Tag: London

Macmillan Prize 2019: student success

Two of our recent graduates have every reason to celebrate:

Seobhan Hope’s book ‘Summer’s Sleep’ has been highly commended and Amy Steele has won 3rd prize for her book ‘The Lunchbox’. In this blog post Seobhan and Amy speak about their books and how it feels to be shortlisted for / awarded this prestigious picture book prize.

Shortlisted: Seobhan Hope 

“Summer’s Sleep’ is the story of Summer, the giant, who can’t go to sleep. I spent my final year falling in love with and researching folk tales from around Scotland, and was particularly taken by the Story of Samhuinn, or Halloween, where tales tell of a summer and winter king, who fight to see who will be next to rule the kingdom each year in Autumn. I reinterpreted the old tale, wanting to create a meaningful story that was going to encapsulate ideas of sustainability and raise awareness around climate change and global warming in a gentle way. In my story, we find a giant called Summer exhausted, not being able to sleep, and not knowing what to do. He personifies the warm season, which can not end because its gotten too warm for winter to come. Included in the story is also a diverse group of little characters who -slightly cluelessly- set out to help the tired giant. The final result is a colorful, hopefully amusing and thought provoking wee book. The process of coming up with the story, creating the characters and assembling the book was so much fun, and I am delighted it came highly commended at the Macmillan Prize Competition!”

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Close up

Spread 1

Spread 2

 

Winner of 3rd prize: Amy Steele

“The Lunchbook is about a banana who lives in the fruit bowl but dreams of making it into the lunchbox. Like all fruit, he wants to be taken to school and eaten up, every bit. But being a banana has its difficulties and Banana ends up lonely in the lunchbox as all his new friends get eaten. As the story goes on, Banana gets more and more forlorn and begins to rot as he struggles with his emotions. The book aims to differ from other books with food characters because these characters WANT to get eaten, which (I hope) makes people laugh.

Being chosen for 3rd place in the Macmillan prize was super exciting and actually, relieving, because I had been so worried about the story all year – the main character essentially dies – so it was a good boost to know that publishers like the idea even though it’s absolutely bonkers! I went down to London for the private view which was really interesting. I enjoyed getting to see all the other entries and chatting to the illustrators – everyone was so talented! Macmillan also asked me to come into their offices and have a chat about my book and my portfolio while I was down, which I did, and it was SO helpful to hear their feedback and encouraging words about my work.”

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At the award ceremony

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Illustration staff Astrid Jaekel wins AOI award

A Teaching Fellow in Illustration has been awarded a prestigious Association of Illustrators (AOI) World Award for her recent street art project, “If These Walls Could Talk”. For the twentieth anniversary of Wigtown’s book festival, Astrid Jaekel decorated 11 buildings on the small town’s square with her illustrations.

FREE PICTURE Wallpaper Murals at Wigtown Book Festival 11
Astrid’s illustrations were inspired by the townspeople
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A Wigtown resident stands outside his shop decorated by Astrid“If These Walls Could Talk” was a temporary project which challenged the perception of how older generations perceive street art, which is often associated with youth culture, and perhaps not the Scottish countryside.

In the 1980s and into the 1990s, many businesses in Wigtown ceased to exist and the small south-west town declined. In 1997, however, it was awarded the status of Scotland’s National Book Town, which has, over time, helped to regenerate the local economy. Now, Wigtown’s many cafés and second-hand bookshops attract book lovers all year round.

Astrid began her project by going door to door around the town square in order to learn about the buildings and find residents who might like to “donate” their houses to be canvases for street art. The town embraced Astrid’s vision.

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FREE PICTURE Wallpaper Murals at Wigtown Book Festival 12
Astrid decorated buildings with inspiration from the town’s love of books

 

“I’d like to think that the project made the people of Wigtown feel proud of their town and gave them the chance to continue telling their stories.”

Astrid Jaekel

Many locals have played a major part in growing the book festival as volunteers, and “If These Walls Could Talk” was intended to shine a spotlight on Wigtown and its residents. The project was also meant to encourage visitors to mingle with locals, and to get the visitors to see the place as more than just a charming festival town.

“I’d like to think that the project made the people of Wigtown feel proud of their town and gave them the chance to continue telling their stories to the festival visitors,” said Astrid, “I believe that that’s exactly what street art should do. It should generate conversation and make people reflect upon their surroundings. It should connect people with one another.”

A project of this grandeur proved to require a few extra pair of hands. Astrid enlisted fellow artists as well as ECA graduates, including Irish street artist Joe Caslin.

One set back during the project was Storm Ali. It decided to pay Wigtown a visit just after Astrid installed the wallpapers and many sections were left in tatters or destroyed completely. Through resilience and dedication, though, Astrid and her team managed to repair the damage to produce an award-winning project that seamlessly unites storytelling, illustration and street art while capturing the essence of the small town.

All of the 200 shortlisted entries of the awards will be displayed at an exhibition at Somerset House in London 11 – 28 July, with in-depth presentations of each of the category winning projects.

To learn more about the exhibition, check out Somerset House’s website.

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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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.

Sturgeon

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.

Oak Tree

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.

After Apple-Picking

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.