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Tuesday 20 May 2014

About taking hurdles

After my previous blog I got two questions about some of the content.
First was, what those hurdles were that I was talking about. Next people wondered whether I truly meant it when I wrote: ‘Winning or losing, I’m very happy I participated!’ Wasn’t this just a way to hide the fear/ chance of upcoming disappointment?
I’ll start with the hurdles, I think explaining those will also answer the second question.
Like I mentioned before, as a child I dreamed of illustrating books but I never made any serious attempts to pursue this dream. Now I was finally doing it! Exiting but scary.
Instead of illustrating I went to the Academy of Fine Art in Education. Still I can hear the teacher’s voices echoing in my head: my taste in art was poor, not to mention cliché and so was my artwork. Even now tiny parts of my brain objected to me illustrating: ‘this wasn’t art with a capital A!!’ I decided not to care, I was enjoying myself and that’s what matters, right?!
Working on my art I got stuck often. I got scared to continue, scared to ruin things, scared of expectations. This made me re-think everything. Illustrating for the contest there was no time for such nonsense. All 3 illustrations needed to be finished well before the 1st of May.
So I had to just ‘do’.
I rediscovered how much I like storytelling, my way. Now when I draw I just ‘do’ and don’t get stuck that easily. I got closer to what I like doing without being embarrassed about it. I found new solutions, new materials, new combinations.
During the 20 days of working on my illustrations I had a week of vacation and I caught myself thinking: ‘Oh, I hope I won’t spend my whole vacation drawing!’ And then I thought, wait a minute, I remember a time when I couldn’t wait for the (school-) vacation to start so I could draw all week! The moment I realized that, something changed, I couldn’t wait to get to my studio and start drawing.
Doing these 3 illustrations has brought me so much. So when I say that even when I'm losing I'm winning, I truly mean it.

Below an unfinished detail of the 2nd illustration I did for the Lemniscaat contest.


Monday 12 May 2014

Lemniscaat illustration contest

Again I’ve been too quiet for my own (blogging-) good. Last month I was totally occupied by the Lemniscaat illustration contest. Literally every moment I could spend drawing, I did.
As a child I always dreamed of illustrating children’s- and mostly fairytale books but I never actually made any attempts to do so.
Illustrators were asked by publisher Lemniscaat to send in three illustrations that go with a story of their own choice. It was clear to me it had to be a fairytale but which one?
I chose a story from ‘Persian Fairytales’ by Arthur Christensen (original title: Persische Märchen). My dad used to read from them when I was little and after all the stories by Grimm and Andersen they were amazingly refreshing. These stories had all this different creatures and different magic and lots of blood and gore! My choice fell upon ‘Mohammed the shepherd and the three Peri princesses’.
From beginning to end it took me almost 20 days to finish all three illustrations and I was just in time for the (Dutch) closing date on May 1st! It took me this long because I had to take some really hard hurdles that housed in my brain. Now that I have returned to my ‘regular’ drawings I can feel a difference in the way I work. I just DO because when working on the illustrations there was no time to ponder every brushstroke, they had to be finished and soon! So I’m very happy with this change and much happier to go to my studio.
Sure I would like to win the contest, sure I would like to be among the 10 best and attend a master class by an internationally recognized illustrator. I would like having my work promoted during the Bologna Children’s Book Fair. Have my work exhibited in library ‘The Hive’, in Worcester, England, in the Shanghai Library, China and also in the Centrale Bibliotheek Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
I would like all these things very much but taking these personal hurdles was very important to me. Winning or losing I’m very happy I participated!

Below details from the three illustrations I did for the Lemniscaat contest.