Showing posts with label animals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label animals. Show all posts

May 16, 2011

Monsters and Whales and Bears, Oh My!

An interview with Amanda Lee James

Part 1 of 2 (link to
Part 2)
Click on any picture to giganticate

Amanda Lee James – where I’ve added ‘Lee’ because Amanda James is apparently a fairly common name – is a young lady – noting she is indeed a lady despite what you might think from a first glance of her artwork (stop giving her a complex!) – that in her own words ‘loves to draw, loves to print and enjoys fine lines and seventies-inspired colours’. Her often meticulously textured designs capture many of the amazing creatures both found on land and in the sea – or perhaps ‘just’ in our imaginations as well.

My impression of a lot of Amanda’s work is that she takes a great big fuzzy ball of shag carpet and twists it around in amazing ways to give a great big bear or other distant mammalian cousin! Her illustrations can appear to be candies combined together (even literally as you’ll see) that leaves one with the impression of floating along underwater in a classic Jacques Cousteau documentary! And who knows: maybe you’ll insist – as my son did AGAIN during the read-out check of this article – that she uses gummy worms to make her stories come to life!! Whatever you believe, you MUST make a bee-line to
her site to check out ALL of these prints in large size to do them full justice!

Key is that this Portland-based (for now) artist also compliments her sublime skills and obvious talents with her uniquely deft touch as a print-maker! Now that’s definitely something you don’t see very much of these days! Ziggy Nixon is pleased to have caught up with Amanda shortly before she heads off on the next exciting stage of her personal and artistic journey!

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Hi Amanda, welcome! Can you tell us a little bit about how you became interested in illustration please?
I’ve always been interested in illustration in some form. I wanted to be an animator as soon as I was old enough to know that it was indeed people that created and drew my favourite cartoons. I also wanted to illustrate the back of cereal boxes and draw pictures for books. I’d always be trying to come up with my own little characters and making flip books and that kind of thing.

I first got serious about it when I went to college for art. I feel like it really pushed me to think about art making in a serious way. But about midway through my education, I realised that telling a simple story was more important to me than making some kind of giant political or social statement like many of my peers were into. That’s when I first began identifying with being an “illustrator”.

Later, when I got into printmaking, my interest in narrative grew even stronger because it’s naturally such a graphic medium.

Maybe it just has to do with my exposure to the artform, but ‘printmaking’ seems to be a pretty rarely practiced craft these days. How did your work in this application come about?
I didn’t know what printmaking was until I stepped into my ‘Intro to Relief’ class during the end of my second year of undergraduate school. But I quickly found out that it was a very natural fit for me!

I love making tiny marks and I love repetitive tasks. All of the process that is involved in making images-in-multiples reminded me of drawing different frames in animation. I also loved how tactile the medium was. I liked that every colour had to be done separately and applied in layers.

I think that in a world of iPhones, electronic readers and the Internet, touching paper and applying every colour individually by hand can be really refreshing. I’m also incredibly drawn to printmaking because of it’s such a social art form. I get to go to the studio every day and hang out with a bunch of fun people and make beautiful things! I’ve never felt that kind of camaraderie using other art forms.

If I understand correctly, your work is all done by hand and then you typically produce the final products by silk-screen. Do you also work with computer aided tools at all – even for assistance – or do you prefer the more ‘organic’ approach of pen and/or squeegee on paper?
All of my drawings are done purely by hand. I even use books for my reference material, rather than conduct a Google image search. This is simply because I enjoy the tangibility of flipping through the pages of books.

In the printing process, I do use a copy machine to resize some of my images. I like the ability to see my drawings in a variety of sizes and use blown up pieces for patterned backgrounds. That is the only “technology” that I use while making my prints. I try to keep it as purely handmade as possible.

Speaking of silk-screen, noting my own experiences in the past may have scarred me somewhat, but my recollection is that this can be a difficult process to master. This is true not only in terms of getting colour onto your final material but also in translating your designs onto/into the screens themselves. I would think then that with the amount of finely textured and exquisite detail in your works that this could especially be the case. Do you have to deal with issues like this or has it been a pretty successful tool so far?
I have had a fairly smooth experience with screen-printing.

In the beginning there was quite a bit of experimenting. It was hard to find the right screen mesh count to produce highly detailed images while still letting enough ink through to get a solid line. I also struggled with finding a copy machine that would consistently have enough toner to get the image to transfer correctly.

Despite those factors, I think that it performs better than any other medium for my images in its ability to hold crisp detail and print bright colours.

Is silk-screen a costly approach to reproduce your limited prints or is that manageable?
Silk-screen has been perfectly manageable for my prints. I can reuse the same screens over and over again so in large part my only costs are paper and inks. At this point it’s more affordable for me than going digital.

I also love using this medium because it doesn’t produce as much waste as etching or relief and I can use less toxic water-based inks.

I found the following statement very interesting: ‘The beauty of repetition is something I’ve constantly been intrigued by.’ Why do you think that you are so attracted to repetitive and such finely defined patterns?
It’s hard to say. As far as making repetitive patterned works, I think that I have a bit of an obsessive personality. I find repetition to be extremely comforting and meditative.


I’ve always absent-mindedly doodled little patterns. So in this body of work I’m learning to control the doodles and build up form from them. As far as repetitive detail as an aesthetic, it’s just something that has always drawn my eye.

In the same section on your home website, you said ‘... I started to question if something conventionally ugly could become beautiful if it were repeated and patterned.’ What is your conclusion so far to this ‘theory’? Do you ever have a piece where you just have to kind of break away and say ‘no, that’s not working’?
I typically always try to finish any drawing that I start because I don’t usually like them until they are completely finished. So it’s really hard to tell what’s working or not early on.

Still, like anyone I have a lot of drawings that end up “not working” and I typically just don’t end up turning them into prints. But pieces of them can become useful as backgrounds for more successful drawings. To answer your question, so far the theory has held pretty true as far as directly repeating a small and simple pattern.

Lately, I have been experimenting with random clusters of small patterns to make a bigger irregular
tessellation of sorts. A lot of these haven’t been as successful but I’m still working on it.

I’m also wondering if you have an affinity for other materials that have perhaps influenced your style, ranging even from ‘classical’ wallpaper patterns or even yarn?
I’m pretty sure I have an affinity towards almost every material. I love the look and feel of different textures and objects. I like that the same shapes can look completely different depending on their materials.

The yarn-like textures I use remind me more of worms – but I suppose yarn kind of looks like colourful worms anyway. And yes, I have a strong love for classical wallpaper.

As
one reviewer phrased it, your work is ‘meticulously textured’ and to me there certainly does NOT appear to be any evidence of you taking ‘short-cuts’. With that in mind, how long does it take you to create a piece? Does the amount of attention it takes just exhaust you sometimes?
A drawing will take me anywhere from 12 to 60 hours depending on the scale and how detailed it is. Sometimes – especially if I am working towards a deadline – this can be a bit exhausting but typically I find it very enjoyable.

To manage everything, I try to break the drawing up. If I feel that I am starting to get burnt out on a drawing, I switch to printing for a while. My printing process is very fast and physical so it’s really a good contrast to the drawing. They kind of balance each other out.

Continued in
Part 2

Monsters and Whales and Bears, Oh My!

An interview with Amanda Lee James

Part 2 of 2 (link to Part 1)
Click on any picture to entkleinen

Amanda, you’ve listed some of your inspirations as old children’s books, Japanese woodblock prints and illustrated animal encyclopaedias, as well as having an interest in creatures and places you’ve never seen. What are some of your other inspirations for your unique style? You’ve mentioned the cover of the Beatles’ album ‘
Revolver’ which is what I though of right away when first seeing your work!
Funny you mention that because my mom is a huge Beatles fan! We actually had a Beatles room in our house!

In fact, ‘
Yellow Submarine’ is probably one of my biggest influences for colour choices and a few of my patterns. It’s an absolutely beautiful and inspiring film for me. I grew up amongst many of their collectable figures, plates and records so I think I absorbed a lot of those colours and styles from that era.

In terms of children’s books, two of my favourite illustrators are
Mercer Mayer and Maurice Sendak – but there are far too many amazing illustrators I enjoy and respect to even begin naming them all. We have this absolutely huge bookstore here in Portland that’s just a few blocks from my apartment and when I need inspiration, I just go downstairs to the children’s section and get lost for a couple hours.

Speaking of influences, am I correct in assuming that you also have a particular affinity for the sea and the amazing variety of life that it holds? I really enjoy your work here and I think that some of these pieces are among your strongest!
I love sea creatures. I think that sea exploration is infinitely more interesting than even space exploration. And for a long time, I wanted to be a marine biologist in addition to being an animator or illustrator.

I get seasick though... so I switched my focus to recreating and celebrating these wonderful creatures in my art. I also reference sea creatures frequently because stylistically they lend themselves well to my art. Sea creatures are naturally so patterned and unusual and full of artistic opportunity!

Your shop is also filled with lots of goodies. I’m curious though as to why you almost always print ‘varied editions’ even changing (slightly?) the placement of the animal or even the colour schemes?
I print varied editions mostly for two reasons:

First off, it’s nice to enhance the individuality of the print. More traditional editions of prints naturally have some variety because they are handmade, but I try to further enhance this by having a variety of placement and colour. I think that a print can be as individual as a painting and that they should be valued equally.

Secondly, I get bored making the EXACT same image over and over. Changing colours helps keep my eyes fresh and allows me to explore more in the printing process.

Last year, your design for the album cover of ‘The Angry Orts’ was picked one of the
best 90 album covers of the year by redefinemag. Congratulations! How did you get involved in working with a band on this cover and how did the overall design ‘process’ differ vs. a piece you do on your own?
I got involved with
the Angry Orts project through somewhat of a fluke. Their guitarist’s girlfriend played flute with me in our high school’s marching band and remembered that I did art. They contacted me and I showed them my latest work, the animal series, and we began the collaboration.

I think that the design process for this project was very similar to my normal working methods. The key differences were making more stopping points to check in with the band and taking into account that it would be reproduced digitally and that it would have to be shrunk down considerably.

I loved this project though and the Orts made some amazing merchandise out of the nautilus drawing. It was exciting to see my work in so many other mediums, like earrings, shirts and that kind of stuff.

Now I’ve got to spend a moment or two on your
mixed media ‘bathroom’ set which included scale, medicine cabinet and yes, toilet. Again, if my homework is right, you made these by ‘applying’ a mosaic of different materials (Twizzlers, Lifesavers and marshmallows among other items) onto a Styrofoam form. I guess my question is simply: good heavens, what ever prompted you to do that? It’s fantastic, yes, but wow, definitely unique!
This was the most stressful project I have made as of yet. It is also one of my favourites.

It was actually a whimsical approach to dealing with eating disorders. It was all about overindulgence, obsession and image. I am not sure where the exact idea came from but I have long been obsessed with the candy forest room in ‘
Willy Wonka’ so I would say that’s a definite inspiration.

I originally wanted to do an entire bathroom scene, complete with a bathtub, but quickly learned that candy is very expensive and that this type of sculpture is very time-consuming. It was my first time working in three-dimensional form and my first time working with candy and acrylic simultaneously. And as I was to find out, acrylic dissolves many candies into a brown mushy goo!


Looking back on this though, I can definitely see it as a precursor to my current work. In a way, I am now creating pen-line mosaics instead of candy ones.

You’ve also recently shown not only an affinity for the undeniably confirmed life-forms on our world but also both some unconfirmed (as of yet) and even monstrous creatures. Can you explain your interest in the more imaginative side of your ‘
animal’ or even ‘monster’ prints?
Most recently I have started to experiment with completely separating myself from reference material. As a result, I started to make more imaginative creatures. They are naturally the best subjects for this type of experimentation because there is no concrete definition as to what they should look like.

I find doing this coupled with a lack of reference material to be really liberating because there are truly no boundaries. At the same time, they are some of the most challenging works for me because it can be very hard to get a concrete enough vision in my head in order to transfer it to paper.


I often like to share some of my research with my kids (Jr. age 10 ¾ and li’l Miss, age 7 going on 17), if for nothing else to get them to turn off the TV for a few minutes. In the case of many of your pieces, my son truly enjoyed the subject matter (esp. bats, anything with tentacles, etc.) and texture (I think his words were ‘oh wow, worms!’). My daughter seemed less excited and even issued a slight ‘ooh that’s yucky’ for a couple of images. Still, she’s young and has very little disposable income so I wouldn’t worry about it!

That having been said, there does seem to be a lack of ‘Barbie aesthetic’ if you will to your art (to be bluntly sexist, it can be argued it’s not terribly very ‘girly’ I guess, where I note my daughter’s room is indeed filled from floor to ceiling with Barbie, Hannah Montana and more... sigh, where did I go wrong?). Is this choice intentional or has it just kind of turned out that way?
This choice was not intentional. Maybe is has to do with my growing up as kind of a tomboy?

I don’t personally see my work as masculine, but I have noticed that many people are surprised to find out that my work is made by a woman. When I go to craft fairs, my boyfriend is kind enough to come along and keep me company behind the booth. Despite the huge “Prints by Amanda James” sign on the front of the booth, nine times out of ten people assume that he is the artist and direct their questions to him.

Sometimes I can find this a bit frustrating ... but for the most part it just leaves me perplexed.

Your work is offered in a variety of forms, including fine art prints and stretched canvases, iPhone Cases, ‘skins’ (for laptops, i-Pads, -Phones, and –Pods), tee-shirts and also hoodies. Is there an avenue that you haven’t offered yet where you’d like to see you work appear?
People are kind of afraid to touch prints. As such, I’d like to make something that people would touch.

With this in mind, I’d really love to illustrate a children’s book. I’m actually in the very beginning stages of working on one written by a friend. I think that books are absolutely wonderful little objects because people interact with them and flip their pages.

Finally, just from your list of exhibitions in 2010, it looks like it was a busy year for you. What’s coming up in 2011 and beyond?
I have a solo show coming up at Mag-Big here in Portland that I am pretty excited about. It’s going to kind of be my ‘Farewell to Portland’ show because I am planning on moving across the country to go work on my MFA in printmaking this fall. I have always lived in Portland so I am extremely excited to start working and living in a new community.

Right now, I am still not sure where I am going to exactly – but I do know it’s going to be at least 2000 miles away! And I can’t wait! (ZN: see update below!)

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Amanda Lee James grew up in the picturesque if not often soggy realm commonly known as Portland, Oregon. At last glance, she can still be found working out of her downtown studio apartment which she shares with a, quote, wonderful guy named Ian and three cats, Ghostie, Spooky, and Whisper. She is nearing any moment now the finish-line for getting her Bachelors in Drawing and Printmaking from Portland State University.

Afterwards, she will pack up cats, guy and her assorted collection of fuzzy and squidgy friends in print and head off to Baton Rouge, Louisiana to attend graduate school at LSU. We hope for her sake that she knows what TRUE humidity is like!

Amanda’s work is filled with an obvious sense of her love to draw and print things that make not only herself but others very happy. She has a knack for furry creatures, friendly monsters and tentacled beasties of all shapes and sizes! Her work is filled to the brim with overlapping and painstakingly detailed patterns and she confesses as well to wanting to see just how many different lines and shapes she can get onto one piece of paper.
We wish her all the best of luck and success in her on-going travels and hope that Cajun Country treats her with all of it’s famous Southern hospitality indeed!

Links
Homepage

Shops :
Society6
Etsy



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All pictures, videos and other media are used with written permission of Amanda Lee James, including all current or previous business affiliations related to same, or are available in the public domain (noting copyright and other restrictions, accordingly). No further reproduction or duplication is permitted without contacting the artist directly.

Some pictures have been modified slightly or combined only for the purpose of space limitations. In all cases, we invite you to visit the artist’s site(s) for more!

April 28, 2011

Spontaneous Simplicity Made Super!

An Interview with Gemma Correll

Part 1 of 2 (link to
Part 2)
Click on any picture to biggify

Gemma Correll has most likely enjoyed – as well as not enjoyed some – of the attention her ever-growing popularity as an illustrator has brought her! She has been called an ‘obsessive chronicler of everyday life’ yet her work is continually lauded by fans of some of the widest varieties of neat stuff you’ll ever find! Some fans respect her talents so much that they have even had some of her more iconic images tattooed on their persons! Yet, her talents are so obvious - and indeed unmistakeably promotable - it should also come as no surprise that some less scrupulous purveyors of goods – even from the so-called ‘High Street’ denizens – have blatantly copied her work for their own ill-gotten gains! Boooo!

With a ‘direct’ style that is both refreshing and yet challenging (trust me, try it yourselves!), Gemma’s work is one thing for sure and that is FUN! And despite what some would like to believe, she also has a BA in Graphic Design specialising in Illustration from Norwich (England) where she graduated with honors, or honours as we should say. She’s been featured in more magazines than you can shake a royal sceptre at and darned if her work doesn’t pop up on any number of ‘funny image’ sites on the Internet on an almost daily basis! We’ve learned more about tea towels and
tote bags and the amazingly large community of designers out there for these items than we ever thought possible!!

And as Gemma will attest, her job as an illustrator is indeed a ‘real’ one, despite rumours to the contrary that she is only in it to throw us off from her ‘very successful drug smuggling ring’. Even if by some twist of fate – and no doubt a bad Nic Cage movie to follow – it winds up that she is only pretending to draw things and is just distracting people with her trusty sidekick, Mr. Norman Pickles the Pug, it will never be able to be said that she wasn’t entertaining!

Ziggy Nixon was very lucky to catch up with the ultra-busy Gemma to share a few thoughts and even a daily fashion tip or two:

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Hi Gemma, welcome to the show! Let’s jump right in and ask you how it feels to be quote, ‘possibly the UK's most prolific* illustrator’ (as indicated by
NUDE magazine, where your work graced their recent issue)?
*which according to Merriam-Webster’s on-line dictionary means ‘producing young or fruit especially freely’... plus some other definitions I obviously didn’t read very closely.
Yeah... not sure about that. I’m sure there are other illustrators who are much more prolific than me. How about
Rob Ryan? He seems to produce an amazing amount of work given how intricate his designs are.

I do draw a lot, but it’s all pretty spontaneous... Which prompted one blogger to remark, “Gemma Correll’s work is little more than doodles.” I’d like to think that it is a LITTLE more than doodles...

While we’re talking about doodle-licious goodness, I love your comment on
Flickr:
‘I've been told that I draw "like a five year old". I don't think that those people get that I choose to draw that way. I *could* draw in (a different) style all the time, if I wanted to, but I don't’.
Why is it you think that there are those out there that just don’t – or won’t – get what your work is about?
I suppose it’s just the fact that my images don’t look polished – they look spontaneous and simple. Some people’s idea of a “good” illustration is something that’s realistic, with shading and correct perspective!

And while I understand that everybody has their own opinion, the world would be a boring place if all art was realistic. Plus, it’s a lot harder to draw the way that I do than it looks!

What have been your influences in helping shape your style? If you’re curious, I would draw very favourable comparisons to the works of:
- a past ZN interviewee who is really hitting it big,
Mike Perry;
- a number of iconic images from the 60’s and 70’s including Klaus Voormann’s ‘Revolver’ album cover!
- as well as having some of the line-work and imagination of the great
Heinz Edelmann!
Well, thank you, although I don’t think I’m quite in the same league of any of those folk. I think that my biggest influences have been narrative illustrators like
Tom Gauld and Simone Lia, both of whom seem to flawlessly combine text and image.

I think that a big part of my ‘strength’ if you will with my illustration is in my writing. Standing alone (without text) I don’t think my illustrations are up to much. I mean, just drawings of cats...

In addition, as a child I would read my dad’s “Far Side” annuals all the time. Although a lot of it went over my head, I think that it was one of my earliest influences, along with
Posy Simmonds and the cartoonist, Giles. I also read a lot of illustration and design books at college, so it’s hard to pinpoint every influence I’ve had, but some others, off the top of my head, would be - David Hughes, Quentin Blake and Jim Houser. Then there are fine artists such as Alice Neel (who by coincidence ZN met as a child while his mom was in art school) and Paula Rego, who I admire and who may have influenced my work in a more subtle way.

I am pretty amazed at the sheer volume of work you seem to churn out! Your
Flickr album is packed to the rafters with images; you run your own website, a blog as well as a ‘collective’ blog; you’ve been busy with exhibitions and more; plus you even keep at least one daily illustration journal/blog thingie that keeps everyone posted about your (mostly) boring existence! How do you manage all of that without just passing out from exhaustion? Because if it’s owing to your brand of coffee, I want to know so I can order some, too!
Actually, I think I was slightly burned out at the start of this year.


You see, I was kind of running on adrenaline all of last year. It was my first full year of full-time freelancing and I suppose I just wanted to get as much done as possible! Having said that, I do draw pretty quickly, which enables me to get a lot of stuff – well, personal work at least, not necessarily client work – done in a short space of time.

However, I was starting to find at the end of last year that I was spending less time drawing and more time just doing administrative stuff like packaging shop orders! In fact, around Christmas, I was having a hard time finding time to draw because I was always at the Post Office. I even got quite ill from overworking myself! So to help ease the pressure, I’ve decided to close my etsy shop for a while. It’s pretty difficult to run an on-line shop AND be a freelancer.

I’m hoping that this year I have more time to work on my illustrations and to just doodle in my sketchbook. I’ve always been a kind of workaholic, so I’m going to take more time out for myself this year. I think that time out will provide more inspiration and experiences for my work, anyway.

I do have really good coffee though! It’s a Peruvian roast from my favourite local café.

Concerning your ‘daily’ life and even ‘what I wore today’ illustrations, what is the impetus behind the ‘diary’ work (did we get both of those right? No, dialy dairy?)? Are you just making sure to stretch your illustrative muscles once a day or is this more of a kind of ‘endurance art’ project for you?
It’s really just a way to process my day. I tend to focus so hard on work during the day that I need to doodle to relax a bit. It doesn’t have to be a diary, but I enjoy drawing them.

I also have a pretty bad memory, so it’s a way of keeping track of the things I’ve done, too. I’ve been doing something similar since I was a teenager (although unfortunately those diaries have not survived).

It’s also in large part because I am an introvert. I think this helps me in fact process my thoughts by writing and drawing.


Continued in
Part 2





Spontaneous Simplicity Made Super!

An Interview with Gemma Correll

Part 2 of 2 (link to Part 1)
Click on any picture to enlargeticize

Gemma, so much of your work makes it abundantly clear that you have a deep affection for animals, be it for your lovely pug, cats of all shapes and sizes as well as the occasional bear. What has sparked this apparently happy union of your work with this understandable affection for our furry cousins?
I’m not sure – I think I’ve just always been a friend to animals.


I had a cat growing up (named Olli) who I absolutely adored. I was quite obsessed with cats in general, actually, although I had a dog, too (not a Pug) and I drew them all the time. I used to draw cat comics and such-like a lot. So I suppose nothing has changed.

Over the aeons, your work has appeared on any number of items including cups and plates, plush dolls, pillows, prints on textiles and paper, walls (graffiti? For shame! ^_^ ), murals and other exhibitions. With all these in mind, where (or how) is the one way you think your work is best presented? Are these your preferred outlets or do you have a secret wish to see your work presented in a different way?
I don’t really have a preference, I just like having
my work on stuff.

I’m not too bothered about what the “stuff” is. Of course, I’m always thinking of new ways to present my work. But it’s more a case of ‘does a client have a particular product that they want me to decorate’? All I have to do in most cases is produce the artwork.

However, murals and exhibitions are different and more personal. I’m not always keen on how my work looks ‘properly’ framed (or maybe that’s because I don’t know how to frame stuff properly). So I tend to either have unframed illustrations (dangerous, especially when there’s a private view involving free alcohol) or in random vintage frames.

I also tend to draw at a small scale, so I’m still not sure about my work in mural ‘form’. I enjoy drawing them but I don’t know if I like my illustrations at such a large scale! I feel like they lose some of the fun.

What kinds of other things do you make?
I make screen-printed tote bags, greetings cards, badges, pocket mirrors and ‘zines. When I say make... I mean, design. I don’t actually physically make any of my products anymore.

Plus, I was recently commissioned by the site
To Dry For to design a commemorative Corgi Royal Wedding tea towel for the upcoming Royal Wedding!

I used to do the screen-printing and the badge-making, etc. but it got to be way too time-consuming. I do usually still photocopy, fold and staple my ‘zines, though. I think that’s part of the whole ‘zine making-process.

I find that my eyes are particularly drawn to your use of patterns, including both the use of fine-texturing and your larger prints of same, as well as what could be considered an understated or best said limited use of colour. What attracts you to both of these ‘tendencies’ do you think?
I love vintage children’s book illustrations, which I think explains both my tendency to use texture and limited colour. I like to use pattern and texture just to add ‘interest’ to my work.

Also, I like to keep things as simple as possible. Overworking an image has always been a problem for me - the more I work on an image, it starts to lose the sense of spontaneity that I think defines my work. Limiting the colours helps avoid that, too.

How important is getting the typography ‘right’ for your work? You seem to have an amazing knack for this as well! Did you ever study typography specifically or has it been a ‘learning on the job’ aspect of your work?
I have never studied typography, it’s just something that comes naturally to me. I usually draw my lettering freehand. Since words are often an important part of my work, I need for them to integrate into the image. I hate it when the text and the imagery in an illustration clash, or don’t work together.

But since I’m not really much of a “planner” I usually just go for broke and draw and write and hope that it all works together. It usually does...

You are also employing agents to help support your work, including both
NB Illustration** and Anna Goodson Management. I only ask because at least in my experience not a lot of ‘free-lance’ illustrators have agents. How does that work for you? Are you still able to maintain the ‘free’ aspect or how do you balance that exactly? Sorry for being so lost about that, but I’m serious, no one else brings this up much!
**I found their descriptive of your work interesting (‘naive’ and ‘stylised’)!
I work exclusively with Anna Goodson for US and Canadian clients. I find some of my own clients in the UK and Europe and also sometimes work through NB.

I love my agents because they find me work and clients that I otherwise wouldn’t. And like the administration tasks I mentioned before, they handle the financial side of things, which I really dislike. Case in point, I just spent an entire Saturday doing my accounts. The less of that I have to do, the better!

You also recently completed your largest work yet for the
Chapter Arts Centre in Cardiff in celebration of their 40th 'birthday'. How did working on that project compare to a nice comfy day spent in the warmth (?) of your own place with pug in tow while doing your own work? I’m also curious: when that show is over, what happens to the mural?
The mural has actually been painted over now. It was just up for six weeks, which I knew when I created it.

I quite enjoy drawing murals just because it is so different from sitting indoors at my desk. Doing the Chapter mural gave me a chance to travel to Cardiff (I’d never been to Wales) and work in front of an audience which was a little daunting! I’m used to my only audience being Mr. Pickles, who’s generally more interested in licking his bum.

But anything that takes me out of the studio for a couple of days is a welcome break, usually and if I get the chance to travel, too, that’s great. I am a fan of travelling. So, anyone who happens to be reading this, why yes – I WOULD like to come and spend a week in Mexico or Florida or Spain to paint a mural at your gallery/arts centre/school. Let me just grab my suitcase...

You obviously had a very business 2010 and your calendar for 2011 seems to be filing up rapidly! What are then your main projects or even priorities coming up in the next months?
Well, I’ve literally just moved to Germany (Berlin) a few weeks ago. I’m not sure yet if the move is forever, or just for a while...

But for the first 2 months I’ll be here, I’m pretty much concentrating on a big project! In fact, it’s the biggest project I’ve ever done, which is a bit daunting! It’s a book based on my “What I Wore Today” series and it’s going to be a journal that readers can fill in. I’m looking forward to just focusing on one thing for a while, rather than 20,000. Plus, later in May, I’ll be appearing at the
Apple Store in Munich, so come on out, it’ll be fun!

Still, even while trying to take it a bit easier, I might be a little distracted by the proliferation of coffee shops that Berlin has to offer!

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In order not to cause any conflict – or let’s say more conflict than usual – let’s see what Gemma’s agents have to say about her, which we present in this only very slightly abridged and otherwise unmodified form:

Gemma Correll is a freelance illustrator currently based in the UK (well, no, she’s now physically in Berlin ... or is she?). A graduate of the
Norwich School of Art and Design (BA honours Illustration, First Class, 2006), Gemma's work has a strong narrative basis. She specialises in hand-drawn comics, characters, typography and pattern. She has exhibited all over the world, including in China, the US and Europe (which we are led to believe are all parts of the world, though we’re not sure about this whole ‘China’ rumour as we’ve never been there). She was the recipient of a Young Guns award from the Art Directors Club of New York in 2010.

The ‘usage’ of her work (huh?) is seen as being ideal for both magazines and editorials owing to her ‘naive’ and ‘stylised’ style that features such a wide variety of subjects as ‘objects, icons’ and ‘people’ (again, huh?). Furthermore, Gemma is known for her "quirky characters in strange situations". Her work has been featured in magazines, books and in advertising, as well as on products ranging from tee-shirts to umbrellas.

And despite her etsy shop currently being closed (this bit is ours by the way), you only have to type in Gemma Correll in Google to find any number of fantastic ways to enjoy her art for your very own!! You’ll be very glad you did! Oh and if you DO get her stuff tattooed on you, send her a line!


Please check out all her links and more today!


Flickr Gallery


Blog ‘A Chronicle of a (Mostly) Boring Life’




Blog (collaboration with other artists) –
http://whatiworedrawings.blogspot.com/


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All pictures, videos and other media are used with written permission of Gemma Correll, including all current or previous business affiliations related to same, or are available in the public domain (noting copyright and other restrictions, accordingly). No further reproduction or duplication is permitted without contacting the artist directly.

Some pictures have been modified slightly or combined only for the purpose of space limitations. In all cases, we invite you to visit the artist’s site(s) for more!