Monthly Archives: September 2015

Loose Ends and Weekends

I’m tidying up loose ends today, submitting my acquittal for my Trudy and Dodds grant project, a work long overdue, that sadly became entangled in Thunderstorm Dancing, and the many complications of life.

It’s my own manuscript, and I can’t say the text is finished. I’m only on the fifth draft; that must be near the beginning, hey?. In writing up my acquittal, I’ve bonded with it again, and maybe it will come to fruition one day. But for now it will go into the cupboard to wait until Leonard Doesn’t Dance is finished.

sketch of Dodds from Trudy and Dodds

sketch of Dodds from Trudy and Dodds

Puglia sketch with dachshund colour lores

Trulli sketch with Dachshund. The setting for Trudy and Dodds is a little town in Puglia, southern Italy, where the houses wear hats and so do many of the dogs.

Puglia street sketch lores

Another trulli sketch.

Drawing the trulli was fun. They have a lovely inbuilt contrast in texture; smooth plaster walls and shingly roofs with delightfully irregular curves. The more I drew them, the more irregular the curves became, which I saw as a good thing. And although the tips of the roovess do in reality have little ornaments which are like the signature of the individual trullo builder, in my versions, the ornaments have started to take a more fanciful form. Really, these ideas are just at the beginning stages.

And tomorrow I will be off for a long weekend with some dear friends, my Refashionista Sistas. This yearly sojourn is always full of love, creativity and relaxation. We will depart in cars brimming with art and craft materials, delicious food, and comfy slippers. On my return, I will probably share with you some of my creations… unless I end up falling asleep in a chair for the whole weekend. If so, I promise to post a photo of the slippers and the chair at least.

acouncil

This project has been assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council, its arts funding and advisory body.

Bear’s campfire story

Here’s Bear with Boy.

Bear and Boy came about when I was working on the Share A Story poster with the team from the Australian Children’s Laureate.

bear campfire temp

Ann James and I were initially scribbling away at the same time, tossing ideas around for ways to illustrate themes like ‘grow a story’, ‘hunt a story’, ‘hear a story’. We had few preconceived ideas about how we were going to make the poster concept work and we were playing for all we were worth. During this process I drew Bear and Boy, which I later coloured, because I liked the sketch, but I didn’t bother finishing it off perfectly.

But I was primarily the designer for this job, and it quickly became obvious that for the sake of visual cohesion, Ann’s illustrations would look better throughout; not mixed with some of mine. I moved to the computer and started colouring and experimenting with pattern, until we found something that was starting to work. Justine Alltimes and Ann Haddon provided invaluable insight and art direction.

Asking Ann to produce all sorts of obscure drawings on demand was like popping coins into the Best-Ever-Slot-Machine, and watching exciting and unexpected treats pop out. At speed. So much fun!

While from Ann’s point of view, it was fun to watch her drawings merge with colour and pattern and start to form a composition on the poster.

Ann James' Red Riding Hood and friend wolf (with mysterious dark figure looming behind!)

Ann James’ Red Riding Hood and Friend Wolf (with mysterious dark figure looming behind!) © Ann James 2015

Add classic vintage Australian Stamps

Add classic vintage Australian Stamps

Merge using a bit of digital magic along with some V&A pattern.

Merge using a bit of digital magic along with a V&A pattern in the background. Voila!

Being a fan of blobs, I liked the original inky halo around Mr Wolf. But the consensus was that there was not enough contrast to identify his shape against the background patterning, so he had to have a digital bath… or perhaps shave.

If you’d like to download the Share A Story free poster-calendar, conceived by Laureate Jackie French and illustrated by Ann James, go here. It is a great, open-ended way to engage your children with stories.

Share a Story poster final art web

Department of Education and Training early learning wall friezes

To prove I’m still here, I’m popping up some single illustrations done for the Department of Education and Training this year. The brief read thus:

The purpose of the four wall friezes is to encourage families to engage in learning activities with their child everyday. On each frieze there will be eight panels – a cover and a panel for each day of the week, with a different illustration of a family member(s) and a child/children engaged in a learning activity related to the theme. For example:

    • Music: dancing/singing, etc.
    • Science: cooking/exploring nature, etc.
    • Maths/numeracy: counting/measuring/block building/puzzles, etc.
    • Imaginative play: dress ups/cubby houses/pretend play/creative play spaces, etc.

The DET are happy for me to post fragments of the artwork I did for them, and you will hopefully come across the full design somewhere; perhaps in your local library.

Not surprisingly there was a dog or a chicken in each illustration… Oh actually, I couldn’t find a hygienic way to get a dog or a chicken onto the kitchen bench for the Maths illustration. Rats.

(…There were no rats in the kitchen either.)

kids play music JudyWatsonArt

A fragment: Music

Tommy from Thunderstorm Dancing enjoyed a new incarnation here. So did some of the other characters.

little spaniel from Imaginative play JudyWatsonArt

A (small) fragment: Imaginative play.

There’s that spaniel again. She keeps popping up.

my boys do cooking Maths JudyWatsonArt

A fragment: maths

My 12 year old got morphed into a 15 year old for this illustration. That was fun. I morphed him back again later. I’m not ready for a 15 year old.

Geeky little girl enjoys science with chicken friend

A fragment: science

Geeky girl gardener enjoys some science play. I like a geeky girl and I like her taste in chickens.