Early in April, I rounded up the blog interviews of authors of Team Lampara who participated in the Kuwentong Musmos Workshop in Bohol. This time, the blog interviews of the illustrators of Team Lampara are put together in one post. They too have stories to tell and their advice for aspiring illustrators is meant to inspire and give hope.
Jamie Bauza illustrator of Masaya Maging Ako encourages the aspiring illustrator to keep on practicing. As the saying goes, practice make sperfect!
Pepot Zamora Atienza illustrator of Ang Nanay Kong Drayber learned to trust the creative process to enjoy the art and the making of art.
Lui Buan illustrator of Ang Alaga Kong Lolo advises aspiring artists "to know thy self". An understanding of one's strength and weakness lead to continuous growth personally and professionally.
Luis "Ito" Chua illustrator of Kiko Kitikiti shares the importance of joining organizations like Ang Illustrator ng Kabataan for professional support and networking.
Angela Taguiang illustrator of Ang Batang Papet believes that technical skills alone does not make an artist. Emotions and expressions in a work of art matters a lot.
This coming week, the blog begins featuring yet another team of authors and illustrators from the Kuwentong Musmos Workshops of Room to Read.
Read and learn from the stories of Team OMF-Hiyas, Maloi Salumbides, Joshene Bersales, Janina Rivera, Dr. Luis Gatmaitan and Yna Reyes.
Showing posts with label Filipino Illustrators. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Filipino Illustrators. Show all posts
Saturday, April 18, 2020
Tuesday, June 4, 2019
Friday, April 26, 2019
Illustrator of the Month: Beth Parrocha
Illustrator and woman of wonder, Beth Parrocha lent me her time for this blog feature. I have heard her talk on several occasions but in this interview, Ms. Parrocha speaks from a well spring of love and dedication for her chosen craft. Read her insights on the book industry, especially on the illustrator and publisher relationship, her creative process and the benefits of curiosity and play for the growth and the development of the artist.
1. In your years as children’s book illustrator, name three things that have changed PH Children’s Literature and three things that have remained the same since you started out. These changes and constants may vary from the stories you worked on, the community that supports you as an artist, the publisher-illustrator partnership and opportunities beyond the archipelago.
3 things that have changed:
There are more children’s book illustrators now.
More picture book stories that are relevant to what is happening with children in the Philippines.
International publishers are recognizing Filipino illustrators a lot more.
3 things that have remained the same:
There are still some publishers that are unaware that to nourish their place in children’s book publishing, they will have to nourish the people that are a part of the industry like the writers and the illustrators.
IPR and copyright laws still need to be established in people’s minds.
I still illustrate for children’s picture books ☺
2. You have an amazing and wonderful body of work. I find them playful and whimsical. Quiet, cozy and comforting too. What keeps you going?
What keeps me going is that I’m curious. I’m curious as to how the main character would look like. How the visual elements would conspire to make the story come alive to the reader. Whenever a publisher gives me a story to illustrate and would tell me of their excitement to see the illustrations. I always reply, “I’m excited too!” For me, I don’t really know what would come out until the book has been printed.
More than anything else, I am a storyteller; the picture book is where I am free to express my narrative.
It’s not an easy process, but worth it. To undergo with each new story the process of exploration and the thrill of seeing everything connect together at the end. Illustrating a book is an adventure; I will not deprive myself of that.
I love it when publishers give me stories, it’s like they are kids themselves and they are asking me to play.
3. What is your take on awards and recognition as an artist?
When people especially your fellow artists acknowledges your work, express your gratitude but don’t let the trophy or the recognition define you. There are a lot of other artists that are better than you. It’s just that at this moment, you are the one that is being recognized. That thinking will keep you grounded, or else that trophy can destroy you, by making you complacent. So you wonder why you’ve reached a plateau with your art? That is the reason why.
The sense of wonder and enjoyment that you will feel, whenever you create something that you can actually see and touch out of an idea, that feeling, that is what you should work on. Only you can give that to yourself.
4. How does play factor in your work and in the life of an artist, in general?
A circle is just a circle until the artist decides that it be something else, stretches it, twists it on one end, and calls it a fish. That decision is the spirit of play.
A line is just a line until the artist grapples with it, chases it around with a pen, a pencil, brush or even a mouse and it becomes anything that the artist wants it to be. That is play.
A story becomes interesting when you have toyed with it enough to see through the tiniest of ant holes just so you can look at it from a different perspective.
Play is important to the artist or else everything about his work would look static.
5. Kindly give your 5 recommended activities for artists and children’s book illustrators.
There are lots of things that you can do to make yourself a better artist and illustrator that you will have to discover for yourself. I cannot limit your experience based on what I know. But perhaps I can help you with how you can conduct yourself while you are having those experiences.
Be curious.
Suspend judgment. Do not conclude in the beginning what may or may not happen at the end.
Hold your emotions in check. You might miss something important by indulging in your emotions.
Clear your mind of clutter so that the experience flows in to you unhampered.
Be firm in the belief that you will be learning something.
Ms. Parrocha will be conducting the ILLUSTRATORS AT PLAY II* A Hands-on Workshop on Making Picture Book Art with Beth Parrocha. April 27 (Saturday) | 1:30 to 4:30 PM Glass Space, Ayala Museum
Tuesday, September 18, 2018
Book Talk on the 2016-2017 National Children's Book Award Winners
Friday, July 14, 2017
PPT on Storytelling as Truth Telling
To be delivered and presented in the Annual Lampara Books Seminar on Saturday, July 15, 2017.
Tuesday, May 30, 2017
Friday, December 30, 2016
Preview: Book Project 2017
Around March of 2016, I began a research and development project for one of the leading foundations in the Philippines. It is a book development program which the foundation commits to finish by 2017. After a three month long R and D, I pooled together a team of creatives as approved by the foundation's board members. I couldn't fully reveal the entire project yet, but here's a study by our illustrator whose work in progress makes me super excited to share with you all!
Any guess on what the story is all about?
Any guess on what the story is all about?
Wednesday, August 24, 2016
Curating for #BuwanNgMgaAkdangPinoy
I thought of making a list of books by Filipino authors and illustrators, published in the Philippines (except for one) for #BuwanNgMgaAkdangPinoy. The list covers a year and a half of blog posts. How few. I should review more.
The curated post includes Filipino authors and illustrators I have featured in the blog as well.
Author Interviews: January 2015 - August 2016
Sophia N. Lee
Christine Bellen
Genaro Gojo Cruz
Ma. Teresa Gumap-as Dumadag
Gidget Roceles Jimenez
Illustrators Interviews: January 2015 - August 2016
Jia Rubio Montserrat
Mark Lawrence Andres
Kora Dandan Albano
Book Reviews: January 2015 - August 2016
What Things Mean
Mommy Loves You Just The Same
Wrap Them, Store Them, Peddle Them The Filipino Way
Amazing Me
Mang Andoy's Signs
All About the Philippines
The curated post includes Filipino authors and illustrators I have featured in the blog as well.
Author Interviews: January 2015 - August 2016
Sophia N. Lee
Christine Bellen
Genaro Gojo Cruz
Ma. Teresa Gumap-as Dumadag
Gidget Roceles Jimenez
Illustrators Interviews: January 2015 - August 2016
Jia Rubio Montserrat
Mark Lawrence Andres
Kora Dandan Albano
Book Reviews: January 2015 - August 2016
What Things Mean
Mommy Loves You Just The Same
Wrap Them, Store Them, Peddle Them The Filipino Way
All About the Philippines
Thursday, August 27, 2015
Illustrator Interview: Kora Dandan Albano
With Ms. Gidget Roceles Jimenez |
Kora Dandan Albano shares with us her joy in working with Gidget Roceles Jimenez in their book, All About the Philippines (Tuttle, 2015). She has some tips for budding artists on the use of watercolor as medium for art. Read on and you might just learn a thing or two about watercolor painting!
I love your spreads for the book, especially the ones on the end pages. Why Banawe and Pahiyas?
Sagada and Pahiyas spreads were actually inside illustrations for the Travelling Together and Fiesta sections. But he editors decided to use them as end papers for the book.
Your control of color and water is amazing! How do you do it? Any tips for aspiring illustrators and artists who are using this medium?
Watercolor is an unforgiving medium. So careful planning is important. Hindi pwede yung attack ka lang ng attack. Calculated lahat - from the amount of water that you mix into the paint to the degree of dampness of a pre-wetted paper - lahat iniisip at pinaplano muna. Sa una parang ang hirap, pero if you’ve been using the medium for over 25 years like me, it becomes second skin, instinctive na.
For me, there is no substitute for a good drawing, so I always draw my pencil sketches on plain paper first, adjusting and revising until I’m happy with them. Then I trace them on quality watercolor paper using a light box - this is to avoid damaging the paper with too much erasures. Arches and Canson Montval watercolor papers are my favorites. I always paint from light to dark. Highlights are leave outs – kung ano yung kulay ng papel, iyon ang whites or highlights sa illustration. I don’t use white paint as much as possible. I build up my images one layer at a time. Like in the Sagada spread, I painted the first layer of clouds first, then while letting that area dry, I tackled the first layer of the greens of the rice terraces next, and so on and so forth until the entire paper is covered with first layer of paint. Then I work on the next layer, starting at the parts that are already dry. I move my drawing board a lot while painting. I even paint some parts upside down sometimes. Normally it takes about four to five layers of paint to finish an illustration.
More tips:
> Always clean your mixing plates to avoid muddy mixture of paints. Huwag manghinayang sa paint.
> Always use fresh water for washing and dipping your brushes. Replace the water when using a different hue. Like, if you are painting a part that is yellow and your water is already blue, you will end up painting it green if you don’t replace your water with a clean one.
> Sketch pad papers are not watercolor papers. Don’t use them.
> Invest on good quality watercolor paints. I use Winsor and Newton, and Holbein paints.
> If you want to be good in watercolor, paint in watercolor most days of the weeks, at least 2 hours at a time.
At the book launch or All About the Philippines |
Describe the experience of working with Gidget and Tuttle.
We were a good team! Just like with most of my children’s book projects, I only worked closely with the editor/coordinator of this book. I really appreciate it that Terri, the editor from Tuttle in the U.S., involved me from the planning stage of the book up to the edits. For this project, Terri and I exchanged about 250 emails between us and each one I got from her is a “feel good” email. Her reactions to my submissions were always - Awesome! Fantastic! Wonderful!
Though, Gidget and I knew each other, we never met to discuss the project. It is only during the edits that the three of us worked together via email, proofreading and making sure everything is in place. But it was good to know afterwards that Gidget really loved what I have done with our book. Looks like, even if we didn’t discuss a single illustration while I’m doing them, our vision for the book were practically the same.
What is your dream book?
I want to write and illustrate a book about my childhood in Bulacan.
Photo source: Grabbed from FB with permission from Ms. Albano and A-gel Ramboyong.
Wednesday, May 7, 2014
Book Project Update: Big Sister
Been working with Totet de Jesus for nearly a year now on Big Sister, our new book, which will see publication this year. Hopefully.
Labels:
Big Sister,
books,
Filipino Author,
Filipino Illustrators,
Filipino Librarian,
Lampara Books,
Philippine Children's Literature,
Ruben "Totet" de Jesus
Thursday, March 6, 2014
Pinoy Illustrator Interview: Liza Flores
Liza Flores, illustrator and former President of Ang INK, answers questions about her creative process and the challenge of illustrating Dear Nanay, our book which was published by Lampara Books (2014).
I have always loved paper! As far as I can remember, whenever I'm at National Bookstore, or any store that has paper, I'd be looking at the store's paper selection (whole sheets, cut sheets, gift wrappers, notebooks), even if I had no real use for it. In a trip to the US, I bought Manila paper, just because their Manila paper had a nice thickness, and was in a nice yellowish-crafty color.
a. What attracted you to use paper when illustrating a book for children?
I think the idea of using paper was planted in my head when I got a set of Japanese bookmarks when I was around 10 years old.
b. How different is this medium to, say, water color or digital media as far as rendition is concerned?
When I use paint or colored pencils, I have to have a very clean and detailed drawing of the whole book before I can color. (1) I start by making small thumbnail studies. (2) Then, I draw all the pages again, but this time bigger, a little bigger than the book's size. I use regular bond paper and a pencil when I do this. (3) With A light box, I trace my drawings on to the actual paper board I'll be using. (4) Finally, I color my line drawings.
With paper cutouts, I can jump from rough thumbnail studies straight to cutting. I don't draw on the paper I cut. I just imagine the shapes I need, like a circle for a head of a character, then I cut. Almost any object can be simplified into simple, basic shapes. So I would cut one piece or element at a time, move things around to see what works, and build each character, scene, and page as I go along. Then, I glue the parts when I'm happy with what I have.
With paper cutouts, I can jump from rough thumbnail studies straight to cutting. I don't draw on the paper I cut. I just imagine the shapes I need, like a circle for a head of a character, then I cut. Almost any object can be simplified into simple, basic shapes. So I would cut one piece or element at a time, move things around to see what works, and build each character, scene, and page as I go along. Then, I glue the parts when I'm happy with what I have.
c. What was your approach to Dear Nanay? The story is pretty sad, but you made it appear light and cheerful.
I remember Beth Parrocha saying that whenever she got a sad story, the more she wants to make the illustrations happy. That's how I felt after reading the manuscript.
Also, how the story was written was already easy to understand. So I figured there was room for the illustrations to be less literal. I could illustrate sending a letter via snail mail, or via email, but why not via paper airplanes?
d. Is being an artist/illustrator your first choice of career? If not, what made you become one? If it is, what keeps you in it?
I couldn't decide what course to take when I was applying for college. I knew I liked art, and maybe something communication-related, but that was it. So I ended up choosing Visual Communication (Fine Arts), not really knowing what I'd be when I graduate.
It never occurred to me that being an illustrator was a career until I saw INK's exhibit whan I was in college. In fact, it's funny that it never occurred to me that real people made the drawings in my favorite books. And when I saw the illustrations of Robert Alejandro, Mel Silvestre, Joanne de Leon, Beth Parrocha, I thought, hey, I'd like to do that too!
I enjoy the process of making a book. I like imagining the story and making it "real". I learn something new every time: about the materials I use, about what I am capable of, about how to tell a story better. Then, there's the happy bonus of seeing my work printed, and being enjoyed by the one reading it.
Monday, January 20, 2014
2014 PBBY Alcala Prize Call for Entries
Lifted from the PBBY website.
The Philippine Board on Books for Young People (PBBY) is now accepting entries for the 2014 PBBY-Alcala Prize.
The winner shall be given a cash prize of P25,000.00, a gold medal, and an opportunity to be published. Prizes will be awarded in an appropriate ceremony to be held during the celebration of National Children's Book Day on July 15, 2014.
Interested artists and illustrators can download the manuscripts.
The Philippine Board on Books for Young People (PBBY) is now accepting entries for the 2014 PBBY-Alcala Prize.
The winner shall be given a cash prize of P25,000.00, a gold medal, and an opportunity to be published. Prizes will be awarded in an appropriate ceremony to be held during the celebration of National Children's Book Day on July 15, 2014.
CONTEST RULES
- 1. The contest is open to all Filipino citizens except those who are related to any PBBY member up to the third degree of consanguinity.
- Entries must be based on any of the following, all honorable mention winners of the 2014 PBBY-Salanga Prize:
- Ang Misay sa Aming Bahay
by Susan Anne Alegro Quirante - Gaano ba Kalayo Patungong Paaralan?
by Genaro Gojo Cruz - Reyna Elena
by Michael de Guzman
- Ang Misay sa Aming Bahay
- Copies of these stories may be requested from the PBBY Secretariat or downloaded from the PBBY website (www.pbby.org.ph).
- All entries must be original unpublished illustrations that have not won in any previous contest.
- All entries must consist of three (3) illustrations that are of the same size and medium. Entries do not have to be based on consecutive spreads/parts of the text.
- A contestant may send in more than one (1) entry.
- Each entry must be signed by a pen name only, preferably on a small piece of paper pasted on the back of each artwork. Entries with a signature or any identifying marks are automatically disqualified.
- which only the pen name of the contestant shall appear. The envelope must contain the contestant's full name, address, contact numbers, short description of background, and notarized certification vouching for the originality of the entry and for the freedom of the organizers from any liability arising from the infringement of copyright in case of publication.
- All entries must be sent to the PBBY Secretariat, c/o Adarna House, 109 Scout Fernandez cor. Scout Torillo Sts., Quezon City by April 14, 2014.
- Winners will be announced no later than May 12, 2014. Non-winning entries must be claimed no later than June 13, 2014, after which they will no longer be the responsibility of the organizers.
Interested artists and illustrators can download the manuscripts.
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
Tag Team Interview: Dang Bagas & Aldy Aguirre (3 of 3)
Here is the last part (part 3) of the Tag Team Interview of Dang Bagas and Aldy Aguirre. Part 2 was posted last January 12, 2013">.
What is your favorite children's book or YA book?
DB: Asking me this question is like asking me to choose just one star in the universe I would like to own and keep in a jar for only me to look at. Please, please don’t force me to choose only one, cause I have lots and lots, countless lots of favorites.
Ok. Fine. I’ll choose one. And I’m choosing this one because I think this is one book that at every moment I read it presents something different and new to me like it’s always the first time I’m reading it. And so it would be a good choice of book to keep if ever I get trapped in an island with no hope of rescue. And that would be Zusak’s The Book Thief.
(Now, my other books are jealous. And they’re all clamoring for a hug.)
AA: The dream hunters by Neil Gaiman and Yoshitaka Amano, books by Shel Silverstein among others
Dang Bagas is a tinkerer – a scriptwriter, theatre artist, filmmaker, teacher, playwright, KUTING’s current president.
Aldy Aguirre is a freelance illustrator from Q.C. He tries to create drawings and illustrations which he hopes can inspire others to also draw and imagine. He has the 2010 PBBY Alcala illustrator’s grand prize and is a member of AngINK (Ilustrador ng Kabataan), a group of driven illustrators for children.
What is your favorite children's book or YA book?
DB: Asking me this question is like asking me to choose just one star in the universe I would like to own and keep in a jar for only me to look at. Please, please don’t force me to choose only one, cause I have lots and lots, countless lots of favorites.
Ok. Fine. I’ll choose one. And I’m choosing this one because I think this is one book that at every moment I read it presents something different and new to me like it’s always the first time I’m reading it. And so it would be a good choice of book to keep if ever I get trapped in an island with no hope of rescue. And that would be Zusak’s The Book Thief.
(Now, my other books are jealous. And they’re all clamoring for a hug.)
AA: The dream hunters by Neil Gaiman and Yoshitaka Amano, books by Shel Silverstein among others
Dang Bagas is a tinkerer – a scriptwriter, theatre artist, filmmaker, teacher, playwright, KUTING’s current president.
Aldy Aguirre is a freelance illustrator from Q.C. He tries to create drawings and illustrations which he hopes can inspire others to also draw and imagine. He has the 2010 PBBY Alcala illustrator’s grand prize and is a member of AngINK (Ilustrador ng Kabataan), a group of driven illustrators for children.
Thursday, December 19, 2013
Author and Illustrator Tag Team Interview: Dang Bagas and Aldy Aguirre (1 of 3)
In this tag team interview, author Dang Bagas and illustrator Aldy Aguirre answer my questions on their new story book, The Little Girl in a Box (Adarna House, 2013) their creative processes and dreams of future and past creations.
What's your most challenging experience while working on The Little Girl in the Box? Describe the collaborative process that you both went through in making the book.
Dang Bagas (DB): I faced many challenges in writing The Little Girl in a Box. One was that this story would be written in prose form. I’d been a TV scriptwriter for years and I’d been out of practice writing narratives in prose, at least ones that I meant to get published in a book.
I wouldn’t go into the differences between writing scripts and short stories at length but this time, there was no camera to rely on to capture the world of the story; there was no actor to embody the characters, for me. Letters and words were all I had to create a three-dimensional world.
So words had to be chosen really carefully. They had to be sensorial and synesthetic to engage the reader to travel to the world that I created that could be both familiar and new to them. And as I knew I wanted this story to be read aloud to children, the words had to sing, they had to flow together like a beautifully choreographed dance. So yes, the skills needed to write a narrative in prose was something I had to rediscover before I could even begin writing this particular story.
Another challenge, albeit the most enjoyable so far, was getting to know more stories that are already out there. Admittedly, my reading for the past twenty years were mostly young adult novels so in a period of three months, I read through a lot of picture books. And that’s when I discovered that the story I was originally brewing in my mind was similar to another one.
The Little Girl in a Box started out as a story about a boy who lived in two houses because his parents were separated and things got so chaotic for him that he ran away and ended up living in the streets, inside a box that would take him to so many magical worlds. But of course, there was always something missing in these worlds, his parents, so the boy chose to come back to his two homes.
Sounds familiar? Yes? The premise was similar to Papa’s House, Mama’s House, a story about children dealing with the unique family situation of separated parents. Good thing I took the time to read and read and read, right, or else I would have ended up with a story that’s already been told and most probably, would have been thrown in the reject file and not published.
Initially, of course, because of this, I wanted to throw my story out and write something else. But the element of the box in the story wouldn’t leave me. It haunted me, demanding to be written. So I went back to the drawing board, find a different premise but retain what was the unique and magical element, the box. The box still took the child to places and experiences but instead of taking the child back to his/her two homes, the box helped the child find the kind of home that’s just right for her. And that’s how The Little Girl in a Box came to be what it is now.
The last and greatest challenge was something every writer face: beating the deadline. Five hours before the deadline (PBBY-Salanga Prize), the page was blank. The words were still just in my mind, stumbling over each other, incoherent, not making any sense. And then I went back to what really drew me into writing it in the first place. Again, it was the box. And so I began, There was once a box, a cardboard box… and much like being possessed, the words came and they sang and danced beautifully and whew, I made it to the deadline.
Horrifying as it is for any self-respecting writer, I submitted a first draft. But I guess, there are just stories that demanded to be told the way they wanted to be told when they wanted to be told. Us writers, we’re just channels for these stories. We’re just wormholes for them to pass through until they reach the place of existence in the form of words on paper or pictures or even through a storyteller’s voice. But there’s really nothing like it, the moment one becomes a wormhole for these stories – horrifying, exciting, enervating. Beating the deadline was a great challenge, but an even greater one, the most fulfilling one, is letting myself be used as that wormhole for The Little Girl in a Box.
The Little Girl in a Box is the first story I’ve written that is meant to be a picture book so I didn’t think myself to really have a hand in the illustration or even to have the expertise to have something to say about how it is to be illustrated and designed.
Back then, I was just happy that the story’s going to be published. I also knew that the story was in good hands with Ani Almario and Adarna House’s design team. Ani was good enough to share the test illustrations with me and get my opinion on which illustration would be best for the story, brainstorm with me on the design, update me on the development of the book but really, I trusted that whatever she and Adarna House decided on in terms of illustration and book design would be what is to be the best for the story.
When I learned that it was Aldy who would illustrate, I familiarized myself with his work and saw his sketches and sort of visualized on my own how Aldy’s illustration is going to look like. Then, we got to meet once and the only thing I asked Aldy to be particular about is to track the growth of the little girl as she gets to be too big for the box because this also tracks the plot of the story that could be missed if it’s not in the illustration.
And that’s about it. But I should say, if I was a wormhole for the written words, Aldy was the best wormhole for the illustrations and between us, we had great mediums in Ani and Eli Camacho of Adarna House. I don’t think we needed meetings, or back and forth discussions. Collaboration happened in the plane of having a singular intention: to come up with a beautiful picture book that we would all be proud of. And that’s exactly how the book turned out to be.
Aldy Aguirre (AA): I always try to give justice to the great stories that I had been luckily given to illustrate, maybe that pressure is one of the challenges. Since I really like Ms. Dang’s story, I wanted to somehow represent the story well with my illustrations, and still have their own appeal. From the studies that I presented to Adarna, Ms Dang told me what she had in mind on how the box should be seen as the story progresses, and I think that was crucial.
What is your box metaphor?
DB: As a child, the box represented a lot of things for me. If my relatives sent it from abroad, then I knew it would be filled with surprises and goodies. Then, it became lots of other things: a hiding place, a house in bahay-bahayan, a car, a plane, paper to draw in, something to put treasures in, a place where one can sit quiet to read or just nap in when I’m supposed to be doing homework or household chores, or really just someplace I could daydream in.
Now, I look at the box as a person’s unique special place in this world, good or bad, fulfilling or not, filled with adventures or dull, happy or sad, quiet or noisy, in the colors of the rainbow or in black and white or in sepia brown, inhabited by humans or monsters or aliens or epic heroes or the sarimanok, a beach or on top of the mountain, with parents or siblings or a husband or child, a library or a playground.
These places could be different from each other at different times and unique only to us. And what kinds of world that would be is our choice and nobody else’s. And we could be there alone or take anyone we want with us. There is no limit to what the box could be and where it could take us. It could be filled with anything we want. The box is whatever we make our lives to be.
In the story, the box is a powerful metaphor. Readers may interpret the box into many things. As an artist, how can a "box" or "boxes" help you become better at your craft?
As a writer, I sometimes liken the box to my own limitations and to the limitations set by the industries I write for. I mean, working as a writer, there were lots of times when I felt “boxed in” or “trapped in a box” or “forced in a box”. But, and this I realized early on in my writing career, that this box can be moved, or one can work around it or shape it and color it any which way I want it to be. Doing that is certainly hard work but the only thing that should stop an artist from doing so is a lack of imagination and afterwards, determining choices that work, then determination to stick by these choices, at whatever cost.
Actually visualizing my craft as something like a box already helps me make it better cause then I know I could make it what I want it to be though I am still working on that: letting my imagination go freely, making the right choices, and sticking to these choices according to what is the best for me, and the stories that I write.
AA: I think it depends on what that box is needed for. A box as a safe place would be good memories and loved ones. Group hug!
Note: Part 2 of the interview will appear next week.
What's your most challenging experience while working on The Little Girl in the Box? Describe the collaborative process that you both went through in making the book.
L-R: Me, Heidi E. Abad, Xi Zuq, Dang Bagas & Liwa Malabed |
I wouldn’t go into the differences between writing scripts and short stories at length but this time, there was no camera to rely on to capture the world of the story; there was no actor to embody the characters, for me. Letters and words were all I had to create a three-dimensional world.
So words had to be chosen really carefully. They had to be sensorial and synesthetic to engage the reader to travel to the world that I created that could be both familiar and new to them. And as I knew I wanted this story to be read aloud to children, the words had to sing, they had to flow together like a beautifully choreographed dance. So yes, the skills needed to write a narrative in prose was something I had to rediscover before I could even begin writing this particular story.
Another challenge, albeit the most enjoyable so far, was getting to know more stories that are already out there. Admittedly, my reading for the past twenty years were mostly young adult novels so in a period of three months, I read through a lot of picture books. And that’s when I discovered that the story I was originally brewing in my mind was similar to another one.
Dang Bagas with the audience she writes for |
Sounds familiar? Yes? The premise was similar to Papa’s House, Mama’s House, a story about children dealing with the unique family situation of separated parents. Good thing I took the time to read and read and read, right, or else I would have ended up with a story that’s already been told and most probably, would have been thrown in the reject file and not published.
Initially, of course, because of this, I wanted to throw my story out and write something else. But the element of the box in the story wouldn’t leave me. It haunted me, demanding to be written. So I went back to the drawing board, find a different premise but retain what was the unique and magical element, the box. The box still took the child to places and experiences but instead of taking the child back to his/her two homes, the box helped the child find the kind of home that’s just right for her. And that’s how The Little Girl in a Box came to be what it is now.
The last and greatest challenge was something every writer face: beating the deadline. Five hours before the deadline (PBBY-Salanga Prize), the page was blank. The words were still just in my mind, stumbling over each other, incoherent, not making any sense. And then I went back to what really drew me into writing it in the first place. Again, it was the box. And so I began, There was once a box, a cardboard box… and much like being possessed, the words came and they sang and danced beautifully and whew, I made it to the deadline.
Horrifying as it is for any self-respecting writer, I submitted a first draft. But I guess, there are just stories that demanded to be told the way they wanted to be told when they wanted to be told. Us writers, we’re just channels for these stories. We’re just wormholes for them to pass through until they reach the place of existence in the form of words on paper or pictures or even through a storyteller’s voice. But there’s really nothing like it, the moment one becomes a wormhole for these stories – horrifying, exciting, enervating. Beating the deadline was a great challenge, but an even greater one, the most fulfilling one, is letting myself be used as that wormhole for The Little Girl in a Box.
Dang Bagas with friends from the industry |
Back then, I was just happy that the story’s going to be published. I also knew that the story was in good hands with Ani Almario and Adarna House’s design team. Ani was good enough to share the test illustrations with me and get my opinion on which illustration would be best for the story, brainstorm with me on the design, update me on the development of the book but really, I trusted that whatever she and Adarna House decided on in terms of illustration and book design would be what is to be the best for the story.
When I learned that it was Aldy who would illustrate, I familiarized myself with his work and saw his sketches and sort of visualized on my own how Aldy’s illustration is going to look like. Then, we got to meet once and the only thing I asked Aldy to be particular about is to track the growth of the little girl as she gets to be too big for the box because this also tracks the plot of the story that could be missed if it’s not in the illustration.
And that’s about it. But I should say, if I was a wormhole for the written words, Aldy was the best wormhole for the illustrations and between us, we had great mediums in Ani and Eli Camacho of Adarna House. I don’t think we needed meetings, or back and forth discussions. Collaboration happened in the plane of having a singular intention: to come up with a beautiful picture book that we would all be proud of. And that’s exactly how the book turned out to be.
Aldy Aguirre (AA): I always try to give justice to the great stories that I had been luckily given to illustrate, maybe that pressure is one of the challenges. Since I really like Ms. Dang’s story, I wanted to somehow represent the story well with my illustrations, and still have their own appeal. From the studies that I presented to Adarna, Ms Dang told me what she had in mind on how the box should be seen as the story progresses, and I think that was crucial.
What is your box metaphor?
DB: As a child, the box represented a lot of things for me. If my relatives sent it from abroad, then I knew it would be filled with surprises and goodies. Then, it became lots of other things: a hiding place, a house in bahay-bahayan, a car, a plane, paper to draw in, something to put treasures in, a place where one can sit quiet to read or just nap in when I’m supposed to be doing homework or household chores, or really just someplace I could daydream in.
Now, I look at the box as a person’s unique special place in this world, good or bad, fulfilling or not, filled with adventures or dull, happy or sad, quiet or noisy, in the colors of the rainbow or in black and white or in sepia brown, inhabited by humans or monsters or aliens or epic heroes or the sarimanok, a beach or on top of the mountain, with parents or siblings or a husband or child, a library or a playground.
These places could be different from each other at different times and unique only to us. And what kinds of world that would be is our choice and nobody else’s. And we could be there alone or take anyone we want with us. There is no limit to what the box could be and where it could take us. It could be filled with anything we want. The box is whatever we make our lives to be.
In the story, the box is a powerful metaphor. Readers may interpret the box into many things. As an artist, how can a "box" or "boxes" help you become better at your craft?
As a writer, I sometimes liken the box to my own limitations and to the limitations set by the industries I write for. I mean, working as a writer, there were lots of times when I felt “boxed in” or “trapped in a box” or “forced in a box”. But, and this I realized early on in my writing career, that this box can be moved, or one can work around it or shape it and color it any which way I want it to be. Doing that is certainly hard work but the only thing that should stop an artist from doing so is a lack of imagination and afterwards, determining choices that work, then determination to stick by these choices, at whatever cost.
Actually visualizing my craft as something like a box already helps me make it better cause then I know I could make it what I want it to be though I am still working on that: letting my imagination go freely, making the right choices, and sticking to these choices according to what is the best for me, and the stories that I write.
AA: I think it depends on what that box is needed for. A box as a safe place would be good memories and loved ones. Group hug!
Note: Part 2 of the interview will appear next week.
Thursday, November 28, 2013
Monday, October 14, 2013
Blog Tour: Guardians of Tradition
A few weeks back, I said yes to a blog tour that will feature the book, Guardians of Tradition: The Gawad sa Manlilikha ng Bayan by Mae Astrid Tobias. Published by Adarna House, this non-fiction book is illustrated by Rommel Joson with beautiful photographs by Renato S. Rastrollo.
The blog tour started yesterday, 13 October 2013 and you can read the reviews and excerpts from these blogs:
Dia Pelaez
Tina Matanguihan
Freine
Chris Mariano
Xi Zuq
Josephine Litonjua
I'm excited to read the reviews of the book bloggers who joined in the blog tour.
As for me, participating in the blog tour is my simple way of celebrating Mae Astrid Tobias' achievements as a writer and dreamer. A long time ago, in my past life as a grade school librarian, I invited Astrid for a talk on campus writing, journalism and on her writing life to grade school students of Xavier School San Juan. How she emphasized the importance of research when doing a writing project! I even wrote an article about her author visit in the school's website. Read the article in this link.
My excerpt and book give-away info is scheduled on 19 October, 2013.
The blog tour started yesterday, 13 October 2013 and you can read the reviews and excerpts from these blogs:
Dia Pelaez
Tina Matanguihan
Freine
Chris Mariano
Xi Zuq
Josephine Litonjua
I'm excited to read the reviews of the book bloggers who joined in the blog tour.
With Mae Astrid Tobias, ca 2005 |
My excerpt and book give-away info is scheduled on 19 October, 2013.
Labels:
Adarna House,
blog tour,
books,
Filipino Authors,
Filipino Illustrators,
Guardians of Tradition,
Mae Astrid Tobias,
Renato S. Rastrollo,
Rommel Joson
Tuesday, July 2, 2013
Celebrate NCBD: A Curious Buffet
A CURIOUS BUFFET
Ang I.N.K. Group Exhibit
About the Exhibit:
Ang Ilustrador ng Kabataan presents an exhibition inspired by the kitchen.
Ang I.N.K. Group Exhibit
About the Exhibit:
Ang Ilustrador ng Kabataan presents an exhibition inspired by the kitchen.
Pots and pans, teacups and spoons are the stuff of the everyday and the normal. We use our kitchenware and utensils almost unthinkingly - picking them up, using them, washing them down over and over again. Kitchen and table utensils are the tools of our daily domestic routines and are steeped in the matter-of-factness of life. Spoons and teapots can be some of the most unremarkable things in the world. Utilitarian and ordinary as they are, one may think that they are far removed from the wonder of the visual arts.
But art can exist in everyday things. In this exhibit, Ang Ilustrador ng Kabataan aims to juxtapose the common kitchen utensil with the magic of art. Factory made utensils give way to artworks made with hands. The artworks on display will use kitchen items and utensils as starting points for sculptures and paintings. Objects that were originally intended for cooking and eating will be reassembled, recombined, repainted and transformed to items for pure visual enjoyment.
In the end, when all the artworks are assembled, the intention is to create a collection of desserts and treats of a different sort for both the eye and the mind.
Details:
Post (formerly PABLO) Cubao X
Exhibit Opening: June 29, 2013/ Saturday/ 6pm
Exhibit runs until July 13, 2013.
Labels:
30th NCBD,
Ang INK,
Filipino Illustrators,
PBBY
Saturday, June 29, 2013
Sunday, June 16, 2013
Happy Father's Day!
Jomike Tejido is at it again!
He made an e-greeting card for Mother's Day using the illustrations he made for our book project. Father's deserve one on this special day!
My father is a retired public school teacher. I did not see him bring home test papers to check or lesson plans to make at home. He is very good at time management. He was a strict teacher, a disciplinarian. What I remember most was his big table in his classroom. It was made of wood, very sturdy and smelled like baked bread. I did visit him in his shop in school and watched him plant vegetables in the school garden along side his sixth grade students.
To my father and my husband, and all the fathers in the world, Happy Father's Day!
Sunday, May 12, 2013
Happy Mother's Day!
Another spread from Jomike Tejido from our book, My Daddy, My One and Only. What a fitting illustration for today's Mother's Day celebration.
To my mom who pushed me to become a librarian; to my children who make me a better person every day by being their mother; to my husband who made my being a mother possible; and to my mothers in the profession, thank you for this life filled with grace!
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