Starting From Chicken Scratch

So I’ve been contemplating lately what my next move will be regarding my illustration career. As I blogged earlier, I don’t think the direction I was heading was quite the right direction I should be. It’s kind of hard to keep doing what you’re doing when what you’re doing isn’t doing anything. Isn’t that the definition of madness? Spinning your wheels and expecting a different result?

My mailing list since 2005 has been directed toward picture book publishers, and there aren’t too many No, Davids or Frog Belly Rat Bones out there. And you know what? That’s fine. I’m not sure I’m understanding the logic, but I respect the decision, and I’m free to move on.

This morning I bought a Kindle copy of the 2011 Artist’s and Graphic Designer’s Market book. It’s been a while since I had a copy (looks like 2007 was the last), and I wanted to get a version that didn’t leave me with a dead tree in a few years. So I’m Kindle-ing this one.

I’ve decided my mailing list is getting a do-over, and I’m starting with the Market book I bought this morning. When the 2012 Children’s Writer’s and Illustrator’s Market book comes out in September, I’ll sift through that one, too. I’m going to look for publishers for older kids this time, and book covers and maybe posters and agents and such.

I still love, love, love picture books, but I’ve resigned myself into accepting that if I ever get one published it will likely be independent of a major house. And I’m fine with that, too. I’ll be doing it because I love creating and pulling ideas out of my butt, and that satisfaction can happen no matter who pays for the final outcome.

Yesterday I went for a bike ride (Rockwood, PA to Garrett, PA on the Great Allegheny Passage). I took a picture while I was riding, so I have an excuse for the blurry. Lots of thoughts in my head, including the one I shared above.

And here’s another one:

You need to get out more.
You need to move more.

The more you move more,
the more oxygen gets sucked into your little brain,
and the more thoughts can get thought out of your butt.

Think your own thoughts. Paint your own pictures. Live your own life.

Test the new Hairy Eyeballs QR Code

I was messing around with a QR Code generator today, and it gave me this for the Hairy Eyeballs Web site (http://www.hairyeyeballs.com/):

Pretty cool, huh? I don’t have a smart phone that can read these things, so I’m hoping somebody who does can try it and tell me if this thing actually works.

But it still looks cool.

The Death of…@GrisGrimly?

If a major publisher can do this to Gris Grimly, what might a lesser publisher potentially do with someone like me?

http://grisgrimly.blogspot.com/2011/05/death-ofme.html

If you know anything about Mr. Grimly’s art (and if you don’t, take a look: http://www.madcreator.com/index.cfm), you know his palette is muted, earthtoned and perfectly suited to his work.

I’m not sure of any details other than those relayed through the above blog post, but I’m wondering where the breakdown occurred. If someone had a problem with the color, why wasn’t the artist approached and given the opportunity to make compromises and any color adjustments himself? Who did make the changes? Who O.K.’d them? And why would they think it was perfectly fine to do that?

I’m not sure what happens if I purchase this book. Am I supporting Gris Grimly? Or am I supporting the person at Random House who decided to “fix” his work without his input or acknowledgement?

As an artist, how do you handle a situation like this? Do you have any rights? Is this something that needs to be addressed in the contract? And if so, why is something like this even an issue that needs to be debated?

Hairy Eyeballs Press! No! I’m not kidding!

I’m mulling around some considerations and thoughts and decisions, as writers tend to do and, although I can’t reveal some of the considerations and thoughts and decisions here, I can reveal a few.

First off, I have a new logo I’d like to share without comment:

Second off, I have a new Web site that only has a domain name at this point, but I’m going to keep it to myself until it actually has some content. Just know that it’s getting thought about wildly.

And third off, as the “First off” and title of this post may have given away, I’m making plans, but I won’t be able to share them officially for a couple of months.

So right now, just consider yourself sort of in the noose — I mean loop. Loop. Did I say noose? I meant loop.

Dancing in the Moonlight: Complete

Here’s the color version of the sketch I posted last week. I think he turned out pretty good, but I’ve been looking at him for so long I’m not sure anymore. He’s getting some positive feedback, so I’m thinking he might be O.K.

He’ll be heading for a drink mix directory which will go out to art directors later this year. Fingers crossed on this one.

Dancing in the Moonlight

So you remember that Frankenstein hot cocoa idea I was doing for the Pittsburgh Society of Illustrators drink mix directory?

Yeah. It wasn’t really working for me, so I canned the idea and started over. I dreaded having to sit down and work on it for some reason. I still might use it somewhere someday, but right now it just isn’t happening.

I decided to stick with the hot cocoa idea though. I was thinking a lot of people drink hot chocolate in the evening before bed, and it would look pretty cool to have chocolate dripping off the teeth of a vampire, right? I also thought he should have some friends to enjoy it with.

But evening for a vampire is about the time when the party’s just getting started, and I wanted to make sure I showed that. He’ll be wearing printed pjs (not sure yet what the print will be) along with his bunny slippers, and everybody’s dancing to that old King Harvest song. You know, the one I can’t seem to get out of my head now that I’ve started this thing.

Desperately Seeking Tim Burton

Dear Mr. Burton,

I’ve found myself in a desperate rut, the likes of which you’ve managed to retrieve me from in the past, and I’m hoping you will be available again sometime soon.

January a year ago, I made a trek to the Museum of Modern Art, specifically to view your work on display there. I bought a membership just so I wouldn’t have to stand in line with all the other saps who had to wait to get in.

The rooms that housed your exhibit were terribly crowded; I’m sure we were well beyond the building’s fire code. Sardines, as it were. But I managed to see everything, just to make sure I didn’t miss anything that might later turn out to be something I would have liked to have seen.

After I squeezed my way through all the rooms I took a breather. I bought some stuff. I ate some stuff and, in spite of the sardine thing, I decided I needed to get myself back in the middle of that exhibit.

So I did.

This time I knew exactly what I needed to see again, so I jumped out of the line that snaked around the rooms and headed straight for the drawings.

The drawings, as you know, were watercolor outlined in pen, so there was really nothing out of the ordinary there. Using the media in that way was nothing new, and had never been a source of inspiration for me. So that couldn’t really have been the attraction.

Why was I still there? Why couldn’t I take my eyes off these images? Why were these images so much better than what I conjured in my own sketchbooks?

I think what sucked me back into those rooms and set my sparks flying was that unrestrained childlike imagination. How does an artist allow himself to let everything fly out the window like that? The caricatures were well beyond caricatures. Arms and legs and tails and horns and whatever other body parts that could conceivably be conceived as a body part were attached to shapes that weren’t really bodies until simulated body parts had been attached.

But you knew that.

Stripes and checkerboards and spirals and dipping horizons added to my acute sense of instability, and all I could do was stand in front of them and try to soak in as much as my little brain could soak in, in the hopes that some day that freedom would spew out in my own work.

On the train ride home I drew. Over the next few months I drew some more. I was inspired and ready to take on my own sketchbook demons and wrestle them into something I could proudly show the world.

Things seep away over time, however. It’s been another year, and I seem to have lost that thing. That permission you had given me to create outrageousnous. Those weird images that had been crisscrossing around in my head. And, ultimately, the hope that somewhere down the line it would all be worth it.

Dear Tim (do you mind if I call you Tim?), please send me a sign. Something. Anything. Something to get me back on track. Something to help me find my monsters. I’m afraid right now they’re lost, and I’m also afraid they’re scared. And hungry. I know I am. I desperately need to bring them home.

Please help me bring them back home.

Signed,

Nora

P.S. Thank you kindly for allowing my family to give me your art book last Christmas, and I’m eagerly awaiting your and Danny’s CD box set, as my Alice in Wonderland soundtrack is quite possibly wearing thin.

“The Lost Thing” or “How Shaun Tan Helped Me Find What Went Missing”

This is going to take a while, so I apologize right up front, and I thank you for seeing it through to the end, if you do. Let’s start by stating the instigation for this post:

Shaun Tan is changing my career.

There. I said it, now it’s out there, and now I have to find the nerve to follow it through.

This all started the day I bought Shaun Tan’s book Tales from Outer Suburbia last year, mostly for the illustrations (as usual), but also because I’d been working on a book of short stories of my own, and I wanted to see how somebody else tackled that kind of project.

Having Suburbia and a library borrow of his The Arrival as my only Shaun Tan interactions, I dragged family to see the Oscar-Nominated Animation Shorts at a local movie theater last month. The Lost Thing was one of the nominees (and eventual Oscar winner) and was based on Shaun’s Australian-released children’s* book of the same name. Shaun also worked for years on the movie.

*The word “children’s” is a little dodgy here. The book will be forced into the children’s section of bookstores because, cleary, no adult would be caught with a book filled with *gasp* pictures.

I bought the 15-minute short from iTunes within the week (sorry, no direct URL to the movie on iTunes). I pre-ordered his book Lost and Found which was released a few days later and included three of his early picture books, one of which was The Lost Thing.

I tweeted about our movie night. I tweeted about the Oscar win. I tweeted about iTunes. I tweeted about Lost and Found. Suffice it to say, the movie lingered in my little brain longer than expected. Evidently, something had happened over those few days that was making that little brain do some thinking.

I thought about my own career, and I thought about where I might have lost it.

My own Lost Thing.

I checked my checklist:

  • I work hard (kid’s illustrationsThe Rots, one of many books in the works).
  • I brand each aspect of my professional life as professionally as I can (see the sites above and below).
  • I promote myself (this blog, The Rots’ blog, my book blog, I’m on Facebook, I’m on Twitter, I send out promotional postcards religiously).
  • I promote others.
  • I try to be a good little small-business marketer (see everything above).
  • I follow advice when it comes from multiple, knowledgable sources (art directors, editors and agents).
  • I make changes that those sources seem to think are necessary.

I’ve heard a lot of advice through the years about what editors and art directors are looking for in an illustrator. I’m a member of SCBWI, and I attend the local conferences. Before I go on, I just want to say that I know these are only opinions and guidelines, and if my work is good, it’s just a matter of finding the right editor/art director/project that will take me on, regardless of whether the work followed the advice given. I know that. I understand that. But when the work isn’t coming in and the same advice is (again and again), it may be time to think about making some changes.

This is Stanley. He is the image I used on the first postcard I sent out with the style I could finally call mine. My initial portfolio and book submissions were similar.

I was told by two editors that they were concerned my characters weren’t cute enough.

I was told by a fellow illustrator that I needed to think along the lines of three-year-olds and clowns. “And smiles,” he said. “Not creepy.”

I was told by an art director that she could only use my work for scary stories.

I was told by another art director that he couldn’t use my work, but to send him updates anyway because “you never know.” (That publishing company released a book of poetry less than two years later using an illustrator who’s work was very similar to mine, but who’s pedigree included working for Disney.)

At a conference in NYC during an open question session with a couple of art directors, one answered the question, “What are you looking for in a submission?” with:

“Don’t send me people with googly eyes, big heads, small bodies and little skinny legs.”

Our portfolios had been open for preview earlier in the day. You can’t make this stuff up.

I made the changes. I concentrated on cuter. My heads got smaller, along with my eyes, which also evened themselves out and eventually constricted to pupils. I drew clowns. I made new samples and avoided the scary. My people were smiling. I kept up with the promotions. I sent new samples every three months. I tried to keep my attitude positive.

And yet.

Why was I not getting the work?

I posed the question to an editor. “I love it!” she said. “But this would be a hard sell.”

I posed the question to an agent. “It’s the economy,” he said. “Just keep doing what you’re doing.”

I posed the question to an art director that same day. “It’s the economy,” she repeated. “You’re doing everything right.”

I rewrote some of my “adult” short stories to make them more “accessible” to a younger audience, based on things I had read and heard at conferences:

  • I made my kids the protagonists.
  • I made my kids solve the problems.
  • I kept my picture book submissions to 32 printer-friendly pages.
  • I consciously made an effort to create unusual perspectives and action in my illustration samples.
  • I added pages to my Web site to show I knew how to develop a character and create sequential imagery.

But more than anything I took the edge off my illustrations.

And yet.

Enter Shaun Tan.

Lost and Found is just beautiful. It breaks the rules because it can. It breaks the rules because Hatchett Australia and Arthur A. Levine gave Shaun Tan a chance to break the rules. And Shaun Tan got the chance to break the rules because he created beautiful images and wrote from the heart.

I know. There’s that other piece of advice that gets thrown around a lot. But what if beautiful images and writing from the heart stomps all over the other rules?

The Lost Thing actually shows men smoking! Not once, but three times! Smoking! The horror!

The first of the three stories is resolved by a tree, and the third story isn’t really resolved at all. But the kids! Aren’t the kids supposed to be who make everything alright?

All three stories in the Lost and Found collection have themes that would surely be considered adult-oriented. Right? Maybe older kids, but certainly not those three-year-old clown lovers. (How many kids would really understand the sign, “State-sponsored thought for the day: LET THE MARKET DECIDE”?)

And those illustrations? Where are all the action shots? Where are all the in-your-face pay-attention-to-me page compositions? What’s to keep the attention of these attention-deficit children?

That’s when I took a look back over the last few years to see what happened. When did I change? When did I stop illustrating for me?

I took a(nother) long, deep breath and asked, “Where did I go?”

I had lost my Me somewhere.

My funny. My style. My twisted sense of humor. The Me that made my illustrations mine. My ideas had been squashed by 32 pages of cute. Of action. Of advice. Of opinions.

Shaun Tan’s advice to illustrators:

“Think about the things in yourself that are different to everybody else. And don’t think of those as a disability or something negative, but think of it as a positive attribute. Whatever it is that makes you unique, that’s what people are interested in.” 

Really? I so need this to be true.

I want to make a beautiful book that happens to be loaded with illustrations. A book with pictures. Why are picture books only geared toward kids? I buy kid’s books all the time. For me. I buy them for the pictures. My collection of picture books are alphabetized by illustrator.

I want to make the beautiful books I see in my head, the ones that most publishers won’t touch, the ones that may or may not contain kids, where the kid may or may not be the protagonist, that may or may not be scary, that may or may not have an adult sneaking a smoke in somewhere. The ones that may or may not depict clowns as the creepy nightmares they really are.

So I guess at this point I’m on my own.

I’m going to revisit some old picture books I had given up on. They had been poked and prodded and reinvented to the point I didn’t recognize them anymore. My original vision had been lost in my attempt to make them conform.

I’m going to continue with my Hairy Eyeballs project, but I’m not going to hold my breath for a publisher. I’ve submitted the book to an editor I met at a conference who definitely seems the type who would go for this sort of twisted idea of a thing, but I’ll completely understand when she tells me she isn’t interested. After the book is rejected in a few months, it will be my baby again, and I’ve no plans on submitting it elsewhere. I know people who will help me with the editing. I’ve already designed the book. I have a following of close to 3,800 people on Facebook as of this writing who think my twisted little characters really are cute (their word, not mine). But more than anything, I don’t feel the need to be accepted by the mainstream publishing world anymore.

I’m ready to make the books I’ve always wanted to make.

It’s time.

So it’s very likely at this point I’m the only one still here. But that doesn’t really matter right now, because this post was just for me.

And now, thanks to a lost thing, my creativity is again, too.

Robot guitar man

This was a drawing I made at work one day, and I wasn’t really sure what to do with him at the time. Since then, I figured out a way to squeeze him into the book I’ve been working on, and here he is, “spruced up” a bit to fit with the other stories in the book.

Spinach has as much iron as watermelon

Here’s why you have to actually proofread (and don’t assume spell check is good enough).

Whoever wrote out the results of an 1870 (or 1890, depending on where you get your information) German study misplaced a decimal point one spot to the right of where it was supposed to be and gave spinach ten times the iron than it actually had. It was written out by hand, so we can almost forgive the guy.

The bad part? It wasn’t until 1937 that some other German dudes discovered the typo and fixed it. But even then, it wasn’t really pointed out to the public until the British Medical Journal republished the study in 1981. Too late. Popeye debuted as a supporting character in Thimble Theatre in 1929, and has been hyping cans of spinach since. And actually, spinach eating jumped 33% between 1931 and 1936 in the U.S. which supposedly saved the spinach industry.

So all the kids who grew up being forced to eat their spinach can thank a cartoon and a typo.

Zombie tooth

I’ve had root canals before, so this one wasn’t bothering me all that much. I never really understood what all the bad press was about. Yeah, it was inconvenient, expensive, took a long time (try holding your mouth open wide for an hour and see what I mean) and took more than one trip, but I never really experienced major pain or side effects or anything. I was a little cranky going in because all of the above, but still.

This time I had to go to a root canal specialist. I won’t get into the whole story (short version: the dentist before mine didn’t finish the original root canal in this tooth properly), but there was some curving going around in there, and my dentist shooed me on.

Let me back up and say that the only reason I found out that the first root canal wasn’t finished properly was because the crown that other dentist had attached (also improperly) to the tooth came off.

Let me back up a wee bit further and say I had just finished a month-long root canal on a different tooth four days before said crown came off.

So I started out not a happy camper.

Anyway, my nubbins of a tooth looked zombie-ish to me. I even thought I could hear it’s little voice yelling, “brrrraaaaaaaaiiiiiinnnnns,” but I wasn’t certain about that. I won’t scare you with an actual photo (pretty gross in there), but I will show you the x-ray. I think you can figure out which one’s the zombie.

And all that other work? Yeah, that’s from grinding my teeth at night. But I digress…

By the way, it took a full week to recover from the first part of this root canal. First came the pain, which bypassed anything my pain prescription could handle. Then came the swelling. I already have a problem with the roots of my teeth pushing up into my sinuses on a normal day, but the swelling caused major allergy-type symptoms (obnoxious nose-running, sneezing, itching, you get the idea). Not only that, even when I wasn’t trying to eat I kept biting the inside of my cheek.

I go back to get the root canal finished on Thursday. Then I get to go to a periodontist to get part of my gums removed. Then I get to go back to my regular dentist for the final tooth restoration.

Oh, and I’m paying for this without insurance on an illustrator’s bank account.

I think this is what they mean by “root canal.”

Other than that, everything’s going just fine.