I can't remember how I found IJM.... but I have a sneaking suspicion it may have been another Hello Sandwich tip-off! I'm loving all Ebony's links right now! :)
Dutch super-stylist Frank Visser is the creative mind behind IJM studio. It seems he does all kinds of styling, set design, art direction under this name... and his work is just incredible - so inventive, engaging and so tactile. LOVE it.
IJM studio also has a blog.
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
IJM
Monday, March 30, 2009
Creative Women's Circle meeting this Saturday
Heeeey... just thought I would take a moment in-between posts to plug a little talk I am giving in Melbourne this weekend!
Graphic designer Tess McCabe, who I met whilst we were both blogging for the Melbourne International Design Festival last year, has recently taken over organising of a group called Creative Women's Circle (originally the brainchild of interior designer Dearne Herrenberg). It has been running for a couple of years, and is held 6 times a year.
According to Tess, CWC meetings are a great way to meet likeminded creative women from a variety of creative fields, and learn from their experiences. The women involved in CWC are engaged in all sorts of creative businesses, from jewellery to printmaking, magazine production, graphic design, bags and accessories manufacturing...
And... apparently, Tess thinks my experience in creating and maintaining this little blog would be of interest to creative women in Melbourne! Who'd have thought!?
Anyway, allegedly it's a very casual, social affair... so I am trying not to be too nervous! I'll be talking about how I started out in the crazy world of props buying/set dressing, how the blog has opened a few doors for me professionally, and how creative people can better promote themselves and raise their profiles online via their own or other peoples blogs. And perhaps I'll be showing some slides :)
If you're in Melbourne and interested in coming along this Saturday morning, it would be lovely to meet you! It's at the gorgeous Guildford Lane Gallery, 20-24 Guildford Lane, Melbourne, from 10am - 12 (I won't be talking that whole time I hope!) RSVP to tess@tessmccabe.com.au
Annette Ringrose's ring o' roses
Annette Ringrose's gorgeous paper rose heart, hanging on display at the Food and Wine festival in Melbourne last week.
Melbourne-based props maker extraordinaire Annette Ringrose can make pretty much anything. Usually using not much more than polystyrene, cardboard and a gluegun. She often makes props for TV advertisements, private events and corporate functions... incredible things like oversized fruits, crazy costumes, table centrepieces and once she even made a giant engagement ring (for a very romantic wedding proposal). She also makes particularly great chocolate-chip cookies.
I have to share Annette's gorgeous oversized paper rose hearts, made for a display at the Melbourne Food and Wine festival last week. She made around 36 huge paper roses, carefully cutting and curling and spray-painting each petal, before gluing them around a painted polystyrene ball, then attaching them all to large ply-wood hearts. Aren't they gorgeous!?
Here Annette shares some photos of the rose-making process step by step! So clever. Thanks Annette!!
Annette also works at The Prop Store in Melbourne. Next time you need some amazing prop or oversized custom-made incredible thing for your corporate function / wedding / kid's 21st / whatever - Annette's your lady!
Friday, March 27, 2009
Interview - Andrew Elliott
I am constantly impressed with the talent of Australia's emerging photographers... I guess at times we struggle to find our way in the international design scene in certain creative fields... but we do sure do produce some awesome photographers. Andrew Elliott is another young Australian photographer to watch, but unfortunately for us (fortunately for him!), he's based in New York City.
Andrew is great friends with recent interviewee Louisa Bailey, and in fact it was Andrew who helped her out when she first got to NY, hooking her up with Craig McDean for some assisting work. It was also Louisa who suggested I chase Andrew up for an interview... and I'm so glad she did!
Andrew's work is so incredibly varied... his travel shots and dreamlike night-time landscapes are mesmerising... his portraits of family and strangers are thoughtful and considered, and yet his spontaneous snapshots (often of his gorgeous model/Ivy League student girlfriend Cameron Russell) are so natural and unstructured. (I guess it helps when your subject is as beautiful as Cameron!)
The other thing I find so inspiring about Andrew is his success as a young photographer in New York... it can't be easy being a little fish in such a big city... but Andrew seems to have cemented his position there, and it's clear he's in for the long haul! He recently went out on his own, after assisting high profile photographers Craig McDean and Steven Meisel for the last few years. I'm sure Andrew is destined for big things... watch this space!
ps) Andrew also has a photo blog here.
Tell me a little about your background - what did you study and what path led you to what you’re doing now?
Like so many photographers I’ve read or seen interviewed, I became interested in photography between the ages of 12-14. In my case it was on a trip to China when I was in 8th grade. My high school had a good darkroom, which made it easy for me to experiment with photography through to the end of 12th grade. I’ve had countless fleeting interests ever since I was born but when the time came to choose what to study further, photography was the only thing that I’d honestly maintained a consistent interest in for several years. So in a way, by a simple process of elimination, deciding to study photography at university and put my energy into being a photographer was one of the easiest decisions I’ve made.
You left Melbourne in 2004 and headed straight to the Big Apple to study at Parsons School of Design. What prompted this courageous move, and how has NYC treated you as an emerging photographer?
I’d been fascinated with New York culture – music, art, film - since my early teen years, so when I finished my undergrad studies and was itching to get out into the world and live in a different city, New York was at the top of the list. And it seemed like a logical idea for a photographer because it was - and is - the capital of the photo industry, at least economically speaking. There’s a great creative community in New York, and it’s been exciting to often be in such close proximity to people whose work I’d admired from Australia. During my time in New York I’ve met many people whose work I’d admired from afar back in Australia.
After a year at Parsons, you dropped out to work for photographer Craig McDean. This must have been a big decision at the time! How do you feel about that decision in retrospect?
It wasn’t the easiest decision at the time because I like to finish what I start if possible, but I recognised it as a good learning opportunity for me and have never looked back. And when I say learning opportunity, I don’t really mean in the sense of learning how to light subjects or how large shoots are structured and organised for example – I mean in the sense of meeting people and gaining life experience, regardless of what particular path I would follow with my own photography. Going from the MFA environment to working on fashion shoots was quite a shift, but working in fashion at that level was often fun, challenging, and allowed me to meet so many interesting people from all around the world. Craig was great to work with, and since he’d started out in London as Nick Knight’s assistant there was a lot of valuable photographic knowledge being passed down and that was a privilege to be a part of. I then went on to work for Meisel, which was totally different but also great experience.
There are many things about fashion that aren’t so great, but to me the best thing about it is that it can be really international. The stereotype of the fashion industry is that it’s shallow and fickle, and there is some truth to that, but it’s easy to overlook the more positive aspects – and they are very real. If you were sitting at the lunch table on any given shoot, you could be surrounded by people from Hungary, Russia, Brazil, Germany, Italy, Belgium, England, America, or places you’d never even given any thought to, like Martinique or Slovakia. I can’t think of many work environments you could be in that are international to that extent. You have a lot of time to talk to people while you’re working, and you really do learn a lot from exposure like that and watching people interact with each other. It reminded me of meeting my father’s students at graduation parties in our back yard in Melbourne when I was younger (he was an English as a Second Language teacher) where there were people from all corners of the world packed into a small area. There’s something ideal about that.
Working for yourself can be really difficult for creative people. What are the challenges you have faced working for yourself – do you struggle with the business side of things, for motivation to get started on a project, or networking etc? How do you tackle these parts of your job?
I haven’t been on my own for very long at all, so I’m really a novice at it. Motivation is the easy part - I’m interested in and motivated to do so much more than I would ever be able to find time for. When it comes to personal projects, funding and access are the key difficulties. Commercially, the difficulty is building a reputation for yourself and convincing people to see financial value in your work. The ultimate challenge really is all about developing and improving your work, and the reason I think that’s so difficult is because that’s really about developing and improving yourself. There’s no substitute for life experience, and it takes time and a lot of experience and reflection to make that kind of progress.
Which photographers, artists or creative people are you inspired by?
Tibor Kalman – for me, the early issues of Colors magazine were the pinnacle of the magazine publishing industry so far. I can remember reading them at the local newsagent when I was a schoolkid, and even back then I knew I was looking at something really special. I dare somebody else out there to make something that good.
Gerhard Richter – formally, technically, and aesthetically there’s no better artist working today.
James Nachtwey – is especially admirable in terms of the subjects he covers and his personal investment in them. The documentary ‘War Photographer’ is a must-see for anybody interested in photography, conflict, or the social politics and moral complications of photographing suffering.
Wolfgang Tillmans – the breadth of his work is especially impressive. There have been only a handful of photographers who have covered such a broad scope of subject matter and made it as interesting, beautiful, and unexpectedly coherent as he does.
Jonas Bendiksen – is a great young photographer with Magnum. His project ‘The Places We Live’ was one of the best things I saw last year. I came across a short video interview of him online where he was saying something along the lines of how the people who will inherit photography will not necessarily be making the best compositions, but rather have the best ideas, or be telling the most poignant stories. I thought that was a great attitude to have towards photography, and it’s something that shows through clearly in his work. I’m eager to see what his next big project will be.
Robin Schwartz – makes amazing, funny pictures of animals.
Bruce Davidson – has been around a long time, and has done many great documentary projects. ‘Subway’ still amazes me - especially since the small world it documented doesn’t exist any more. There are quite a few photographers at Magnum, like Josef Koudelka and Martin Parr whose work I’ve followed and admired since my first year studying photography.
Where else do you find inspiration (books, particular magazines, the net, everyday life?)
Novels – Don Delillo, Jonathan Lethem, and J.M. Coetzee are great. Internet – NYTimes, Funny and Interesting, 5B4, Arts and Letters Daily, Facebook, Magnum blog. In general – travel, talking to friends, watching action movies, walking. I like to keep up to date about what’s happening in the Japanese photo/publishing industry in particular – there’s a lot of good work happening there that gets little recognition outside Japan.
What does a typical day at work involve for you?
Coffee, then in no particular order: time online reading and emailing, photographing whatever project I’m working on, going to the lab, editing and scanning, bouncing ideas off people, sending my folio out, walking, and the occasional protracted internal dialogue.
What are you most proud of professionally?
I try to avoid professional pride as much as possible. Dissatisfaction with your work is a great motivator to be making progress.
What's the best thing about your job?
The fact that I can make an actual adult living through my teenage hobby.
And the worst?
Finding the right balance between making a living and making the right work.
What would be your dream project?
Taking a simple picture of the earth from orbit. Anything in space, come to think of it.
What are you looking forward to?
Photographing an upcoming portrait project for a non-profit start up called Interview New York. Visiting Melbourne in august – it’s been more than two years since the last trip. Getting film back from the lab tomorrow.
NYC Questions –
Best design/art bookshop in NYC?
Dashwood on Bond Street.
What/where was the last great meal you ate in NYC? Akamaru Modern ramen at
Ippudo.
Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?
Tandem biking to Café Orlin to eat malawach.
NYC’s best kept secret?
Doyers on Doyers lane is great. The section of the Berlin Wall on 53rd street. The Russian souvenir shop on 14th street that’s never open.
Thursday, March 26, 2009
Handle and Spout
How gorgeous are these handmade accessories by Handle & Spout?
Via the Tas-ka blog (Tas-ka is my new favourite webshop, thanks Ebony!)
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Hello Sandwich (Ebony Bizys blog!)
Ebony Bizys knows things. And she has impeccable taste.
Lucky for us she finally has a blog, so we can all keep up with her brainy ways.
Look at all the amazing things Ebony has shared on her blog recently :
Hand-painted easter eggs -
Japanese bento boxes -
Super-cool Dutch design house / webshop Tas-ka -
Delicious artworks and collages by Jessica Williams -
See how smart she is? Bookmark bookmark bookmark. x
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
Amazing Megan Morton
Photos for Australian Travel and Leisure Magazine Christmas Gift Guide 2008, styled by Megan Morton, paper-sculpture by Benja Harney, shot by Sydney photographer Dieu Tan.
I've had more than a few star-struck moments in the last year thanks to this little blog! I can't quite believe how many lovely, super-talented people The Design Files has put me in touch with... it's a beautiful thing :)
A couple of weeks ago, I magically found myself in the most incredibly stylish home in Toorak, popping open a bottle of champagne with none other that my all-time favourite Australian props/interiors stylist Megan Morton!
I am still recovering from the excitement! Deep breaths.
Megan was (is) even more fabulous and wonderful than I could have imagined. Truly. She was so friendly and open and generous in conversation... sharing with me so many fascinating details about her job, her creative colleagues and her incredible body of work. I feel very lucky to have spent an evening in Megan's company. She is just so lovely! We hit it off immediately (I can't imagine anyone not hitting it off with Megan, by the way). Our conversation was kind of like a breathless, excitable school-girl gossip session... ie "oh my gosh, the colours are amazing... you will DIE!" etc etc.
It would have been rude and ridiculous to tape-record our conversation or take notes... (and I was doing my best to be polite!)... but I wish I could remember word for word, the frenetic stream of conversation.... Because it was all absolute gold. I left with my brain full of names and details to Google (wish I could still remember them all!). But the main thing which struck me about Megan - aside from her incredible body of work and endless list of exciting projects and clients and collaborators - was that she is just so infectiously passionate about her craft. She talked about styling in terms of 'taking a house, and putting it's best foot forward... making it as delicious as it can possibly be'... perfect.
The whole experience was entirely surreal... not just because Megan was so amazingly fabulous... but also because we met at the most incredible Toorak mansion, which Megan was house-sitting whilst in Melbourne for a week. (Apparently, if a home is this fabulous, house-sitting is known as 'chaperoning' the home, and is an insurance requirement!?). This massive, ridiculously beautiful home was designed by Melbourne architect Rob Mills, and Megan had recently styled the place for a photoshoot, kitting it out in the most stunning furniture from Hub and De De Ce. *Sigh.
Anyway, I appear to be gushing (as usual!).... But I thought I would share some beautiful shots Megan sent me last week, which she styled for the Travel and Leisure gift guide last year. This is a collaboration between Megan and her paper-forming friend Benja Harney, and was shot by Sydney photographer Dieu Tan.
ps) don't worry... an interview is in the works...!