Monday, 19 December 2011

Al Jaffee's Fold-Ins

If you’ve never heard of Al Jaffee, chances are you know his art.

For over 40 years he’s created the MAD magazine fold-ins on the last page of each magazine.

He’s still creating them in his 80’s, and he revealed he created the fold-in as a tribute to the ‘fold out’ that was popular in....another magazine!

The New York times have created this excellent little interactive site in tribute to his fold-ins. Enjoy!

Thursday, 15 December 2011

Video Editing

Last weekend was a CHRISTENING BANANZA with FIVE (count 'em, FIVE) kids being baptised on my wife's side of the family. Being the only one with a video camera in attendance, I was immediately designated: 'The Video Guy'.

I was happy to take on the task, although just as the priest made the sign of the cross on each child's forehead, the most heart-breaking of all messages appeared on the screen:

FLAT BATTERY

Thankfully, someone was taking photos on the day, so I managed to combine the existing footage with a nice slideshow of photographs, and burned it all to DVD using 'PowerDirector' ( a free program), much to the families delight.

I added Powderfingers 'My Happiness' as a wav. file to the soundtrack to help bolster the slideshow - a cheap gimmick but it worked!

I am currently editing my parent's US trip as well as our fishing trip in November...and here and now I will solemnly swear: NO STAR WIPES!

Monday, 12 December 2011

Character


I feel that the most important part of most stories (not all) is character, so I've been sketching madly, attempting to map out little diagrams of the characters in The Cloud Factory. Here is a sample of the daddy cloud talking to his son about growing up to become a storm cloud like his old man.




So far I’ve managed to map out the characters and the settings, the big part now will be mapping out the ebb and flow of the book by laying out each page and getting a feel for the pacing of the story.
I’m also going to mock up some coloured artwork in Illustrator to get a feel of the environment the story will be set in.

Tuesday, 6 December 2011

The Cloud Factory

Here is another children’s book I am working on at the moment, called ‘The Cloud Factory’. It’s about the son of a storm cloud (below) going to the cloud factory to learn to become a storm cloud like his dad, however the little cloud wants to become a shape cloud.


I’m designing the look of the factory at the moment and this is a rough (below). Those destined to be storm clouds enter the tube on the left, those destined to be shape clouds enter on the right.



Here’s the clincher:  there will be no text in the book whatsoever!
(Much like Gregory Rogers’ “The Boy, The Bear, The Baron, The Bard”.)

So the challenge is to tell the story in panels and to convey emotion through the characters. At the moment it will be 24 pages.






Wednesday, 2 November 2011

Sydney Armageddon

I saw this album cover when I was about nine years old. It’s Midnight Oil’s ‘Red Sails in the Sunset’ from 1984.
I have never listened to the album but I was so struck by the cover art that it has stayed with me.



Only recently have I discovered the artist who created this amazing scene of nuclear Armageddon in Sydney. He was a Japanese artist named Tsunehisa Kimura, who created this nuclear cratered vision of Sydney Harbour via photo montage, six years before Photoshop 1.0.

It would have been painstaking work, he had an incredible eye for detail. This was the biggest version I could find on the net. I also found the image below. He passed away in 2008.
Enjoy!

Sunday, 23 October 2011

Sunday Sketches

After a mango and banana feast (and thanks to the rising heat) Flynn took a time out on the couch inspiring me to quickly capture the pose:



I was also compelled to sketch Grady’s concentration whilst playing the Wii (it’s the only time he stays till long enough!):


Monday, 10 October 2011

Whacky McWhack Whack - the new book starts here

This is where it all begins!
I’ve decided to start working on a children’s illustration book titled: ‘Whacky McWhack Whack.’

I’ve made some sketches over the weekend in an attempt to nut out the details of the character:



The story is about a four year old boy who via his over active imagination is always ‘whacking’ members of his family.
Until he whacks someone very important and decides to change his ways.

I don’t want him to be an evil kid, just a very ‘active’ kid - that’s why I changed his eyes from droopy/malevolent to rounded, open, bright eyed.

I’m writing the text at the same time as I draw so that I can keep the process as organic as possible. I’m thinking of the different scenarios and costumes ‘Whacky’ (Bruce to his mum) can be wearing as he wreaks unintentional havoc.

At the moment the book will be about 22 pages in length.
Stay tuned!

Tuesday, 4 October 2011

Wednesday, 28 September 2011

2011 Novels - Visual List

Here's a visual list of the books I've read this year, you can read my reviews of them here






























Monday, 26 September 2011

Bamboo Fun from WACOM

This is what I use to create my arty stuff:


A Bamboo Fun from Wacom. I bought it from Dick Smith. It’s compact, cheap, and easy to use. I would recommend it for an absolute beginner because even Paris Hilton could operate it. Use it with Illustrator 10 and you too could be creating digital comics!

Tuesday, 20 September 2011

Bill Plympton - 'Horn Dog' and 'Guard Dog'

I have admired Bill Plympton for many years. His animated short '25 Ways To Quit Smoking' (1989)  is a classic, but here are some lesser known shorts of his that capture the nuances of his animation so well....



Friday, 16 September 2011

Trippy!

I've finally found this!
An excellent example of animation!
I saw this on SBS one night in the 90's and have never forgotten it....enjoy!


Thursday, 15 September 2011

You Think You Know This Painting...

Here is ‘The Creation of Adam’ by Michelangelo...



You’ve seen it a million times, but there is something very unique and ingenious about this painting. Michelangelo use to study dead bodies to gain a better understanding of human anatomy – he studied the muscles, the skeleton, even the brain...



Can you see it now?


Michelangelo designed God and the angels in the form of a dissected human brain. This was only discovered relatively recently (in 1990 by physician Frank Lynn Meshberger).

Does this mean that God is in the brain?
Genius in every sense of the word!

Wednesday, 14 September 2011

Preview Art - The Visual Guide to Imaginary Friends

Some preview art from a kids book I'm working on - 'The Visual Guide to Imaginary Friends'.

These guys are classified as 'Furry Friends':



Sunday, 11 September 2011

Novel Mini Reviews - the story so far 2011

Here is a list of novels I've read this year so far, each has a star rating and a mini review:

The Truth – Peter Temple           
** Overrated murder mystery/police procedural following a secondary character from the more brilliant ‘The Broken Shore’ (by the same author)

Cloudstreet -  Tim Winton           
*** Sprawling family drama with genius prose

Wetlands – Charlotte Roche      
***.5 Racy, saucy tale about a girl and her ‘habits’. Sold millions in the authors native Germany, apparently...

The Shadow Year – Jeffrey Ford               
*** Fascinating yet ultimately nonsensical story about kids ‘controlling’ their neighbourhood with a scale model

Turtle Moon – Alice Hoffman
****.5 Well written tale based in Florida about a stoic ex cop and a woman who’s son goes missing, Hoffman is a very unique writer who draws you into her worlds

The Help – Kathryn Stockett
** Sanitised version of race relations in 60’s America about African American maids

The Cement Garden – Ian McEwan
**** Brilliantly written story of a group of siblings left to fend for themselves in the UK after their mother dies at home. Touches on brother/sister ‘relations’ in a very real convincing way.

When You Reach Me – Rebecca Stead
**** Excellent young adult mystery novel that features time travel in the background

Wonders of a Godless World – Andrew McGahan
***.5 Cryptic esoteric  curio about a mental patient on a volcanic island and her relationship with a mute, motionless man who can transmit his thoughts

Carter Beats the Devil – Glen David Gold
** Overly long narrative about a magician in the 30’s with touches of whimsy, romance, and action

Heart Shaped Box – Joe Hill
* Dire re-tread of horror staples that amount to nothing

The Naming of Tishkin Silk – Glenda Millard
**** Touching portrait of loss and acceptance in a rural family, for young adults

Lullaby - Chuck Palahniuk
*** A journalist learns a ‘culling poem’ that can kill people, even if he thinks it. A fantasy piece anchored in reality with an out there ending. By the author of Fight Club.

Disgrace – J M Coetzee
**** Well written mediation piece about a middle aged lecturer and the ramifications with his daughter after a dalliance with a student and a violent incident

How to Make Gravy – Paul Kelly
***.5 Great insight into Paul Kelly’s life (not necessarily about how he wrote his songs)

Kafka on the Shore - Haruki Murakami
**.5 Bizarre road trip story dealing with cat killing demon named Johnny Walker and a man trying to close a portal to another world...the author admitted he wrote the novel without an outline and it shows!

After the first death – Robert Cormier
*** Some middle eastern men take a school bus hostage, gritty and real and as pertinent today as when it was published

The Outsiders – S E Hinton
**** A group of youths (including 3 brothers) fight another gang where one is killed. Hinton portrays the brothers in a very compassionate way and all 3 are very distinct

The Harp in the South – Ruth Park
*** Family drama set in Surry Hills at the turn of the century dealing with growing up, first love, loss, and coping as Irish immigrants in Oz (they laughed, they cried...)

Dirt Music – Tim Winton
** Somewhat meandering journey of a woman lost with herself and in her relationships with two men

Chocky – John Wyndham
*** A boy in the UK communicates via his mind with a benign alien. An interesting story about our place in the universe.

Blaze of Glory – Michael Pryor
**.5 Young adult mystery story about an alternate world where magic is real and two friends try to solve a murder

The Book Thief – Markus Zusak
**** Moving and original story narrated by Death during World War 2 following the adventures of an adopted girl in Germany

Black Swan Green – David Mitchell
****.5 The misadventures of a 13 year old boy in the UK in the 1980’s. The deterioration of his parent’s relationship is made real via the excellent dialogue, and made sadder by the fact that the boy doesn’t realise his parents are splitting up

Of Mice and Men - John Steinbeck
*** A small tale of two friends in 30’s America, a ‘simpleton’ who accidently kills and his brainier friend. This one will stick in your mind.

The Forgotten Children – David Hill
* True story about UK kids being sent to Australia in the 1950’s. Good story, wrong author.

In My Skin – Kate Holden
**** Fascinating memoir.

Triptych – Karin Slaughter
**** Excellent murder mystery with three dimensional characters and unseen twists

Portnoys Complaint – Philip Roth
***** There is so much truth in this novel that I commend the author for writing what people (mostly men) only think about!

The Passage – Justin Cronan
** The first 200 or so pages of this 700 page behemoth is a good action thriller, within the next 500 pages the novel regresses into 'zero care factor' territory. It's an end of the world allegory with vampire-like beasts and a virus set loose.

Past the Shallows– Favel Parrett
**** A poignant and haunting tale of 3 improverished brothers in the south of Tasmania, their violent father, and a mystery surrounding the death of their mother. This one has stuck with me. 

The Finkler Question – Norman Jacobson
** There is a powerful insight into humanity in this novel however there is far too much navel gazing for this reader.

The Handmaids Tale – Margaret Atwood
***** Perfect and believable speculative fiction showing how women could plausibily be stripped of their freedoms and forced to breed for 'Commanders'. Not as science fiction-y as it sounds, a great sense of menace. Highly recommended.

The Thirteenth Tale – Diane Setterfield
** Books. A 'ghost'. Elements of Jane Eyre and a mystery novel - for 3/4 of the way anyway. An easy read although not involving or immersive, the last quarter lets it down.

Water for Elephants – Sara Gruen
*** An excellent yarn about an elderly man recounting his time in a travelling circus in the 30's run by a sadistic egomaniac, ignore the Hollywood tripe and read it.

BONE - Jeff Smith
***** FINALLY managed to read all 1500 or so pages of this epic tale of Fone Bone and his cousins. True character development, great action scenes and one of the best climaxes I've read in a graphic novel for ages.

The Comfort of Strangers - Ian McEwan
**** A macabre tale whereby each turn of character tightens a noose. I had no idea this had been adapted into a film with Chris Walken! MUST HUNT DOWN!


The Regulators - Stephen King
** People in a suburban street are shot by creatures in vans. Unfortunately the plot is given away within 100 pages so the rest was a skim read.

My Darling, My Hamburger - Paul Zindel
**** Zindel uses minimal words to evoke great, believable characters. Everyone could relate to this story of teens and first love.

The Last Werewolf - Glen Duncan
**** Duncan does for werewolves what True Blood did for vampires. He provides new insights into 'the transformation' and suggests that werewolves inherit people's lives when they eat them. Hard to put down.

So there we have it! The most novels I have ever read in a year.
Total count = 39!

Woo hoo!

Now to compile my list of mini novel reviews for 2012.....

Tuesday, 6 September 2011

Preview art - Jon Prefect, Underdog

Here are some art samples from 'The Racketeers' showing Jon Prefect the 'Missionary Man' and Joe Kiss, otherwise known as 'Underdog'.






This is the first time I have created a comic with no paper involved! Fully digital from start to finish - oh yeah! All created in Illustrator 10 with a Bamboo tablet (a little one not a fancy schmancy one).

Monday, 5 September 2011

Oliver Jeffers

Check this out - from the author/illustrator of one of my favourite kids books - 'The Incredible Book Eating Boy', a little video by Brooklyn based kids book creator Oliver Jeffers

Enjoy

Thursday, 1 September 2011

The Racketeers – Preview Art

Here is some preview art of the first volume of The Racketeers. The story will be called ‘The True Vine’ and will introduce the characters of Jonathan Prefect (Missionary Man), Joe Kiss (Underdog), and Fatima Gold (Lotus).

I am currently drawing page 7 of 10 and expect to have the whole thing ready by the end of September.

The Racketeers - Volume One

Wednesday, 24 August 2011

The Racketeers - page 5 to be lettered

Tonight I plan to letter page five of a planned ten page comic titled 'The Racketeers'