click to read issue one
Transcription
click to read issue one
issue one click to read Eleven wonderful things 4-6 Everyone’s lovin lilac 8-9 Art - Toshiyuki Fukuda 10-13 Art- Meredith Gaston 14-19 Photography - Samantha Everton 20-23 Let’s go shopping 24-25 Imagination 26-27 DIY fun with Maja 28-29 She comes in colours everywhere 30-39 House tour - Little piece of Paris 40-43 Australians we love 44-47 My world 48-51 Sugar and spice 52-53 Frogs and snails 54-55 Start collecting 56-57 Roll up roll up 60-67 Little trend..quirky 68-69 Handmade 70-71 Recipes for preserving children 72-77 Haunted summers by Barbara Berrada 78 -87 Thanks to Barbara Berrada for The Haunted Summer www.zigouis.blogspot.com papier mache is produced by THE CONVENIENCE STORE We are Beck, Alice and Paul Paul does the graphicky stuff Alice does the drawings and photos and Beck is the dreamer Thanks Rachelle Napper, Otto, Tovalisa, Nael, Indigo, Noe, Sam from the Ruby Slipper, Mari & Kati for the inspiring DIY project www.jujubook.com Stephanie Tetu, Amy from Cake with Giants, Simon Cardwell Biggest Thanks Matt, Matilda, Indigo, Frankie, Lila (Sundays will be loads more fun from now) 3 Simple little bohemian hideouts www.bianca-and-family.com The kooky Our Crazy fun with Little Red Stuga www.littleredstuga.com Lovely lights www.roseandradish.com BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS www.enfantterribleshop.com Childrens Gorilla www.ourchildrensgorilla.com Cameras for kids ..Love them www.lomography.com 5 The imaginative SweetPea www.sweetpea-home.com Home Beautiful rugs www.reuberhenning.de 11 Calm Play www.kidonyc.com Awesome Arne Jacobsen chairs www.spunkysprout.com 7 Left to right...Donuts www.donnawilson.com Necklace www.smallable.com Floral dress www.noaddedsugar.com Star scarf www.zef.eu Love T-shirt www.dandystar.com Waistcoat www.nixieclothing.com Shoes www.trippen.com Butterfly top www.florahenri.com Trousers www.caramel-shop.co.uk Dress Triozenfant from www.littlefashiongallery.com 9 art Toshiyuki Fukuda When did you start seriously becoming an artist? 父親がカメラマンだった影響もあり、その分野での仕事への興味は子供の頃からあり ましたが、真剣に考えたのは18歳前後です。 When I was 18 years old, I started to think about becoming an artist. My father was a photographer and that has always influenced me ever since I was a child. How would you best describe your style? 懐かしさと違和感と安定の調和。 A sense of Nostalgic Harmony. Where do you find your inspiration for your interesting characters? 全ての物事に影響を受けていると思いますが、趣味で外国の古い絵本や雑貨をよく集 めています I think I have been influenced by all things around me, I am collecting some foreign children books, misc. things as my hobby. 11 Did you have a favourite book when you where little? 水木しげるの漫画全般 鈴木大拙の「禅」 中沢新一、細野晴臣の「観光」 日本の本ばかりでごめんなさい。 All Japanese books cartoon books ( generally ) by Shigeru Mizuno ‘Zen’ by Daishi Suuki ‘Tourism’ by Shinichi Nakazawa. What are you working on at the moment? 6月に作品集がでます。 永井宏というアーティストに詩を書いてもらい、それに絵をつけました。 その展覧会が東京、奈良、大阪、広島で順次開催予定です。 オーストラリアでもぜひ(笑) My portfolio will be issued in June. The artist Mr. Hiroshi Nagai wrote his poem and I illustrated it .We have a artist exhibition soon here in Japan….I wish it would happen in Australia as well! www.to-fukuda.com 13 art Has it changed you as an artist? I think being in a different place gives the imagination a whole new set of pictures and ideas. You sometimes forget to be a tourist in your own city but it is an important thing to do. Here daily things still feel like adventures because everything is different. I love the swans down on the river in Kreuzberg that have inspired lots of swan-themed pieces, as have the old kaputt houseboats with their lovely shapes and unusual little windows that became ‘Mr Houseboat Horse’. The feeling of being a spectator makes me want to record things and document new experiences through drawings and diaries. I have been gathering together different elements like new papers, old German stamps and found objects from flea markets, and translating these into ideas and art. We are guessing from your work that you must have the most beautiful dreams! Yes sometimes I dream too vividly for my own good and I wake up exhausted! But my dreams are wonderfully colourful. Last night I woke up laughing out loud! meredith gaston Hi Meredith! Nice to finally meet you! How’s living in Berlin? It’s fascinating - you can feel the history and the stories all around you. It is such an eclectic city where old and new things exist and age together in amazing harmony. I still pinch myself occasionally that I am here! Kreuzberg, where we live in central West Berlin, is a very bohemian and charming place with cobblestone streets, beautiful parks. In summer, when the sun sets at around 10 pm, the Berliners flock to the parks and rivers to eat dinner picnics. Berliners are far more relaxed and eccentric than I had imagined and the dress code here is more than cool. The little ones must learn it from their parents because they also look amazingly trendy - with knitted leg warmers, patterned gumboots and headbands all sported with great individual flair! What did you dream about when you where little? Mountains turning into animals, mountains opening up into oceans, being stuck overnight in supermarkets (I loved those ones!), carnivals with people in strange costumes.. Did you always want to be an artist? My father is an architect and my mother is extremely clever with textiles. I grew up in a creative environment which was fostered early by the creative principles of Steiner schooling in my kindergarten years. I was always into craft, always making things, writing love letters to family and friends and making collages with magazines and my little glue stick. I think it was written in the sky and etched into my bones! But I have a few other passions, and amongst those is writing. I have studied for five years at the University of Sydney, diving into English, Art history and Cultural studies. I hope to keep studying and one day perhaps teach in the university. But I know that I will always be happy with a pencil, pen or brush in my hand and I am grateful for the gift that this is. I reflect on this every time I pack my little watercolours into my bag.. the portability of creativity is a wonderful thing. continued on page 16 15 meredith’s work is available at www.kindergallery.com 17 continued from page 14 If you could choose something that your art best represents what would it be? Perhaps Bjork’s album ‘Vespertine’ that I have long loved for its etherial beauty and whimsy. It is beautiful painting music and the lyrics make for gorgeous images. Also the idea from Albert Camus that artists simply reproduce the first few images that touched them as children or that first accessed their hearts. I can really relate this idea to my work and the images and patterns that I always return to and love: birds up in trees, wobbly patchwork mountains, naughty animals, and rosey cheeked faces. I also think these words signify the importance of art in children’s lives. I remember in great detail all the drawings, cross stiches and works of art hung in my childhood bedrooms, and vividly recall the beautiful illustrations in my most favourite picture books. What are you working on next-what should we expect to see next from Meredith Gaston? I will be working on new watercolour pieces about kites (my new love!), some large linen and canvas pieces, and perhaps some more hand painted tea cups! I am slowly but surely organizing my own little picture book of drawings, small watercolours and poems. This has been evolving over a few years and weaves together my dreams, my travels and my favourite words and ideas. I wanted the book to suggest learning, changing and moving, so I have been letting it grow slowly as I have been. I would like to make postcards, work more with textiles and make some large scale swan installations one day. I would also love to keep illustrating books because the collaborative experience of working with writers is something I really enjoy. Finally if you where any colour what would you be? Red 19 photography I recently read that somewhere between the ages of 8 and 10, Samantha Everton stumbled upon the works of Salvador Dali and was never the same again. Looking through her latest series of hauntingly beautiful work titled ‘Vintage Dolls’ there are certainly visible hints of Dali lingering in every image. Growing up in a large multicultural family in outback North Queensland, she lost herself in her imagination whilst fossicking for gemstones in towns with names like Emerald, Saphire and Rubyvale. She started as a photographic artist in 2003 after graduating from RMIT ‘Vintage Dolls’ is her 3rd solo exhibition. Preparing this work, from initial sketches and storyboarding, to sourcing materials and location’s even her friends black cat, took 18 months. “The house was by far the hardest prop to find. I spent weeks searching all across Melbourne Australia for just the right place, to finally find a house a few streets from where I lived. Then I had to convince the owner to allow me to smash holes into the walls, strip wallpaper, rip carpet up and install a tree into the living room,” Samantha says. “The owner was very accommodating!” 21 Samantha is now about to stage her fourth solo exhibition in 2009. Since her graduation, she has won a number of awards including the Px3 Paris International Photography Awards (People’s Choice). Her work has been published and reviewed in numerous books and magazines around the world, including The NewYorker, Photofile, Harper’s Bazaar and Blanket magazine. www.samanthaeverton.com www.dickersongallery.com.au 23 Arthurs Circus is the vintage lovers dream. In their store (both online and in Melbourne) you will stumble upon hard to find quirky vintage collectables, including toys, lighting and our favourite, their awesome photographic prints. You can catch up with the Arthurs Circus folk at www.arthurscircus.blogspot. com or checkout the online store www.arthurscircus.bigcartel.com and if you’re super lucky, pop in and visit them at 631 Queensberry St, North Melbourne 3051 Victoria, Australia. Mini Rodini was founded by Cassandra Rhodin a Swedish fashion illustrator and artist. The designs are fashionable, modern and full of humour and creativity for children between 0-11 years. Ranging from basic cotton t-shirts to luxurious leather jackets and cashmere sweaters. As well as stocking to over 80 stores world wide Mini Rodini have our own boutique on Nytorgsgatan 36 in Stockholm www.minirodini.se Couverture has long been a favourite haunt of ours when in London! They specialise in one off designer pieces for the home and stock an amazing collection of children’s clothing from the likes of Mina Perhonen and Quincy. They have loads of accessories, exquisite toys and endless finds. A highlight is the collection of ever changing vintage treasures that mix so well with sharp in store styling. Couverture, 188 Kensington Park Road, Notting Hill, London W11 2ES. www.couverture.co.uk 25 Imagination is the child’s own room A child sees the home with different eyes to we adults; they can find caves, hiding places and sneaky creepycrawlies in the corners and under the tables. Little humans thrive and feel the home as their own place when their creativity is fed and given space. creates delicious memories and makes everybody feel needed. The bedlam of family-life can be made easier by being a creative adult. You can get more breathing time for yourself if you sow little seeds of stories around your children. They can use them as starting points for their games and plays. A messy and quarrelsome afternoon can be turned into an exciting trip in the woods in your own living room, or a crazy racket can be turned down when you ask your little agents to sneak around quiet as mice while they are on their important secret mission. The instructions in Maja do not need a fat wallet, bottomless arsenal of materials or special skills either. Every home has the suitable ingredients. When you play a game or build a hut it is good to forget making it perfect. The result does not really matter, the most important thing is that everybody is having fun. It is great to be an explorer in your own home, make toys from materials lying around, find and invent. It is so much better then buying into a ready made, plastic world. The goods sentenced The pictures in Maja are ideas, gateways to the rubbish bin can hide lots of to games and stories. The ideas of this amusement in them if you just know book can work in every home, spacious how to look for it. Old mattresses, toilet or tiny. paper rolls, strips of sheets, old kitchen equipment can make your imagination The setting does not really matter, blossom. The single sock is not a because in his fantasies a knight rides nuisance after all, it can be used as a his horse on the whispering moor. material for a SWINGING VINE. Children’s rooms do not need to be like deco magazines. It is, as the name says, a childs own space. It is room for the imagination, hide-and-seek games, Maja inspires the whole family to room for a secret agent to pry into create fantasy worlds. Working and things and creatures to romp about. playing together refreshes team spirit, Enjoy….....www. jujubook.com 27 www. jujubook.com 29 blouse mamapapa 31 blouse bonpoint from arabella jacket trelise cooper dress vintage lace blouse vintage skirt big by fiona 33 blouse seed waistcoat vintage belt boo foo woo trousers bonpoint from arabella dress bonpoint from arabella jacket seed deer brooch love/hate 35 top (worn as dress) antipodium bow stylist own blouse bonpoint from arabella jacket trelise cooper 37 Photography by Alice Elliott-Pimm Shot on location at the Ruby Slipper Thanks Sam clothing as before dress vintage scarf vintage liberty necklace meet me at mikes from kido store 39 A sneak peek around the home This little piece of Paris in the heart of Sydney belongs to the wonderful Virgine Batterson. Maman to 3 beautiful children Kenyon, Ella and Liam. Wife to the lovable Scott. Virgine is the creator of MamaPapa and coowns the adorable Manon et Gwenaelle (www.manonetgwenaelle.com) a children’s boutique in Darlinghurst, Sydney. Busy as this all sounds everything in Virgine’s world is immaculate. 41 My favorite things to do Hang out with my husband and children. I love knitting, reading, and bookstores. Weekends away with my family. I love my camera to capture moments. I love bags, love shopping for my children. Going to the movies. Having a nice dinner with friends. A day at the beach, going to the markets. Travelling ..... www. manonetgwenaelle.com [email protected] 43 Sister Suffragette Australian illustrators we love and you may have missed. Our daughter’s daughter’s will adore us and they’ll sing in grateful chorus. “Well done Sister Suffragette!” Mary Poppins 45 47 s n a pped b y k i d s 49 51 sugar and spice & all things nice jess brown for wovenplay www.jessbrowndesign.com felt tipis www.vanillabug.bigcartel.com nathalie lete snowdome www.lapinandme.co.uk extract from play all day www.gestalten.com sue london booties wwww.enfantterribleshop.com tambourines www.arthurscircus.bigcartel.com alexander girard wooden dolls www.unicahome.com paper garlands www.sophiecuvelier.com marilyn neuhart dolls www.houseind.com extract from play all day www.gestalten.com 53 slugs and snails & puppydogs tails salvor giraffe www.designpublic.com switches and gauges poster www.ourchildrensgorilla.com kidimo letters www.littlefashiongallery.com construction site by taro miura www.shop.textalk.se kids doc martins www.drmartens.com cardboard castle www.annwoodhandmade.com (visual reference only) tin sheriif badges www.rompstore.com lewis rabbit #7 www.letrainfantome.bigcartel.com eiffel tee www.atsuyoetakiko.com extract from play all day www.gestalten.com 55 start collecting - posters lumi www.letrainfantome.bigcartel.com fifi lapin www.fifilapin.bigcartel.com e.soule www.kidostore.com vintage lamb www.lapinandme.co.uk 57 59 dress mamapapa 61 milo tee big by fiona scanlan jeans boo foo woo indigo leotard vintage skirt trelise cooper dress mamapapa necklace ey grif…. 63 velvet jacket trelise cooper skirt trelise cooper milo jacket paperwings tee wornfree jeans boo foo woo boots isle jacobsen indigo playsuit vintage jacket trelise cooper 65 velvet clothing as before tutu woven play headpiece big by fiona scanlan 67 Little trend.. quirky (curiouser & curiouser) Left to right...mushroom lamp bianca and family mouse headband littlefashiongalllery dress nicola edeler from lillibulle hat little fashion gallery talsiman necklace red spotted purple fake moustache lupin handmade anything muchacha bag dragonhouseofyuen/etsy 69 H A N M A D D - E Feltidermy So funny and cool..... we love it www.girlsavage.com Meet the interesting folk from Cocon www.littlecircus-shop.com 71 Recipe for preserving children 1 x grass-grown field Half a dozen children (or more) Several dogs (if available) 1 x stream Pebbles Into field pour children and dogs , allowing to mix well. Pour stream over pebbles ‘til slightly frothy. When children are nicely brown, cool in a warm bath When dry, serve with milk and a fresh baked gingerbread jacket bonpoint jeans boofoowoo dress miss haidee from kidostore 73 tee dandystar from larkhandmade dress as before 75 Photography by Alice Elliott-Pimm 77 79 81 83 85 87 89