Discover the social platform for Creative Talents, or Register

Let's Talk

Illustrator Tyler Stout discusses life, work, and how he missed his calling as a doctor

Read Interview

Popular this week

  • artmaia
  • Multidisciplina…
  • Offline

Posts

Let's Talk, Jenny Mörtsell

Capturing the nuances of expression in the human face is no simple feat. However, Swedish illustrator Jenny Mörtsell does so with a skilled and delicate hand. Living and working in Stockholm, the political and economic heart of Sweden, the 31-year-old Mörtsell balances a busy roster of U.S. and European clients who have come to adore the style of her signature pencil drawings. She has also begun exhibiting her work in gallery shows. Currently, she has an exhibition of original illustrations on display at Eskilstuna Konstmuseum, a museum located in a small town outside of Stockholm. And while Mörtsell hopes to focus her attention in the future on more gallery work, at the moment she has her hands full with projects for magazines like Nylon, Flaunt, and Good, among others. We took some time to talk with Jenny recently, here's how our conversation played out.


What first attracted you to pursue illustration?

First I wanted to be an artist, but then realized I could make a living by doing posters and record sleeves. That sounded fun, so I decided I wanted to be a graphic designer instead. After high school, I studied printmaking for some years, then graphic design, then finally I went to Konstfack where I took a masters [degree] in Graphic Design & Illustration. But It wasn't until a year and a half after I graduated [that] I got tired of trying to be a designer and went back to doing pencil drawings instead—something I hadn't been doing for years. I got [such] good responses on the things I showed other people [that] I decided to give it a go. It kind of went better than I expected.

So after your initial pencil drawings received a good response, how did you go about taking that work to a wider audience?

I basically sent out emails with a link to my website to all the magazines and advertising companies I liked. Almost noone answered of course, but a few brave ones hired me and that led to the famous one thing leads to another-thing. Having an agent which I've had for the last two years also helped a lot, especially when it comes to getting paid and getting advertising assignments.


When would you say then that you began drawing?

Like a cliché, I've been drawing since the day I could grab a Crayola.

Let’s briefly talk about inspiration.

My inspiration comes from perfectly normal things like old and new movies, music videos, books, and magazines. And my beloved friends. I also spend a lot of time wandering about on the Internet. You know, when you look for one thing that leads to another thing and suddenly you're caught up in this whole new world of influences? I like that a lot. I mostly look at other illustrators to stress me out, like "Oh my god, this is so good I need to work harder and get better." But I don't know if that qualifies as inspiration.


Can you tell me about the art scene in Stockholm?

I'm not a big consumer of contemporary art. For some reason I tend to get very provoked by artist's egos, so I try to avoid the scene. I think this has to do with all the art schools I went to. If I go to a show it's either because it’s a friend of mine who is exhibiting or for the free beer.

So I take it you don't exhibit your work too often? Or just not in Stockholm?

I have an exhibition right now at Eskilstuna Konstmuseum—in a small town outside of Stockholm—but it's my first real [exhibition]. Because I always work on a commission or two or three I sadly never have time to draw something that isn't for something or someone, and I wouldn't want to hang that up on a wall. I wish to change all that though.


Are you working on more personal work to show at upcoming exhibitions then?

At the moment, sadly, I am only drawing for money.

Your illustrations are startlingly realistic. How do you capture that realism?

I always use a photo as a starting point. Some people ask me if I do sittings. I know it's considered more "art," but I would be too nervous to have someone sit still for so long. And I what I really really like to go into [are] those details and small defects that you only have in a photograph. Like a strand of hair that is messed up, or a half-blinking eye. Those sort of things that can only be captured in a moment. Technically, I use digital images and draw while looking at the screen. That way I can zoom into details, change the contrast to see the shadings, rotate the picture so my eyes don't get tired, and tricks like that. Kind of hi-tech, lo-tech.


You've said that you really like the small details and defects that get captured in a photograph. What else do you look for in a photo when deciding whether or not it's suitable for a pencil drawing?

I don't really enjoy drawing things or environments or animals and such. So I guess I just look a lot for interesting faces.

What is a normal day like for you?

I usually start work at nine. I have a studio space at Södermalm in Stockholm. I draw, scan, send sketches and stuff; answer emails; go to meetings; drink coffee in front of the computer; read dlisted.com on my microbreaks; procrastinate doing changes in drawings clients doesn't approve of; use the clone tool to remove dust from scans; use the lasso tool with 2 px feather to cut out things; eat bread rolls in front of the computer; think about art projects I'd like to do instead of working; Facebook; listen to radio documentaries; draw, draw, draw until very late at night. The downside of working with both European and U.S. clients is my workdays can be very long.


Can you tell me about the Bravehat Collective?

It consists of four of my former classmates at Konstfack: Hanna Wieslander, Kristoffer Busch, Anna Giertz, Magnus Hansson, and later we were also joined by textile artist Ingela Nilsson. We used to share a studio and worked on a couple of commissions, the biggest one probably a graphic profile for a restaurant called Landet. Eventually we had to give up the studio cause we never got paid, and everyone kind of got occupied with their own career. But we still have a clubnight at Landet every once in a while with live artists, visuals, nice costumes, and whatever we can think of.

What would you like to be doing 10 years from now?

I have so many plans and ideas—like have a bakery that opens at noon; start an illustrated fashion magazine; make and sell organic butter; open a gift wrapping store; make choreography for a dance group from the tools in Adobe’s creative suite; start an accessories brand with common objects in expensive materials; write poetry. I wish to have at least some of them realized by then.

Related links: www.jennysportfolio.com www.familymanagement.se www.eskilstuna.se

Comments (2) | Posted by mnewton

Job: Senior Graphic Designer
Company: Landor Associates Location: Cincinnati, OH

All jobs Submit

Otaku Magazine: Japanese Horror Issue


Otaku Magazine is a Romanian publication which aims to promote visual artists both national and international.

'Kaidan', is the subject of the latest 4th issue, which Wikipedia describes as follows: "In its broadest sense, kaidan refers to any ghost or horror story, but it has an old-fashioned ring to it that carries the connotation of Edo period Japanese folktales."

Only 100 copies are available for international orders, so if you're interested you'll need to get moving.

Cover by Aya Kato

Add a Comment | Posted by samgilbey

Job: Senior Design Manager - Geneva, Switzerland
Company: Procter & Gamble Location: Geneva, Switzerland

All jobs Submit

Bruno 9li


Bruno 9li (is a Brazilian artist), generally, comments on " uno" e deeply is convinced the intense divine linking between all the beings - people, animals and the nature in itself. 9li creates works that graphically illustrate its vision of epic meeting of natural and supernatural beings. These meeting, depending on the point of view, can be understood as mythical stories of the past, as well as fantastic situations of a distant future.

See more: www.bruno9li.com

Source: ap303

Comments (2) | Posted by inksurge

Job: Creative Director
Company: The Garrigan Lyman Group Location: Seattle, WA

All jobs Submit

Hansen VS Obama



Scott Hansen aka ISO50 has designed the new poster for Barack Obama's campaign. You can purchase the print for $70, all proceeds go to Barack's campaign.

Comments (11) | Posted by albertoeca

Job: Maya 3D Art Director
Company: octOpus Location: Dubai, United Arab Emirates

All jobs Submit

Let's Talk, Leah Hayes

Boston-bred illustrator Leah Hayes, who's a phenom with a Bic-brand ballpoint pen, enjoys laughing. "I laughed forever the other night, watching these rare Andrew Lloyd Webber music videos," she says. "But actually I was laughing out of happiness, not making fun of them. I love musicals so much." Life isn't all shits and giggles for the 27-year-old, Parsons School of Design graduate though. Thumb through the pages of her graphic novels—2004's Holy Moly and the recently published Funeral of the Heart,—and you'll realize Ms. Hayes has her share of somber days too. But it's the less-than-sunny nature of her graphic novels that makes them so appealing. Hayes' multi-layered illustrations aptly compliment the tales of sadness and woe captured in her diary-meets-sketchbook approach to storytelling.

When she's not feverishly sketching ideas for graphic novels (or watching obscure Andrew Lloyd Weber music videos), Hayes stays busy doing editorial illustrations for publications like The New York Times, McSweeney's, and The Wall Street Journal. She also fronts a rock band called Scary Mansion and has a twin sister named Vanessa, who is, coincidentally, also a singer. We took a minute to chat with Ms. Hayes recently, here's how that conversation played out.

When did you first begin drawing in a serious, career-minded way?

I've always been drawing, and I've always wanted to be an illustrator—I used to read my father's Illustration Annuals obsessively when I was a kid. But I started trying to get jobs when I was 19. I was in college and knocking on the doors of The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal between classes. It sounds ambitious, but it was at the expense of my schoolwork I'm afraid.

So were you eager to begin working as an illustrator, or just bored with school?

It was both.


What I enjoy about your ballpoint illustrations is the incredibly distinct feeling and tone they have. What prompted you to use a ballpoint, and can you talk about the advantages and limitations?

I started to use a Bic pen because it is so much like a pencil—the line quality varies greatly, and you can get a super soft fine line, good for cross-hatching. I suspect too that I enjoyed drawing with a tool that is un-erasable. I did it again later with scratchboard. I think I like the recklessness—and stupidity, maybe—of doing something once and not being able to change it.

This idea of permanence related to drawing in pen, would you say it’s helped you develop confidence in your work?

Yes. It’s made me take more risks, in a weird way. Because I always want to do the silly, dangerous thing; the foolish thing. Pen and scratchboard don’t really allow you to make mistakes, so the stakes are higher—I made a lot of mistakes anyway, though.


Your work has been collected in two books published by Fantagraphics, Holy Moly and the recent graphic novel Funeral of the Heart. Can you tell me how your relationship with Fantagraphics came about?

I sent them a cold submission when I had just graduated from college. They were nice enough to read it and give it a chance.

_Holy Moly_ was more of an abstract collection of illustrations threaded together by a loose narrative where Funeral of the Heart is a graphic novel with a defined plot. Can you talk about the difference between the experiences of putting these two books together?

Well, Holy Moly was literally a collection of doodles that I did both during class and at restaurants, and it was a bit like an illustrated diary of what I was going through at the time. It's a really sad book—I can't even look at it now. It makes me so sad. Funeral of the Heart is basically the same thing, but more organized. It's my feelings on certain things, but expressed through metaphor instead of crazy, ranting snails. I'm not sure if one can say that metaphor is a ‘clearer’ way to express an idea, but because of the short-story format it at least gives the illusion of structure.


For future publishing projects, would you be interested in pursuing a more structured approach?

Hmm… no. I look forward to doing another insanely frustrating, confusing, hard-to-read/swallow book.

Your editorial illustrations have appeared in The New York Times, McSweeney's, The Wall Street Journal, and so on. How does contributing artwork to these types of publications differ from say, creating artwork for a graphic novel or more art-minded publication?

Well, I get paid for them, which is helpful. They have also led to some interesting things, too. Every job leads you to something amazing eventually, no matter how small or underpaid.


It’s funny you say that. I’ve had this discussion with so many people, the idea that one opportunity can have this sort of spiderweb effect, leading to so many other opportunities. Can you give me one example of how this has worked in your career?

I drew Holy Moly and had it published, virtually no one bought it, and then one day I got a call from Steven Page from The BareNaked Ladies. He had seen my book in Canada, liked it, and asked me to do the album cover for his next record. That was by far the weirdest career connection that’s ever happened to me.

You also play in a band called Scary Mansion. Can you tell me little bit about the music and what you do in the band?

I started the band a couple of years ago as a solo project, but now I play with a drummer and a bassist. I don't know what to say about the music. I guess it's sort of a musical version of Holy Moly. I have other side projects, too. Lots of little bands.


As a musician too, I see so many similarities between pursuing music and art. I wonder what types of parallels, if any, your experiences have shown you?

I write songs about sadness, dark things, [and so on]. Similar themes to [the] books [and] art I’ve done. I cannot really say what the exact connection is, but I can’t do one without the other.

If you had the opportunity to completely change the trajectory of your life, would you still be an illustrator?

Yes. And also I would have thought to invent cuteoverload.com.

Related links www.leahhayes.com www.fantagraphics.com www.myspace.com/scarymansion www.myspace.com/vanessahayes

Add a Comment | Posted by mnewton

Job: Senior Graphic Designer
Company: LUNAR Location: San Francisco, CA

All jobs Submit

Yoda Decks by HelloKarpa™


These ones are still hot, just out of the oven at Pop Cling and on their way to Hello Karpa . EXTREMELY limited collection of this 3 designs, pre-order them now !

YODA COLLECTION by HelloKarpa™

Add a Comment | Posted by Karpa

Job: Design Manager
Company: Macys.com Location: New York, NY

All jobs Submit

Gkaster goes Live


Pierre Magnol (formerly known as Kurtzmedias) and Pierre Fabre have joined forces to create GKaster ,their brand new motion-design studio.

They also upped their last Reel which is a sweet eye-candy.

Check-it : GKaster

Comments (3) | Posted by Lysergid

Job: Senior Designer
Company: Steelcase Inc Location: Grand Rapids, MI

All jobs Submit

Old School Design



Effektive is the firm of designer Greig Anderson based in Scotland UK.
He has a strong sense for typography and old school design basics, very analogue but contemporary, clean & simple. Check out his work at Effektive.co.uk where you can see the great Spirograf A2 Posters and the Cassette Badge Sets among other beauties.

Comments (1) | Posted by albertoeca

Job: Interior Designer (Auto
Company: ChaseDesign Location: Syracuse , NY

All jobs Submit

Wig Zero One Book


You might wanna grab the last copies of Wig-01 book. Quite interesting work by the art director of Un.titled.

WIG-01

Comments (1) | Posted by Karpa

Job: Flash Developer
Company: Trigger LLC Location: Los Angeles, CA

All jobs Submit

Chrisitee


Nothing's ok, everything's fine

"Started to draw since I was a baby Chrisi with my dad and sister.Pushed my skateboard first in 1990 and from the beginning I loved art in skateboarding and skateboarding in art. People like Mark Gonzales, Andy Howell and Ed Tempelton were my first art/skateboarding heroes. But I also love the old viennese art scene like Egon Schiele nad Gustav Klimt, they gave me a lot of inspiration. It took me a while before I started to paint on shirts, skateboards and other stuff. After years of experimentation I found my own style to explain myself." - Chrisitee.

Chrisitee next exhibition in Vienna's coolest gallery INOPERAbLE

Add a Comment | Posted by FKNC

Job: Art Director
Company: Fathom Creative, Inc. Location: New York, NY

All jobs Submit

A_B Peace & Terror


"A_B_… is a geopolitical survey of the 192 member states of the United Nations with regard to the quantitative degree to which each contributes to peace and terror in the world.

Limited edition of 20 dual-sided posters screen printed by K2 Screen London. The A_ side is printed verso in metallic graphite ink while the B_ side is printed recto in pearlescent white ink on GFSmith 180 gsm Transclear paper."

A_B PEACE & TERROR POSTER

Add a Comment | Posted by Karpa

Job: Freelance Graphic Designer
Company: Dead As We Know It Location: Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NY

All jobs Submit

Jeanspezial



Let me introduce you a young illustrators collective, coming frome Troyes, France : Jeanspezial. Composed of 7 (very) talented illustrators, this crew loves mixing technics and styles to try to become just one person, one identity. Jeanspezial. Defenitivly worth a check.

Comments (1) | Posted by unstru

Job: JanSport - Product Developer (Packs & Travel)
Company: JanSport Location: San Leandro, CA

All jobs Submit


Send this page to a friend!