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Kajimaba: Australian animated shorts

Kajimba is an upcoming 26 part series of short animations featuring creatures from Australia’s outback. I love the little preview clips, which feature some great animation acting and are pretty funny to boot.

Video profile of Ghostpatrol

InFrame.tv has posed this beautifully-produced video profile of Australian artist Ghostpatrol busy at work in his “Mitten Fortress” studio.

The video is brought to us by Matt Hopper who also produced the recent video of Australia’s Shaun Tan posted here.

Previously: Ghostpatrol: Pencils as Canvas

Australia’s Picture Pig

Australia’s Picture Pig illustration collective seems to be quite a powerhouse of amazing talent. Made up of Nigel Buchanan (whose illustration we see here), Dean Gorissen, Andrea Innocent, Lew Keilar, Sonia Kretschmar, Stuart McLachlan, Steven Moore, Christopher Nielsen, Ben Sanders, Danny Snell, Mark Sofilas, Jim Tsinganos, Michael Weldon, and Amanda Upton, the group has an incredibly strong pooled portfolio with a surprising variety of styles.

Thanks to group member Christopher Nielsen for the tip.

Interview with “Fail Whale” artist, Yiying Lu

Every now and then an illustration comes along that becomes a cultural phenomenon. The “Fail Whale” has become one of those images.

The whale appears on the microblogging / social network, Twitter, every time their servers slow down – which in recent months, has been very often. As frustration with the service grew, Fail Whale sightings increased. The cute pastel image became a lightning rod for Twitter-users’ frustrations.

Pretty soon, people were wearing Fail Whale Tshirts and joining Fail Whale fan clubs.

Yiying Lu is the artist behind the Fail Whale. I was surprised to learn that Yiying was not paid directly for the image – she originally posted the image to iStockPhoto.com where the Twitter people picked it up.

Last week, I asked Yiying a few questions about her experience. Here are her responses:

1) What was the inspiration for the whale and birds illustration?

It was initially created as a birthday e-card for an overseas friend of mine when I was in my last year study at University – expressing my: Sorry I am failed to be there across the ocean, but here is a little console from my heart. The whale is a self metaphor. Hence the original name I had for that artwork was “lifting a dreamer”.

2) Are you surprised by all the attention the ‘Fail Whale’ is receiving?

Actually, both Yes and No:

“Yes” because it was surprising how perfect my whale illustration fits twitter’s brand, and even more perfectly how the whale and the birds fit their “over capacity, too many tweets” usage – the huge whale being carried by the little birdies. Once it was in use, I guess it was not surprising that people would fall in love with the whale – he is really cute. That little image has been the most effective piece of damage control that company could have hoped for: turning a service interruption into a loveable thing! I am surprised how Biz Stone managed to find the image on iStockphoto among 3 million other images, but then that is how the universe works.

“No” because I’m confident with my artwork, as they are made from heart so it wasn’t surprising to see they bring the attention.

3) Will you continue to use stock photo web sites in the future? Would you recommend it to other artists?

I will reserve my comment about this for now. I am currently having a variety of discussions about the licensing of my works.

4) Which artists do you look to for inspiration?
Lots – René Magritte, Alan Fletcher, Saul Steinberg, Bruno Munari, Salvador Dalí, Shel Silverstein, Feng Zikai, Yoshida Sensya, Ito Junji and many more. Music Artists like Röyksopp, Air, the Buggles, Daft Punk and so on..

5) What projects are you working on now?

I’m working on the entire branding & packaging design for PetPhilosophy; starting to re-design the identity of infowi.se; some design projects on Lancôme and Shu Uemura. I’m also planning to work on some children’s books, CD cover arts and some personal design / illustration projects. And of course, taking care of my whale. He has made the biggest splash so far.


Yiying Lu is a full-time artist. She runs her own illustration / graphic design studio and is also a design lecturer at the University of Technology Sydney, Australia.

Also of interest:
Read the full story of the Fail Whale on Read/Write Web
Fail Whale Tshirts and stuff on Zazzle
Follow Drawn! on Twitter
Twitter Down Art

Noferin

Thanks to reader Kenrith who tipped me off to these cute prints from Australia’s Noferin.

Ebony Ellerslie

I love discovering new illustrators by accident through Flickr. Such was the case stumbling across the work of Ebony Ellerslie. Much of her work, including drawings, etchings and origami, shares a similar focus on the shapes, textures, and intricacies of folded paper and fabric. You can find more of her work at her blog, teh delightfully-named Pictopep, and at her rep, The Jacky Winter Group.

Shaun Tan

Lou sends in this link to his favourite children’s illustrator: Shaun Tan, who will be a guest at Continuum 4 in Australia.