This and that

Since early September I’ve been buried underneath heaps of work. That’s good. I’d rather be stressed out by too much to do than too little. However, those kinds of weeks and months leave little room for blogging. I’d thought I’d post a little bit of this and that from what I’ve been up to during autumn 2011 so far.

Kulturnatten in Norrköping 24 Sept

I was invited by Arbetets museum in Norrköping to do some live cartooning for families visiting the exhibition Bamse & Du during Culture Night (Kulturnatten). The Bamse exhibition took place at the EWK-muséum, a section of Arbetets museum devoted to political art. EWK – Ewert Karlsson 1918-2004 – was a Swedish superstar in political cartoons. He won several international awards for his art. My job was to deliver Bamse drawings to the families visiting the Bamse exhibition.

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Photos taken by Aleksander Savic, official photographer for Arbetets museum.

I was amazed by two things. 1) That Bamse is still so popular. Children and parents still love the comics and the films, just like I did when I was a boy. When I’m out in public like this I’ve also noticed a certain awe for hand drawn comics and animation in general. It seems like many people are tired of the digital stuff, big budget 3D productions and the like. There’s a strong appreciation for the craft when people see it’s being done manually.

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2) That young children were prepared to stand in line for such a long time. I’m not a fast cartoonist, but I wanted to make sure that everyone waiting got a drawing of their favorite character. So instead of three hours with two breaks, I drew constantly for 3,5 hours. Some kids waited for probably an hour before it was their turn. Thank you all for your patience! And many thanks to Arbetets museum for having me. I’d love to come back, to draw or just to visit your beautiful museum.

John Bauer-gymnasiet in Lund 6 Oct

My friend Johan Rünow invited me to hold a workshop in drawing and digital coloring at the media school where he’s teaching. I’m really quite jealous of these students who get to make books, photography, posters, zombie films etc. Having fun while at the same time learning essential tools, digital and manual, for working in media in the future. I was there to teach about drawing – sketching and inking, and coloring your artwork digitally. A lot to go through in just three hours.

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Each student had their own personal computer. Some even had iMacs!

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While the students were hard at work I made a cartoon version of myself who’d drunk too much coffee and done no workout. Tried to explain how you can play around with proportions to create different types of characters.

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I wanted each student to make a cartoon version of themselves. Not an easy thing to do, especially if you don’t spend all your spare time drawing, like I did their age. But the students were heroic and made some really cool cartoons. Some of them were really quite outstanding, and I hope to be able to post a gallery of the students’ work here later on.

312686_285460741481301_151193858241324_1049390_1346760451_n_blogThe students went from hand drawn manual work to digital coloring in Photoshop. Photos taken by Johan Rünow.

In support of Syrian cartoonist Ali Ferzat

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“On August 25 2011, Syrian cartoonist Ali Ferzat was beaten by regime security forces for his system critic editorial drawings against the country’s president Bashar al-Assad. His hands and fingers were broken by his assailants, as a warning not to “draw against his masters”, before he was thrown by the wayside to be found by passers-by.

This kind of oppression and scare tactics is unacceptable to us as cartoonists, and with this project we want to show the despots of the world that if you break one artist’s hands, a thousand will rise in his place. We call upon cartoonists of every creed and nationality to produce works celebrating the freedom of expression, opposition to censorship, and in support of Ali Ferzat.”

The excerpt is taken from the site One Thousand Ferzats. If you’re a cartoonist and freedom of expression is important to you, I urge you to participate. Let’s collect a thousand drawings to show that pens will always be mightier than dictators. Yes Saleh, that goes for you too.

And while you’re at it, make sure to check out the archive with so many great cartoons from all over the world in support of Ferzat.

Happy 10th Anniversary ToughPigs!

Go and check out the extraordinary Muppet fan site ToughPigs who celebrate their 10th anniversary with an array of some extraordinary cool fan art. Lots of good stuff going on at the Muppet forums right now as we draw closer to the release of the new Muppets film. ToughPigs will head the coverage of this time of anticipation, I’m sure. Imagine running such an informative and entertaining fan site for ten years! I’m honored to contribute to this great event with this humble piece.

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Summer jobs

Vacation is just one day away, so I thought I’d share a couple of illustration jobs I did recently, before I’m off to foreign lands.

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Text by Emma Agering. Loosing vital information through careless handling of unsecure usb-sticks is a big problem for companies worldwide. That’s why Blockmaster AB invented the Safestick Secure USB Drive! The illustration will be used for customer Powerpoint presentations, but you can also see the illustration on Safestick’s website, as well as requesting a free evaluation stick!

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Ystad’s Allehanda is writing about two summer music festivals in the south of Sweden, Backafestivalen and Sommarrock Svedala, comparing the two. What guy would visit which festival in your opinion?

Hm, it’s raining outside my studio. I think I’ll just pack my bags and leave for sunnier latitudes. Au revoir and happy summer everyone!

The Muppets T-shirt Design Challenge cont’d

After scanning the inked drawing I colored it in Photoshop. To create clean files ready for printing I used the technique described in The DC Comics Guide to COLORING and LETTERING Comics. For some reason I always preferred stylized shading when coloring digitally. Sort of like cel shading with sharp lines. I don’t like the airbrush look. However, I added a few gradients for depth.

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I just happened to have the very materials the muppets are made of at home – reticulated foam and antron fleece. I scanned these and added them as surfaces for the Chef’s face and Zoot’s skin.

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As you may know, Jim Henson performed the Chef together with Frank Oz. One of Jim’s hands were in the Chef’s head, while his other hand and one of Frank’s combined to perform the Chef’s hands. I tried to mimic this by giving the Chef’s face an antron fleece surface, while the hands are plain [human skin]. Some incarnations of Zoot had him covered in antron fleece, while my favorite Zoot puppet had reticulated foam for skin (and a more greenish tone to it). Just to give you some measure of how nerdy I am. 🙂 And as you can see I picked black for background color, thus adding a white contour to the drawing to make the lines come out.

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I took the image to Illustrator and added the text. The type I used is called BattleLines. I think I got it from www.blambot.com.

Print

The final step was to mount the design on an actual T-shirt by some good ol’ Photoshop magic. Photo by my Södra Esplanaden colleague Lasse Lazee Johansson. Then I registered for the competition and sent in my design. Go and check out the many cool entries at Threadless and keep your fingers crossed that they’ll accept my entry. If they do, I’m going to ask the whole world to vote for me. 🙂

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To be continued…?