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Just before we broke up for Easter, our lecturers invited Les Jones from Elsie Magazine in to talk to us. He told us of his origin story and how producing his magazine has taken him all around the world.

'Sneak Peek' from Elsie Magazine's Website

Les is a designer and photographer who takes inspiration from deliberate randomness and found objects and typefaces. He'll photograph menu boards and handwriting in order to create typefaces to use in the magazine, producing the wackiest and most creative looking fonts created by non-designers!


Not only did Les give us an inspiring talk, he also walked us through his process of creating a random illustration. Using found images from catalogues, cereal boxes, everything, Les gave us all word cues to create collages.


Lots of paper, scissors and glue later, the entirety of the graphics and illustration departments had created their own random illustrations and the results were wonderful!

Seeing the variety of collages was amazing, and the sheer volume of work produced in around 45 minutes was astounding!


If you have the opportunity to check out Elsie Magazine's website then definitely do, the link is here: https://www.elsiemagazine.com/


See you next time!


Mort

 
 
 
  • Writer: Mort
    Mort
  • Jan 31, 2020
  • 3 min read

The week of the 18th of March was an incredible one at Glyndwr.

We welcomed two guest lecturers, one from the Netherlands and one from Poland. Their aim was to teach us something wonderful, and boy they smashed it.

The first day involved the two guest lecturers (having only just arrived from their respective countries) tell us about their work, and what they would ultimately like us to take away from this week.

There was a workshop on the intricacies of designing a mural, and a different workshop about freeing up the creative process of making a comic - you can guess which one I chose!

Initially, we were asked to bring a pre-prepared sequence of images. It had to be something that we weren't too precious about and was already a complete artwork in itself. Having just come back from the Leiden trip, I chose to use that comic.

Firstly, we began by redrawing the comic in black and white. We weren't even an hour in, and I was stumped.


Now, until I got to this point, I had always shrugged off black and white styles as being somewhat lazy, or that they didn't have a solid grasp on handling colour. BOY I WAS WRONG.


Working with black and white, you cannot hide anything, and if your tonal range is too flat then your work is going to suck. I'd also left all of my usual tools back in the house so my watercolours were effectively confiscated. Struggling on, I only got two pages of the original five drawn out in the time we were allowed.


The point of this exercise was to make us think more about the shapes that were present in our work rather than the narrative and subject matter. The only panel that I thought I'd achieved that in was the penultimate panel on the second page. It lacks anything figurative and could be taken as something completely abstract.

The next exercise was to redraw someone else's comic. We could add and take out anything we wanted to, which was exciting and scary. I had the pleasure of redrawing a comic about nightmares which totally contradicts my style, it was a really fun exercise. I had a great time using a multitude of pens and watercolour pencils to create mood, and the scribble-y shadows as the head were super fun to draw. If you're interested, the original comic belongs to this lovely artist right here: https://www.instagram.com/kaimasaima/


After redrawing someone else's comic, it was now time to photocopy everything we'd drawn in order to collage panels so that they looked appealing and pleasing to the eye. This was rather liberating in a sense, I went through multiple layouts with paper strewn everywhere - my desk was chaos incarnate. The combination of a lot of skulls and the stark contrast of black and white meant that a lot of death was implied in my collage. We then had to repaint the collage, while trying to incorporate a hint of narrative and this is where it took an unexpected turn.

Through all the skulls and silly message of the original comic, this new narrative slowly began to turn into one involving masks and a lost sense of identity. The repainting of the collage left something to be desired - the grey tones mixing too well and creating a kind of tonal mush - so I asked for feedback and moved on from there.


From an outside perspective, the narrative wasn't wholly clear and so I developed the comic into two pages. Once I was happy with that, I began to work mostly in brush pen and fine liner to negate the grey mush of previous versions. I think this worked well, and gave the narrative more depth than it would have if I'd used colour. This black and white reworking became my final piece of the week.

Overall, having someone from a different university come in to talk to, and teach us was invaluable. Each of us learnt to experiment more with our creative process, and I for one learnt to appreciate the skill required to work in black and white.


If you'd like to know more about the mural part of the week then check out my friend's blog! https://hghillustration.co.uk/blog/f/my-mural-workshop


See you next time,


Mort

 
 
 
  • Writer: Mort
    Mort
  • Jan 31, 2020
  • 1 min read

Here's a quick little comic I drew. Does anyone else find it incomprehensible at our use of plastic?

Seriously, our use of plastic really concerns me

I try my best to buy as many things (vegetables in particular) loose. I just really don't see any benefit to the plastic wrap. It's something that you're only going to use to carry the food to your house, and unless you're going to deliberately drop it onto the ground and smother it all over the bacteria on the floor, then you really don't need plastic wrap on most things.


I hope the plastic bothers you too,


See you next time,


Mort

 
 
 

© 2020 by Codi Mortimer. Begrudgingly created with Wix.com.

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