished.

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Also, I like to make drawings of objects on window-sills, shelves or table tops. For example, these are stones & wood; feathers, shells & bones in baskets or boxes. All such collected items are an inspiration to me, for some reason. They refer to my East Anglian origins, as well as later travels and current location. Found objects hold a sense of time and poetic significance, as well as being formally intriguing. There is a subject to be found in what is placed in the foreground, with a window to divide the shallow space, and a view beyond to encompass elemental landscapes. Such subjects offer simple questions about the ways in which forms occupy space and how they can be visually expressed in two dimensions.

After the Storm

After the Storm is an exhibition of fine furniture constructed from timber from the Royal Botanic Garden, Edinburgh windblown during Cyclone Andrea in 2012. Highlighting the beauty of Scottish-grown timber and craftsmanship amongst our Scottish furniture makers, the exhibition also focuses on the restorative and rejuvenating effects of storms in nature and trauma upon the natural and human environment.

The work of Jane Hyslop who teaches in illustration and who recently ran ‘Plants of the World’ with our second years focuses around flora and regeneration. For After the Storm she has made a series of drawings based on plants recorded in Gore Glen, Midlothian.

Several trees were destroyed or damaged there in 2012 during Cyclone Andrea and more have followed. The natural process of regeneration is explored through a fascination in the plants and the drawing process. Ranges of species are laid out in compositions created through drawing collected plants in the studio.

Hyslop has also created artist’s books that explore the subject of After the Storm through experimental methods of working with paper that extend previous works. Wood veneered paper vessels containing scrolls depicting plants from the site use the form and format of the artist’s book to exemplify the violence and destruction of the storm while offering a snapshot of regeneration at different stages in Gore Glen.

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Shaping the View

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This November ECA Illustration was delighted to hold the 7th International Illustration Research symposium and to welcome lots of researchers and practitioners to Edinburgh.

This year’s event took ‘landscape’ as a starting point, inviting illustrators, mapmakers, printmakers, travelers, tourists, antiquarians, ethnographers and experimental archeologists to share their journeys through Illustration.

Speakers at ‘Shaping the View’ explored complex and various interpretations of Landscape in research, academic study, and professional practice.

From an international submission of abstracts, Jonathan Gibbs and Desdemona McCannon chose 37 academic papers for presentation over two days at ECA.

Five key speakers enhanced this discussion and debate and the symposium concluded with musical pieces, projections and installations of landscape themes in the Wee Red Bar.

As a post-script, Saturday’s site-specific workshops added a new dimension, using the city of Edinburgh to explore further aspects of time, space, and location.

The complementary exhibition in the Sculpture Court has enabled all students and staff to show their work alongside invited artists, leading exponents of Illustration. The exhibition demonstrates a high level of academic study, research, and professional practice.

An international selection of work has been curated for a wider understanding and appreciation of Illustration.  Shaping the View has been made possible by research funding from the University of Edinburgh and by Saskia Cameron’s excellent design work of all the exhibition pieces.

img_4396img_4425img_4426Landscape-based work by 2nd and 3rd year students as part of the ‘Shaping the View’ exhibition

img_4441Roderick Mills, Paddy Molloy, Harvey Dingwall, Geoff Grandfield

img_4470Desdemona McCannon and Adrian Holmes

img_4476Jonathan Gibbs and Anne Howeson

img_4494img_4514Bianca Tschaikner on “Mapping imaginary Worlds’

img_4498Andrew Baker about ‘Landscape in Comics’

img_4520Stephanie Black on the exploration of nostalgia and the contemporary Moon under Water through illustration

img_4534Angie Lewin on printmaking, collecting, and finding wildness in unexpected places

img_4600A wonderful two days ended with drinks and joy in ECA’s Wee Red Bar

Walking the Water of Leith

One of the benefits of living in Edinburgh is that you are never far from nature, a fact which often has a long-lasting impact on our students. In the second week of their studies we took our first years for a long walk along the Water of Leith during which they drew from observation and collected artefacts. Their findings were then to be used as a basis to develop block printed repeat patterns.

Our journey started at the Water of Leith Visitor Centre where we were introduced to the history of the river, its flora and fauna as well as the work and activities carried out by the trust. The group then set off on a 3 hour walk involving many drawing breaks before arriving at the Scottish National Galleries of Modern Art.

After returning to the studio our students carried out research into historic and contemporary pattern before being shown how to create their own repeat pattern and transform it into a linocut.

The final work reflects the students’ personal journey along the river, drawing whatever appealed to them along the way, ranging from buildings, objects, colours, shapes and animals to people. Found elements such as scraps of paper, bits of rubbish or graffiti were also incorporated into the work.

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