Showing posts with label 2009. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2009. Show all posts
Monday, 31 October 2016
Julia Hartling
Julia Hartling's vision of Little Red Riding Hood has all of the stories protagonists on the couch receiving therapy from Sigmund Freud.
Monday, 23 March 2015
Loïc Huck
Fig 1 (above) Loïc Huck, Little Red
Computer art by Loïc Huck with good overlapping of transparencies and colour to build up textures, and the wolf metamorphosing from little Red's cape.
References:
Fig1: http://elwanart.blogspot.co.uk/2009/03/le-petit-chaperon-rouge.html
http://l.huck.free.fr/
Computer art by Loïc Huck with good overlapping of transparencies and colour to build up textures, and the wolf metamorphosing from little Red's cape.
References:
Fig1: http://elwanart.blogspot.co.uk/2009/03/le-petit-chaperon-rouge.html
http://l.huck.free.fr/
Saturday, 20 December 2014
Louise Rowe
Fig 1,2,3 (above) Louise Rowe, Little Red Riding Hood (details from book)
Louise Rowe has published this 'wolf friendly' version of 'Little Red Riding Hood' in 2009 as part of a series of fairy tale pop ups including 'Sleeping Beauty' and 'Hansel and Gretel'. It uses very clever paper engineering and lovely integration of surface pattern, for example the leaf skeletons from the forest floor have become the pattern of the floorboards in grandmothers house.
References
Fig 1,2,3 http://louiserowe.co.uk/redridinghood.html#
Rowe, L Little Red Riding Hood, Tango Books, London, 2009
http://louiserowe.co.uk/
Thursday, 27 November 2014
Miguel Tanco, Caperucita Roja
Fig 1(above): Miguel Tanco, Caperucita Roja 2009
Miguel Tanco shares some of his thoughts, decisions and working methods used when approaching this classic tale for Edelvives in 2009. Caperucita Roja written by Pepe Maestro, illustrated by Miguel Tanco was part of an interesting collection, written and illustrated reinterpretations of children's classics.
"I guess the first thing we do when we were commissioned a classic is to see the different versions that have been made, especially the most original and daring. There will be hundreds, thousands of versions in different countries, including the vision of Gustave Doré, Kveta Pakovska, Nicoletta Ceccoli or Annalaura Cantone, and the very remarkable conceptual work with pictograms by Honegger-Lavater Warja."
The best way to start is that proposed by Maurice Sendak:
Fig 2 (above): Miguel Tanco, Caperucita Roja 2009"An illustrator in my own mind — and this is not a truth of any kind — is someone who so falls in love with writing that he wishes he had written it, and the closest he can get to is illustrating it. And the next thing you learn, you have to find something unique in this book, which perhaps even the author was not entirely aware of. And that’s what you hold on to, and that’s what you add to the pictures: a whole 'Other Story' that you believe in, that you think is there." Maurice Sendak
I explored the stereotypes of good and evil, and above all, the colors assigned to the characters. I heeded the advice of M. Sendak and decided from there that the wolf would not be black, it would be white and caperucita would perhaps African black carnation.
Talking to the publishing company the thinking was that it was best to develop the character as a gypsy. More close to us, a part of our culture.
This opened a new door and gave the story a twist."
Fig 3 (above): Miguel Tanco, Caperucita Roja 2009
Before I started the drawings, I looked for information on the Roma people, I read about racism and persecution, I explored their history.
As a ritual I keep a plastic folder which I label with the name of the book, to which I add any material remotely related, the history, photos, ads, pieces of colored paper, fabrics . . ." Miguel Tanco
Fig 4 (above): Miguel Tanco, Caperucita Roja 2009
Fig 1,2,3,4: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Caperucita-Little-Riding-Colorin-Colorado/dp/8426371779
http://migueltanco.com/
http://www.edelvives.com/
http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Maurice_Sendak
Tuesday, 11 November 2014
Lisa Stubbs
Fig 3 (below) gathered inspiration
"My train of thought was to think about the word Red and what was around me that was red and what are the first images I think of when thinking of the colour red....Lisa is an illustrator based in Yorkshire who also works in textiles and print.
What's on my desk that's red...
What I had on that was red...
What's on my wall that's red...
My favorite book... Alice shouting at the Queen of hearts
The queen of hearts...
Little red...
wolf & Red,
inspiration gathered, I start sketching..." Lisa Stubbs
References:
Fig 1: http://lisastubbs.wix.com/lisa#!portfolio/vstc3=children's-book-illustration/photostackergallery2=6
Fig 2: https://www.flickr.com/photos/lilsonnysky/3856435979/in/pool-thequiltproject/
Fig 3: https://www.flickr.com/photos/lilsonnysky/3857174382/in/pool-thequiltproject/
http://www.lilsonnysky.blogspot.co.uk/
http://lisastubbs.wix.com/lisa
https://www.flickr.com/groups/thequiltproject/pool/
http://www.kootoyoo.com/
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