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What can illustrators learn from quilters? In this workshop we will look to both traditional and contemporary textile artists to teach us about color and composition, pattern mixing, and working with constraints. We will touch some quilts, look at even more, and practice interpreting and depicting textiles with a variety of mixed media. No sewing skills required - we will be drawing quilts, not stitching them! This workshop is for drawers and designers interested in exploring the possibilities of using quilts as visual metaphor, narrative device, or decorative inspiration. We will discuss how quilting and illustration can be complementary, and the benefits of nurturing interdisciplinary creative practices.
Explore the transformation that happens when you expand your business mindset, moving beyond definitions like 'freelance illustrator' or 'graphic designer,' toward the concepts of 'artist' and 'art brand.' This workshop begins with a panel discussion featuring Art Brand Alliance (ABA) members Meenal Patel, Jill Kittock, Carlos Carmonamedia, and ABA director Betsy Cordes. Their stories will help you see how you can apply the 'art brand mindset' to your own endeavors, bringing more authenticity and personal satisfaction to your work while expanding your impact. Then we'll take time for individual reflection, with imagination exercises that encourage you to tap into your own unique story, passions, and values. We'll conclude by breaking into smaller groups, sharing insights, suggestions, and encouragement toward next steps. In the process, we'll help you think more expansively about your role as a creator and the opportunities that are in your power to define and pursue."
Do you want more art directors to visit your website? Do you want more commission requests? We all know that the internet is the primary platform for promoting your creative talents. As a freelance illustrators, you can benefit from harnessing the power of search engine optimization (SEO). Wait—keep reading—it's not as boring as it sounds!!! In this workshop, Nate and Salli will show you how SEO works and describe how enhancements to your website can improve your online presence and help you reach a wider audience.
Create a small set of one-color spot illustrations/icons for a wine brand. This hands-on workshop walks you through our process for iconography, taking you from inspiration to final creation. We'll dig into layout, style, setup, plus tips and tricks — and all while holding a refreshing morning mimosa... for 'inspiration.'
Inspired by cabinets of curiosities, this assemblage-based workshop will explore multimedia materials to create unique theaters of imagination. Curious participants are encouraged to engage in playful exploration using their own diverse art materials: found 3D objects, collaging ephemera material, drawings, and paintings. The work is assembled in the provided wooden box, acting as the theater, showcasing the interdisciplinary work. Participants will choose their own ideas and themes to explore while providing their own unique found objects and materials.
This paper presents ongoing material from a practice-based PhD, researching the potential for wordless illustration through critically evolving traditional approaches of visual storytelling into immersive spatial contexts. The author contends that by deconstructing the bound book, opportunities for multi-linear storytelling arise which challenge the ways in which narrative experiences might be designed and understood. The author argues for the benefits of these ‘unrestrained’ readings which encourage deeper engagement and learning opportunities through group discussion.
The defining characteristic of illustration is an association with reading from 1830. Illustration contributes to reading in partnership with other visual elements in the mise-en-page across all modern print cultures. Reading has changed. The ancient scroll was replaced by the codex but has returned in electronic form. Publishing has receded; newspapers and magazines are disappearing. Fewer commissions are on offer. Today, illustrators are embracing authorship. But creating an entire work transcends the binary of "word and image." An ancient version of transcendence was captured in the expression "the three perfections," attributed to Wang Wei (699-759), referring to poetry, painting, and calligraphy. The triad has been updated and reinvigorated to encompass copywriting, illustration, and typesetting or lettering. This presentation will use Wang’s concept and episodes in the history of illustration to address the integration of writing, illustration, and design to reclaim illustration as a practice worthy of emphasis in liberally-minded curricula.
This paper will present the development of a research inquiry that explores the integration of AI image generation methods within narrative based practice. The research seeks to question the nature of creative exchanges, iterations beyond the screen and the implementation of AI within module teaching.
Specifically focused on academic book projects (those for students, scholars or practitioners), this interactive workshop session will include tips and advice on framing book proposals, how to choose a publisher, what to consider when developing your ideas and time for questions. The event will showcase real-life examples, and there will be activities for participants to get involved in.
If you have a ticket, please go to the MacMillan Atrium at the Minneapolis Institute of Art for your portfolio reviews.
Need to get your physical papers and digital files in order? Get organized with professional archivist and multidisciplinary artist Grace Danico! She will teach the ins and outs of creating a personal archive, and topics will include basic care of paper and digital materials, file structure organization, and the importance of metadata.
Join Savannah College of Art and Design Professor Ted Michalowski in this high energy live drawing session, with lively music to amplify this enthusiastic drawing atmosphere. Discussion on drawing, on the music, on the direction of the session is encouraged. However, the session is kept free of disruptive chit-chat, so that all can focus on energetic drawing. Attendees are encouraged to bring their sketchbooks and their favorite drawing tools.
Sketchbooks are an important way for illustrators to develop material to call upon later within a job context. Sketchbooks are free from expected outcomes and time constraints, an open space for exploration and contemplation. There's no right way to maintain a sketchbook practice, but we're going to explore ways it can be used. Sketchbooks can look inward, visually manifesting your inner dialogue. Sketchbooks can look outward, a tool to understand the world around you. They sometimes fall somewhere between these two approaches, a dialogue between your imagination and surroundings. We'll share examples of illustrator's sketchbooks, including Gina's and Matt's inward and outward facing approaches. Then it's a drawing party for sketchbook exploration together. We'll have lots of visual stimuli, but feel free to bring your own. Similarly, we'll have some ink, pens, paint markers, and gouache on hand, but bring your favorite stuff too. Then, of course, bring your sketchbook!
In this workshop, San Francisco arts lawyer Chuck Cordes will look at how AI image-generating programs are creating some brand-new issues for illustrators and other visual artists that copyright law wasn't 100 percent intended to deal with. We'll talk about government efforts to regulate AI; lawsuits aimed at AI giants like Open AI, Microsoft, and Stability AI; and look at how courts are treating claims of mass copyright infringement of artists' works. And we'll touch on other theories that plaintiff-artists are relying on, like right of publicity and unfair competition. We'll explore the copyright status of AI-generated art and what that means for makers and users of AI generated images. Audience questions are invited and it is hoped this will be equal parts lecture and dialog. This is a quickly evolving area. If other important matters relating to artists' rights and AI arise, we'll look at those, too.
Imagining education through the prism of collaboration, MICA faculty Rebecca Bradley and Sandra Maxa developed the graduate-level course, Graphic Design/Illustration Collaborative Studio, to fill a void in the curriculum. The course guides students through team-based, multi-disciplinary projects for non-profit clients and community partners. This presentation will share project case studies, workshops and lessons from 3 semesters, as well as stories of success and failure along the way. Collaboration and communication are the key outcomes — amongst the students, the co-teaching faculty and the clients. Students from diverse backgrounds and majors such as Curatorial Practice, Graphic Design, Illustration, Photography, Social Design and Design Leadership learn the challenges and the give-and-take of collaboration, and how, when engaged fully in teamwork, a project can be doubly rewarding. Students form a new understanding of professional practice that builds an appreciation for others and a process that is foundational.
Where and how are BFA illustration students taught about research and writing in their practice? In this talk we will discuss the implementation of research and writing outcomes in the PCAD Illustration program including scaffolding, resources, successes, and areas for improvement.
For over ten years, the Masters in Illustration program at The Glasgow School of Art has developed critical reflective methods to inform students' studio practice. The program requires students to identify their position in communication design practice within a broader historical, social, and political context. The program has been transformational in helping students identify and locate their practice in this landscape, resulting in graduates pursuing careers as practitioners, researchers, curators, and art activists. I will reflect on the range of approaches employed by the team over this period, their effectiveness in supporting students to reflect critically on their studio practice, and how the program has enabled students to transform their practice. Examples of student work will provide context alongside graduate feedback on how the critical reflective methods have informed their studio practice. Keywords: Illustration research, authorial practice, critical reflective methods.
With recent technological advancements, it is becoming increasingly important to train illustrators who are thinkers first and foremost. Worldbuilding, the process of creating both the visual language and imagined inner-workings of an environment, encourages students to create constraints based on an internal logic, and practice working within them. Worldbuilding further adds authorship to the design process, and opens dialogues on ecology, culture, history, and representation while giving students a channel in which to find and develop their visual voice. In this presentation, I will outline a working model for integrating worldbuilding into illustration curriculum. Illustration: World and Voice, an undergraduate course I have taught for the past two years, centers around a comprehensive, semester-long project exploring a simple prompt: create a travel journal for a world that doesn’t exist.
Folk Art values tradition, simplicity and honesty as a reflection of ‘shared cultural aesthetics and social issues’ (Museum of International Folk Art) forming models of cultural heritage. Often associated with settler communities, Folk Art has historically enabled much-needed identification and generated a sense of belonging for migrant peoples displaced from their original homelands, sometimes through choice, but often through necessity of seeking asylum or claiming refugee status as a result of political estrangement or persecuted for minority religious or gender beliefs. These transitory peoples and communities often recognise Folk Art as providing a welcome and comforting sense of relief from persecution, by establishing and nurturing communities who share memories and tales of their collective pasts and promote hopes for their new lives and futures. This paper explores what the term ‘Folk Illustration’ might mean through a negotiated relationship between contemporary interpretations of folklore text and images.
Edinburgh offers the luxury of an unusual wealth of Museums, Archives and Special Collections. On the Illustration programme at Edinburgh College of Art (ECA), we use Archives and Special Collections in supporting Undergraduate students to develop and communicate richer and more varied personal research methodologies. This paper draws together reflections of students, staff on the Programme, Curators, Archivists and broader scholarship on the use of Collections in Higher Education pedagogy. In doing this I seek to map out ways of nurturing rich and sophisticated research methodologies when working with Illustration students. In reflecting on how students actually learn to undertake research, this presentation considers how effectively the pathway model in use at ECA guides students to explore, question and value a broader variety of materials in much more depth.
Launched in Fall 2019, Washington University in St. Louis’ MFA in Illustration and Visual Culture (IVC) program offers students a multidisciplinary illustration education that not only aims to develop their illustration practice but also the research and critical analysis skills necessary for academia. The IVC program required curriculum includes over studio courses and research seminars, as well two Special Collections courses taught by Washington University Libraries staff. As the program has developed, the Special Collections courses have adapted to better complement and connect to the rest of the IVC program. This paper will provide an overview of this curriculum development as well as the challenges and successes of this instruction from the perspective of the library faculty.
Motion Commotion is a curated screening of animation and motion shorts.
This workshop will focus on breaking down the barriers between analog and digital media, discussing how they can be integrated, how you can bring analog processes into the digital space, along with time for collaborative hands-on experimentation with both physical materials and digital tools.
In a digital world, getting out the paints and cutting pieces of paper might be exactly what your creative heart is yearning for. Join this colorful workshop with illustrator Mirna Stubbs. New to gouache? Stubbs will go over the basics of water-soluble gouache and have a few assignments ready to get you started. Materials, tips and tricks, and a relaxing environment will be provided. Feel free to bring your own favorite brushes, sketchbooks, and other tools.
Sometimes, as creative professionals, we allow ourselves too much time thinking by way of note taking, or thinking by way of editing, and not enough time thinking by way of drawing itself. Less Thinking, More Drawing is an introduction to a guided improvisation practice that can be implemented for artists and students alike. Participants will be led through a series of variations of a game called Silly Drawing, allowing chance to dictate the main elements of each drawing. Each round is drawn quickly, so as not to allow one's inner critic to have too much of a say. By the end of this workshop each participant will have created a new cast of characters, and an accordion book that tells a story focusing on one of them, with a plethora of new ideas waiting to be developed further.
Join True Grit Texture Supply creative director Andrew Fairclough as he teaches you how to step up your texture game with a selection handmade textures, brushes and tools plus a bunch of tricks and tips you'll wonder how you lived without.
There are simple beautiful moments happening all around us every day that we often miss. And when we miss these little moments we miss the chance to bring their emotional impact into our work. If we can get past the flatness of our work and reveal what we feel, audiences may find a deeper connection to our work. And we may find another gear to our storytelling voices. This workshop is designed to help you discover those emotional stories around you and in your heart regardless of how awkward, uncomfortable or embarrassing they might be. You'll learn ways to connect with these simple moments, and translate them into the work you do and your daily professional practice. We may cry a little, we'll definitely laugh a lot, and we'll leave with some tools to find all the feels in our lives and our audience.
Human memory can often be unreliable. Because of this, memory refresher systems called mnemonics are frequently used in written and visual learning systems to aid in recall of important information. Drawing has been used as a mnemonic device with studies proving it to be highly effective in elevating recall. Unfortunately, drawing mnemonics are not widely utilized and there has been limited academic discussion from the perspective of artists or designers. There is yet to be any form of research into how skills developed as an illustrator can improve the success of drawing based mnemonics. This study evaluates the current understanding of drawing’s connection to memory and documents the construction and testing of new drawing-based mnemonic systems. The results of this research will aid in educational practices for illustrators and non-illustrators. As well as demonstrate the benefits of practiced illustration beyond the final physical outcome.
As a framework, illustration functions like a tool for reflection and action, giving artists a revisionary process and a foundation for critical consciousness needed to make the visual language and narrative necessary for unpacking the intersections of identity.
The American 20th century is threaded with anti-urbanism, urban declension narratives, and political, cultural and symbolic pathologizing of the city. A particularly acute historical instance of anti-urbanism occurs amid the so-called “Urban Crisis” which begins post WWII and persists in various permutations through the late 20th century. This presentation examines contemporaneous counternarratives to urban crisis and collapse persistent in children’s picture books published between the mid-1960s and 1980s, depicting children’s urban landscapes defined by wonder — filled with street play, stoop life, wild urban natures, majestic infrastructure, and joy forged among dense, heterogeneous, multifamily housing. It argues for the inclusion of picture books as a legitimate site of representation and serious inquiry in disciplinary and interdisciplinary coursework across urban studies and urban historical geography.
This presentation introduces The Journal of Illustration to prospective readers and contributors. The journal is an academic publication disseminating scholarly articles on illustration practice. Together with Illustration Research network it is a platform where people of illustration, people teaching and studying illustration and people practicing illustration can find those articles that help ground and lift understanding, feed curiosity and inspire thinking differently on what illustration is or does.
The United States is experiencing an unprecedented youth mental health crisis and research indicates that students from marginalized communities experience even more significant stressors. As we emerge from a global pandemic, it is clear that trauma increasingly impacts students' ability to focus and perform in our classrooms. As instructors within the higher education system, it is our responsibility to foster classrooms, online learning spaces, and communities that are conducive to learning in this challenging moment. In this presentation I will offer trauma-informed strategies and concrete examples of practices and assignments we can apply to our illustration pedagogy to create the structure, trust, and cultural awareness necessary to create a student-centered learning environment where students can thrive.
This paper explores the process of illustration education as it relates to the augmented reality (AR) format. Professors collaborated with students from various disciplines, such as editorial, character, Motion Design, and Emerging Media to develop unique digital content for holographic screens and AR platforms. The project focused on students' exploration of user experience, embodiment, and immersion, which influenced the creation of augmented illustrative content. The study challenged traditional editorial and character design in light of AR integration. This examination covers the contemporary (and historic) evolution of illustration for AR and its translation into pedagogy. It demonstrates how effective pedagogy helped students master the skills and concepts necessary for creating compelling AR experiences. Classroom findings contribute new knowledge to teaching and designing modular illustrative elements for virtual and emerging digital landscape. The study emphasizes the significance of AR technology in illustration education, enabling students to excel in this evolving digital realm.
Trial and error accounts of pushing students towards creating original illustration while circumventing algorithm and AI-related issues.
In this presentation I outline how the pedagogy of illustration history has changed since I began teaching it in 2009. I discuss the origin and traditional content of such courses in the US and Canada, the strengths and weaknesses of those inherited approaches, and how I have tried to address evolving needs over the years in response to demands for greater diversity, accommodations of learning styles and disabilities, online pandemic delivery, and in 2023, academically underprepared and relatively less socialized students. I review the use of the 2018 History of Illustration textbook that I coedited with Susan Doyle and Whitney Sherman, as well as material I have supplemented the textbook with; and critically discuss some of the active learning exercises and assignments that I have introduced as I have attempted to move away from lecture and exam-based modes. In sum, I interrogate traditional pedagogy and suggest alternatives.
During this hands-on workshop focused on creating custom shirts, you will have the opportunity to engage in the entire process of illustrating and instantly producing a personalized t-shirt. After a brief introduction from DINKC, you will start by sketching and conceptualizing your design, followed by digitizing, cutting, and peeling the vinyl material used to create your shirt. Finally, we will heat press them to transfer the design onto the shirt. This unique experience will allow you to take home a custom ready-to-wear shirt that you have personally created! Participants are required to bring their own blank dark or light t-shirt (cotton polyester is best).
Do you want to tell resonant, incisive stories that stick with your readers? Suitable for beginners or experienced artists, this workshop will help refine your understanding of how comics work, how to compose them well, and how to use their unique strengths to tell stories that create meaningful experiences for your readers.
How do I craft a great pitch for a new project? Where do publishing professionals go to discover new freelance illustrators? What is the difference between an advance-against-royalties deal and a work-for-hire deal? Chronicle Books editors Natalie Butterfield (AT) and Ariel Richardson (CHL) will answer all these questions and more in this informative, interactive session!
This lettering class is designed to teach students the fundamentals of creating custom lettering! Throughout the class, students will explore various lettering styles and techniques. Additionally, learning how to create unique compositions using different lettering styles, hierarchy, and spacing. Lastly, we will cover proper vectoring techniques (and even interpolation — because why not!) to bring our designs to life in a digital format. The class will provide students with the tools and skills needed to create visually appealing lettering for a variety of applications, from branding to personal projects. Through a combination of mini lectures, demonstrations, and hands-on exercises, students will develop their skills and gain confidence in their abilities to create killer lettering. Whether you are a beginner or an experienced designer looking to enhance your skills, this lettering class is the perfect opportunity to create custom type.
The Precarity of Images examines how theories of worldbuilding common to the science fiction genre are applied to the making of agitational propaganda for liberation movements. In doing so, it questions how both explicit and implicit political images—posters, games, comics, illustrations, social media posts—either light a pathway for making a more just world or limit our ability to imagine alternate futures. Focus will be applied to finding moments where visual lexicons of liberation shift — semiotically, culturally, or aesthetically. Strategies of decoding and recoding our visual world — through discursive questioning, speculative drawing, and acts of “political looking” — are used to understand how broken images are maintained or repaired. Self-reflections from the author’s teaching and illustration practice provide concrete examples of how the theories in this paper have been applied.
This session examines a major goal of propaganda during the world wars: recruiting soldiers from colonized countries. The session will review my research on colonialism propaganda, including propaganda used during the British occupations of Tasmania (Lutruwita) and India, and French propaganda used to recruit Sengalese and other African soldiers during WWI, as well as discuss the deep connections between colonialism and war propaganda. Integrating this research with teaching helps explore topics of persuasion and propaganda, as well as explore the basis for the visual language used in racist caricatures, how it was developed for the purpose of propaganda, and how it was eventually adopted into caricatures used in advertising and marketing illustration. Through learning this history, students will hopefully further understand how empires used racist stereotypes in colonial propaganda, how it affected colonized nations and peoples, and how it continues to affect marginalized populations today.
The process of writing an art historical research paper can be a daunting challenge for students in illustration degree programs. This presentation will review how drawing-based prompts can encourage students to use their established, studio-based research as an entry-point into writing-based research.
Presenting selected works from 3 decades of his multidisciplinary practice, Szyhalski examines the labor of witnessing, processing and recording extreme historical phenomena. Special focus is given to the "COVID-19: Labor Camp Report" project (a series of 225 drawings responding daily to the COVID-19 pandemic as well as multiple, simultaneously unfolding crises) and the many forms it assumed since 2020.
Roadshow is an exciting, one-night-only, pop-up marketplace of illustration, art, and comic works. This event features artists' books, zines, printed ephemera, artist multiples, handmade objects, and more from a diverse and impressive group of national and international exhibitors. This high-energy event is free and open to conference attendees, and invited guests—including art directors, esteemed ICON speakers, and many more illustration and art world professionals.
Get out of that rut and away from your computer and phone to find creative sparks where you least expect them. Recharge your design and illustration process and experience the entire world as a creative playground.
Some professionals preach mastery through specialization — focus on one medium, one style, one practice. Sophi is here to endorse creative polyamory — dabbling in mediums you are drawn to outside of your main practice. Sophi will talk through their path from puppet maker to professional illustrator, and how silversmithing and woodturning have revitalized their love of digital illustration.
Illustrators all have unique gifts and powers that make us valuable. This session will explore the path of creatives and how we collaborate with clients and push ourselves to grow and flourish.
Authors Lisa Nola and Lisa Perrin will be in conversation with Chronicle Books editor Natalie Butterfield, discussing the lifecycle of creative projects and how to nurture them with persistence and passion.
On the messy overlap of passion projects and professional pursuits, DO IT (FOR) YOURSELF will use Kurt's Illustration, Design, and Indie Publishing practices as a broader reflecting point on the hustle, grind, and just-have-fun-with-it-industrial complex.
ICON12 attendees get their moment on the main stage with personal and insightful takes on their lives and work.
Kaleidoscope Presenters:
• Oilibhear Gibbs
• Josie Norton
• Michael Byers
• Emory Allen
In this lively slide show, James Spooner disccuses how the elements of DIY he learned as a zine making punk rocker lead him to a life as an award-winning filmmaker and published author.
Balancing creativity and mental health is a struggle for many creatives. In this candid conversation, artists will openly discuss navigating challenges such as stress, anxiety, and burnout, and ways to build resilience through self-care practices. Moderated by Grace Danico.
Our ideas are implanted through images. In visual storytelling, questioning authority involves scrutinizing the media, cultural norms, and societal expectations that may perpetuate stereotypes or biased narratives. It means critically examining the perspectives and stories that are often overlooked or marginalized. Phillips-Pendleton will discuss going beyond aesthetics and considering the socio-cultural implications of visual content through her journey as a visual storyteller, educator, author, and curator.
Artist collaborations are everywhere these days and can be tricky to navigate on a lot of levels: personally, creatively, and financially. Come watch two friends wonder out loud about their past and current brand collabs and what they've learned along the way.
Generative AI is causing artist advocates to rethink the fundamentals of how we advocate for our rights: the right to control our work, be treated fairly, and protect our integrity. This session will give an overview of where we are in preserving artists' rights in the age of AI.
For as long as she can remember, illustration has played a huge role in No‘l Claro's life. From her kindergarten obsession with copying Susan Clark's Health-Tex ads to a fascination with the Fiorucci angels in high school, she was convinced her destiny was to become an illustrator. Art school proved her wrong but did provide the opportunity to study and pursue a craft that would always keep her cozy with illustrators. Claro's session will be a look back at inspiration, sketchbooks, and work and an exploration of where that all led her.
How do you find your way as an artist when you're surrounded by stars? Will imposter syndrome ever go away? Vashti Harrison will discuss her path toward becoming an author and illustrator of books for young readers and share some tips and tricks she learned along the way.
A personal anecdote about how one stressed out illustrator grappled with burnout and AI, and what they did to revive their enjoyment for art.
A journey of self-discovery through a metamorphosis cycle spanning a 7 year creative practice.
The ICON12 Gallery Show at the Chambers Gallery will bring together pieces of art by conference attendees in a curated exhibition. Artwork on display will be available for purchase.
Drawing, designing, posters and imPoster syndrome.
Gabrielle Lamontagne is a Creative Director and Illustrator based in New York who often draws inspiration from that city's iconic bodegas and their feline occupants. Since she relocated from Quebec in 2012, bodegas have become frequent subjects in her watercolor paintings. Her design career includes positions at Bodum, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, and as a creative director at Chobani, where she played a key role in their award-winning rebrand. Gabi’s paintings of blueberries and peaches grace Chobani's packaging redesign, which she‘s always delighted to find for sale at her beloved bodegas.
What sort of art did you make as a child? As illustrators, how can we mine our own childhood for inspiration and ideas? In this session, Magdalena Mora will talk about her path to becoming a children’s book illustrator and how childhood and memory informs her practice. Drawn from years of experience working with youth as an after-school arts educator, Magdalena will also talk about how we can thoughtfully learn from young peoples' experiences and imagination.
A light hearted yet informative conversation about navigating the various sides of business in Design and Illustration, with illustrators Salli Swindell and Nate Padavic, founders of the global community "They Draw". Moderated by Sarah Walsh
In her new vibrant and spirited picture book, artist Laura James pays homage to her childhood in Brooklyn, N.Y., Caribbean immigrants, and to her mother, a homemaker who wore many hats. Often relegated to the background, nannies and domestic workers are seldom the topic of children's stories, yet James achieves at once a deeply personal and universal story. James will speak about how she came to write this book and what it means to tell a children's story with big topics including economy, religion, immigration, and love.
ICON12 attendees get their moment on the main stage with personal and insightful takes on their lives and work.
Kaleidoscope Presenters:
• Josh Lewis
• Matthew Cook
• Em Spitler
• Alexandra Smith
Tara will describe how her career started by making goofy auto-bio comics and posting them on Instagram, and how it led to getting illustration jobs. Tara's candid autobiographical comics shed lightness and humor on issues related to mental health, addiction, and sexuality.
A discussion of the visual language of storytelling and the importance of self expression and intuitive naive art in modern folklore. Self-reflection on the topic of confidence in art, and specifically children's book illustration.
Aidan Koch will be discussing environmental comics as a genre, discipline, and pedagogy. In describing how comics operate as a medium, she will outline their unique position to tell ecological stories both historically and into the future. As an artist who has worked in comics, illustration, fine art, social practice, and conservation, she will describe how her experiences have informed this insight and transformed her own work. This talk will consider how artists can shape the lens around climate change, biodiversity loss, and our relations to the earth.
“[Artists] are here to disturb the peace.” –James Baldwin
As intentional artists, we have a responsibility to disrupt, dismantle, and destroy systems of oppression. We have the power to use design to hold space for the voices of systemically oppressed communities while we work towards a collective future free from violence. Our creative abilities give us the means to collectively share stories in ways that invoke change and inspire action and advocacy for communities that have historically been underrepresented, underserved, and underinvested. Although the concept of abolition isn’t a new one, the 2020 Uprisings provided a reintroduction to this way of thinking to the global public. In my talk, I will explore our role as designers and our duty to engage in design with an abolitionist mindset which I argue is the only means to collective liberation.
Drawing on early career choices shaped by the COVID-19 pandemic, the George Floyd riots, and mutual aid work, sunshine examines the limitations of engaging with the world as an "artist" (whether as a career or as an identity).
Ronald Wimberly discusses his practice with Matthew James-Wilson
Happiness is complicated. Here, I discuss the path of my career, and how I got exactly where I wanted to be. Or thought I wanted to be. In this talk, I'll share what having my dream job taught me about where we seek, and sometimes find, happiness.
Exploring making work in a post-everything world
Art and music of life with husband and wife team Rudy Gutierrez and DK Dyson. Two Dream Walkers traveling independently and together towards their visual and sonic missions. They are dedicated to following their dreams without fear while balancing the real in search of validity in a never ending pursuit of creativity on a daily, no matter the challenges of living this path!
ICON12 would not be complete without having First Avenue for our epic Closing Night Party. As one of the longest-running, independently owned and operated venues in the United States, it’s Prince’s old stomping ground and the setting of his movie, Purple Rain.
What can illustrators learn from quilters? In this workshop we will look to both traditional and contemporary textile artists to teach us about color and composition, pattern mixing, and working with constraints. We will touch some quilts, look at even more, and practice interpreting and depicting textiles with a variety of mixed media. No sewing skills required - we will be drawing quilts, not stitching them! This workshop is for drawers and designers interested in exploring the possibilities of using quilts as visual metaphor, narrative device, or decorative inspiration. We will discuss how quilting and illustration can be complementary, and the benefits of nurturing interdisciplinary creative practices.
Explore the transformation that happens when you expand your business mindset, moving beyond definitions like 'freelance illustrator' or 'graphic designer,' toward the concepts of 'artist' and 'art brand.' This workshop begins with a panel discussion featuring Art Brand Alliance (ABA) members Meenal Patel, Jill Kittock, Carlos Carmonamedia, and ABA director Betsy Cordes. Their stories will help you see how you can apply the 'art brand mindset' to your own endeavors, bringing more authenticity and personal satisfaction to your work while expanding your impact. Then we'll take time for individual reflection, with imagination exercises that encourage you to tap into your own unique story, passions, and values. We'll conclude by breaking into smaller groups, sharing insights, suggestions, and encouragement toward next steps. In the process, we'll help you think more expansively about your role as a creator and the opportunities that are in your power to define and pursue."
Do you want more art directors to visit your website? Do you want more commission requests? We all know that the internet is the primary platform for promoting your creative talents. As a freelance illustrators, you can benefit from harnessing the power of search engine optimization (SEO). Wait—keep reading—it's not as boring as it sounds!!! In this workshop, Nate and Salli will show you how SEO works and describe how enhancements to your website can improve your online presence and help you reach a wider audience.
Create a small set of one-color spot illustrations/icons for a wine brand. This hands-on workshop walks you through our process for iconography, taking you from inspiration to final creation. We'll dig into layout, style, setup, plus tips and tricks — and all while holding a refreshing morning mimosa... for 'inspiration.'
Inspired by cabinets of curiosities, this assemblage-based workshop will explore multimedia materials to create unique theaters of imagination. Curious participants are encouraged to engage in playful exploration using their own diverse art materials: found 3D objects, collaging ephemera material, drawings, and paintings. The work is assembled in the provided wooden box, acting as the theater, showcasing the interdisciplinary work. Participants will choose their own ideas and themes to explore while providing their own unique found objects and materials.
This paper presents ongoing material from a practice-based PhD, researching the potential for wordless illustration through critically evolving traditional approaches of visual storytelling into immersive spatial contexts. The author contends that by deconstructing the bound book, opportunities for multi-linear storytelling arise which challenge the ways in which narrative experiences might be designed and understood. The author argues for the benefits of these ‘unrestrained’ readings which encourage deeper engagement and learning opportunities through group discussion.
The defining characteristic of illustration is an association with reading from 1830. Illustration contributes to reading in partnership with other visual elements in the mise-en-page across all modern print cultures. Reading has changed. The ancient scroll was replaced by the codex but has returned in electronic form. Publishing has receded; newspapers and magazines are disappearing. Fewer commissions are on offer. Today, illustrators are embracing authorship. But creating an entire work transcends the binary of "word and image." An ancient version of transcendence was captured in the expression "the three perfections," attributed to Wang Wei (699-759), referring to poetry, painting, and calligraphy. The triad has been updated and reinvigorated to encompass copywriting, illustration, and typesetting or lettering. This presentation will use Wang’s concept and episodes in the history of illustration to address the integration of writing, illustration, and design to reclaim illustration as a practice worthy of emphasis in liberally-minded curricula.
This paper will present the development of a research inquiry that explores the integration of AI image generation methods within narrative based practice. The research seeks to question the nature of creative exchanges, iterations beyond the screen and the implementation of AI within module teaching.
Specifically focused on academic book projects (those for students, scholars or practitioners), this interactive workshop session will include tips and advice on framing book proposals, how to choose a publisher, what to consider when developing your ideas and time for questions. The event will showcase real-life examples, and there will be activities for participants to get involved in.
If you have a ticket, please go to the MacMillan Atrium at the Minneapolis Institute of Art for your portfolio reviews.
Need to get your physical papers and digital files in order? Get organized with professional archivist and multidisciplinary artist Grace Danico! She will teach the ins and outs of creating a personal archive, and topics will include basic care of paper and digital materials, file structure organization, and the importance of metadata.
Join Savannah College of Art and Design Professor Ted Michalowski in this high energy live drawing session, with lively music to amplify this enthusiastic drawing atmosphere. Discussion on drawing, on the music, on the direction of the session is encouraged. However, the session is kept free of disruptive chit-chat, so that all can focus on energetic drawing. Attendees are encouraged to bring their sketchbooks and their favorite drawing tools.
Sketchbooks are an important way for illustrators to develop material to call upon later within a job context. Sketchbooks are free from expected outcomes and time constraints, an open space for exploration and contemplation. There's no right way to maintain a sketchbook practice, but we're going to explore ways it can be used. Sketchbooks can look inward, visually manifesting your inner dialogue. Sketchbooks can look outward, a tool to understand the world around you. They sometimes fall somewhere between these two approaches, a dialogue between your imagination and surroundings. We'll share examples of illustrator's sketchbooks, including Gina's and Matt's inward and outward facing approaches. Then it's a drawing party for sketchbook exploration together. We'll have lots of visual stimuli, but feel free to bring your own. Similarly, we'll have some ink, pens, paint markers, and gouache on hand, but bring your favorite stuff too. Then, of course, bring your sketchbook!
In this workshop, San Francisco arts lawyer Chuck Cordes will look at how AI image-generating programs are creating some brand-new issues for illustrators and other visual artists that copyright law wasn't 100 percent intended to deal with. We'll talk about government efforts to regulate AI; lawsuits aimed at AI giants like Open AI, Microsoft, and Stability AI; and look at how courts are treating claims of mass copyright infringement of artists' works. And we'll touch on other theories that plaintiff-artists are relying on, like right of publicity and unfair competition. We'll explore the copyright status of AI-generated art and what that means for makers and users of AI generated images. Audience questions are invited and it is hoped this will be equal parts lecture and dialog. This is a quickly evolving area. If other important matters relating to artists' rights and AI arise, we'll look at those, too.
Imagining education through the prism of collaboration, MICA faculty Rebecca Bradley and Sandra Maxa developed the graduate-level course, Graphic Design/Illustration Collaborative Studio, to fill a void in the curriculum. The course guides students through team-based, multi-disciplinary projects for non-profit clients and community partners. This presentation will share project case studies, workshops and lessons from 3 semesters, as well as stories of success and failure along the way. Collaboration and communication are the key outcomes — amongst the students, the co-teaching faculty and the clients. Students from diverse backgrounds and majors such as Curatorial Practice, Graphic Design, Illustration, Photography, Social Design and Design Leadership learn the challenges and the give-and-take of collaboration, and how, when engaged fully in teamwork, a project can be doubly rewarding. Students form a new understanding of professional practice that builds an appreciation for others and a process that is foundational.
Where and how are BFA illustration students taught about research and writing in their practice? In this talk we will discuss the implementation of research and writing outcomes in the PCAD Illustration program including scaffolding, resources, successes, and areas for improvement.
For over ten years, the Masters in Illustration program at The Glasgow School of Art has developed critical reflective methods to inform students' studio practice. The program requires students to identify their position in communication design practice within a broader historical, social, and political context. The program has been transformational in helping students identify and locate their practice in this landscape, resulting in graduates pursuing careers as practitioners, researchers, curators, and art activists. I will reflect on the range of approaches employed by the team over this period, their effectiveness in supporting students to reflect critically on their studio practice, and how the program has enabled students to transform their practice. Examples of student work will provide context alongside graduate feedback on how the critical reflective methods have informed their studio practice. Keywords: Illustration research, authorial practice, critical reflective methods.
With recent technological advancements, it is becoming increasingly important to train illustrators who are thinkers first and foremost. Worldbuilding, the process of creating both the visual language and imagined inner-workings of an environment, encourages students to create constraints based on an internal logic, and practice working within them. Worldbuilding further adds authorship to the design process, and opens dialogues on ecology, culture, history, and representation while giving students a channel in which to find and develop their visual voice. In this presentation, I will outline a working model for integrating worldbuilding into illustration curriculum. Illustration: World and Voice, an undergraduate course I have taught for the past two years, centers around a comprehensive, semester-long project exploring a simple prompt: create a travel journal for a world that doesn’t exist.
Folk Art values tradition, simplicity and honesty as a reflection of ‘shared cultural aesthetics and social issues’ (Museum of International Folk Art) forming models of cultural heritage. Often associated with settler communities, Folk Art has historically enabled much-needed identification and generated a sense of belonging for migrant peoples displaced from their original homelands, sometimes through choice, but often through necessity of seeking asylum or claiming refugee status as a result of political estrangement or persecuted for minority religious or gender beliefs. These transitory peoples and communities often recognise Folk Art as providing a welcome and comforting sense of relief from persecution, by establishing and nurturing communities who share memories and tales of their collective pasts and promote hopes for their new lives and futures. This paper explores what the term ‘Folk Illustration’ might mean through a negotiated relationship between contemporary interpretations of folklore text and images.
Edinburgh offers the luxury of an unusual wealth of Museums, Archives and Special Collections. On the Illustration programme at Edinburgh College of Art (ECA), we use Archives and Special Collections in supporting Undergraduate students to develop and communicate richer and more varied personal research methodologies. This paper draws together reflections of students, staff on the Programme, Curators, Archivists and broader scholarship on the use of Collections in Higher Education pedagogy. In doing this I seek to map out ways of nurturing rich and sophisticated research methodologies when working with Illustration students. In reflecting on how students actually learn to undertake research, this presentation considers how effectively the pathway model in use at ECA guides students to explore, question and value a broader variety of materials in much more depth.
Launched in Fall 2019, Washington University in St. Louis’ MFA in Illustration and Visual Culture (IVC) program offers students a multidisciplinary illustration education that not only aims to develop their illustration practice but also the research and critical analysis skills necessary for academia. The IVC program required curriculum includes over studio courses and research seminars, as well two Special Collections courses taught by Washington University Libraries staff. As the program has developed, the Special Collections courses have adapted to better complement and connect to the rest of the IVC program. This paper will provide an overview of this curriculum development as well as the challenges and successes of this instruction from the perspective of the library faculty.
Motion Commotion is a curated screening of animation and motion shorts.