28 February 2016

Reimagining Objects: a History of Design Exhibition


This week was the opening of our exhibition 'Reimagining Objects'. The purpose of the exhibition was to express our research for our object essays through a new interpretation of our object. We felt that seeing as many of the objects we researched will never be displayed, because they're too delicate or broken, we really wanted to open up the archive in our own way.

I decided not to interpret my own object, although that might be something I do as a later project. Instead I worked with my friend Natalia, who wanted to animate her board game, 'The New Game', a kids game based on the Crimean War. In her research, she explored the surrounding media of the Crimean War in Victorian Britain which not only included newspapers, but also theatre productions, songs, and even 'holidays' to the front to watch the battle. Clearly the documentation (and exaggeration) of the war was relentless and totally indifferent to the violence that was occurring. The board game was a part of this,  disturbingly set against the domesticity of a child's playroom. The game itself is simple enough, with two swirls of ocean with the port of Russia and Turkey being the aim of the two sides. The game used a teetotum, an acceptable version of dice for children. The counters were also miscellaneous so that you could use them for different board games. The game is unbiased; it doesn't matter which country wins. The war is even accessible for children.

It was this juxtaposition that we wanted to try and capture in our animation. We went for a photographic stop motion technique and 3D props in the corner of Nat's living room, in true DIY style. We used paper boats made from sheets of the Illustrated London News as counters to represent the two fleets of ships that eventually move on their own. But once the 'war' is won on either side, the player intervenes and destroys the paper port. The story begins again but with the alternative ending, playing in the exhibition on a constant loop. The idea was that we would depict it as a childlike parody, an kitsch film that's cute, whimsical and harmless, but is also representing the darker side of the time, a sick fascination and entertainment from the bloodshed of the war.

At the exhibition, we projected our animation on one of the walls along with a demonstration of the game available to play on the opening night. We had a fantastic time doing this project on the side of all the million other things we all have to do, but it was all totally worth it! The exhibition was really rewarding and we're all really proud of what we have achieved. None of us pretended to be artists or designers on order to reach a final outcome, but really wanted to use this experience as part of the process of research. It was really nice for me to be able to use what I've learned on my BA course, and I'm really enjoying the combination of what I love within this course. It shows that it is totally valuable to have all these skills, you don't just have to focus on one thing.

See the animation here.

20 February 2016

Exhibition Review: Comix Creatrix, 100 Women Making Comics

Ani and Laurie came up to London to visit, so together with Rosa we headed to the House of Illustration to see the new comic exhibition exclusively displaying work by women, which is always a big plus. Ashamedly (as two illustrators) Ani and I had never been to the House of Illustration before, but this exhibition and the Shōjo manga exhibition coming up in March has helped to peak my interest at least!

A vitrine in the first room covered the earlier examples from the 18th and 19th century, starting with cartoons and individual strips or series published in newspapers and magazines, the earliest being Corporal Perpendicular by Mary Darly in 1775. From there, the rest of the room jumps to women working in the early 20th century. The range goes from Reina Bull's erotic comic series The Adventures of Delia in mail order publishing to Marcia Snyder's 'white jungle babe' Camilla. Highlight of the room has to be a page by Tove Jansson of the series The Moomins, and it was interesting to see her drawings in person rather than the coloured printed version. Her notes and captions are also super cute. I also loved Charlotte Salomon's leben oder theater which beautifully combines painterly illustrations with text without using any kind of grid structure. It was a good way of showing that any kind of narrative could be constituted as a comic. Definitely inspired me to think about making a comic...

The next room is completely covered with cases of pages and had lots of copies of books to spend your time browsing. We all spent a long time going through each one. Beginning with the underground counter culture from the mid-1960s, they had examples from Trina Robbins and Barbara 'Willy' Mendes. I enjoyed the frankness of these comics in comparison to the previous room, and it was clear there had been a turn towards a personal, feminist discourse. Lynda Barry's Girls and Boys showed how comics are a format that opens a connection between the artist and the reader. Rosa and I had a good time chuckling at the dialogue.


But top on my list for me was a page from Anne Opotowsky's collaborative works with Aya Morton and Angie Hoffmeister, His Dream of Skyland and Nocturne. The two books are part of a trilogy about the lives of the inhabitants of the Kowloon Walled City. I couldn't stop looking at the pages on display, and their ability to use delicious combinations of colours to depict the vibrant but difficult lives of these people. I couldn't not have them on my bookshelf...and they've just arrived this week, so I'm looking forward delving into Hong Kong's lost slum through pictures. I'm saving a review of these for another blogpost when I've read them, so I won't go int too much detail...


I also really want to read Returning Home by Cat O'Neil about being mixed race and going 'home' to Hong Kong. The themes of mixed identity rings quite clearly with how I feel about having grown up in the UK, and yet feeling like I need a connection with my ethnic history. I'd really like to explore something about identity and Hong Kong in a project at some point in the future, some of which I'll be looking at in this second essay that I've started researching. I've ordered that now too, so it's been a super spendy week on books, so I've got a lot of reading to do... but at least it will be a break from academic texts.


So if I haven't made it clear already, this exhibition is well worth going to, and I feel like I will probably go again (even if my V&A staff card doesn't work, I'd pay again!!!). It really has spurred me to really go for studying graphic narrative for my dissertation. I've been thinking about looking at mangas by female illustrator/writers, so its clear that I'm still interested in stories through images and objects...so much so I think it would be good training to think about drawing a comic again, even if it's something simple to start off with...

So, to conclude with a reminder for myself, Nadine Redlich's Ambient Comics are a fantastic example of how a very simple idea makes for an incredibly witty and entertaining read. Never underestimate the mundane and everyday!


The best thing about this exhibition is that it is a fantastic showcase of work by women who are using comics to investigate some incredibly difficult issues. There are some intense works surrounding war, identity, love, fantasy, mental health and just everyday life which has always been there, but it is wonderful to see it proudly representing women in what is commonly seen as a male dominated world. It's fantastic to see so much hard work by women celebrated by being exhibited together. Go see it, buy their books, because they are beautiful, challenging and amazing to see in the flesh! I'm definitely looking forward to becoming a reader of comics.

15 February 2016

'Miss Hokusai' Film Review


Apologies for being a day late! So quickly I will move on...

Last Friday, J and I went to the ICA to see a screening of the film 'Miss Hokusai', one of the films that are part of The Japan Foundation Touring Film Programme. The anime is directed by Keiichi Hara, adapted from the manga series Sarusuberi written and illustrated by Hinako Sugiura. The film too acts like a series, combining a collection of smaller narratives to provide a wider context of the day to day life of the characters.

The story is based in the Edo-period, Japan, focused on the life of Katsushika O-Ei, the third daughter of, arguably Japan's most famous painter and printer, Hokusai. It follows their life living together totally surrounded by their work in a tiny shack as she develops her skill as Hokusai's assistant. It describes the tensions and intricacies of their relationship in work, in family and with their clients.

The characters in the film are wonderfully enigmatic, and the main protagonist is a refreshingly subdued in a no-nonsense kind of way rather than aloof. She is clearly a woman with focus and intention and yet, reveals her vulnerability in her relationship with her blind younger sister who she shares the world with. Hokusai too is portrayed as a mysterious, contemplative master, who is strict with his students but is sympathetic with their struggles to achieve greatness.

What is very interesting about the narrative of this film is the way that it weaves fantasy into the story. The snippets of their everyday show their process within their work, particularly how dreams, legends, spirits and fantasy figures affect their painting. For example, they say when painting a dragon, the dragon itself needs to appear and transmit itself through you; for O-Ei, it appears in a storm, creating a powerful image of a dragon. As many anime engage in fantasy, this element seems to be used here to illustrate the bodily performative element of their process, and relay the immersive experience of their practice.

Three Women Playing Musical Instruments, Katsushika O-Ei, Boston Museum of Fine Art

O-Ei, in her real life, is a compelling figure. Very little is known about her. She is thought to have cared for Hokusai in his old age, even divorcing her husband to look after her father. She was an accomplished painter herself, although there are currently only ten works to her name. It has been contested as to whether she may be responsible for some of the later works of Hokusai. From his fame in his lifetime, it would have benefited them both financially that she sold her work as her fathers. Today, the problem is the same; although the painting may have evidence of O-Ei's hand, it still won't serve the high price and prestige of the work being made by Hokusai himself.

Not only does this film serve a feminist perspective on O-Ei and the development of her practice and the relationship with her father, but it also expands the picture of what an unusual position she was in for a young, single woman in Edo. The way it describes the experiential process of painting, the way in which the different painters approach painting shunga, what inspired and drove these individuals in the practice, broadens my imagination on the lives of these artists, particularly for O-Ei, who is stuck in a male-dominated life.

In other words, I highly recommend. If you get the chance to see 'Miss Hokusai', definitely do!

07 February 2016

First Term Essay: The Paradises, Agents of Storytelling

            For the first term essay, I ended up choosing an object that I had been enamoured with since I first saw it; one of a pair of Chinese models called the Chinese Rock Gardens housed in the Museum of Childhood. I had first visited the museum in my last year at university and they had immediately caught my attention. The models are quite large and intricately decorated with luxurious materials such as ivory, mother of pearl and precious metals. What interested me was why they were in the Museum of Childhood in the first place; They looked very much out of character for the museum as highly decorative, delicate objects that certainly did not look like they were meant to be ‘played with’. The label contained very little information on the objects too, only disclosing that they were from Canton in China from 1780-1800, and that legend has it that they had been headed to the Empress Josephine from the Emperor Jiaqing. But I found this to be a limited story, and sought to draw out more from the object itself.

The collections manager at the Museum of Childhood, Catherine Howell, shared the file for The Chinese Rock Gardens, also called The Paradises, which held some of the previous research into the objects. Most of the contents was a research project by Kate Hay, curator in the Furniture department at the V&A. She revealed that the objects originally came from the India Museum, before moving to the South Kensington Museum (later renamed the Victoria & Albert Museum), and then the Bethnal Green Museum (now the Museum of Childhood). It also uncovered that the Chinese Rock Gardens had a sibling, which no longer was displayed at the V&A. A third Paradise was ‘in storage’, although later it was realised to be on display at the Sunderland Museum and Winter Gardens, depicting a Daoist Temple. It became apparent that these models had a far more interesting story than the label gave it credit for, and so I decided that the objective of my essay was to complicate, and hopefully rejuvenate, their given narrative.

I wanted to explore three aspects of the Paradises: Firstly, I researched a little more about Canton and the carvers who might have made the object. I also wanted to find out the credibility of the story of Empress Josephine that was placed as such an important part of the object; Secondly, I contacted the East Asian department to see if there was another object to compare it to. Malcolm McNeill, a curator from the department showed me an ivory Summer Palace in storage at the V&A. It highlighted that the Paradises, although beautiful, was not considered exquisite and so therefore in its design and material seemed to have other motives beyond being impressive and exotic curios. Malcolm also suggested that the individual Paradise I had chosen could be linked to the Daoist story of The Peach Blossom Spring, which became an important part of the research for the second chapter.

            The last chapter, which for me turned out to be the most interesting part of the process, focused on the movement of the Paradises from different locations and how the methods of display pushed certain agendas onto the models. The India Museum employed the Paradises in 1837, much like the infamous Tipu’s Tiger – as an exotic curiosity of the Far East, The Paradises were a spectacular display of a land and a race from a far off land. The South Kensington perhaps slightly improved their use, as in the 1880s, the museum was mainly used as an education tool for Design students, where The Paradises were part of a growing Oriental Section. However, it could still be questioned whether the models in both these institutions ever had their own agency, as they were always part of an impressive spectacle of British imperial power.

            The Paradises came to the Bethnal Green Museum in the 1930s. The development towards becoming the Museum of Childhood was already well under way by this time under the director, Arthur Sabin. The conclusion I came to was that within this space, the Paradises have been able to fulfil its role as a storyteller in itself, without the overpowering of the legend attached to the models. Under a roof containing many objects from around the world, The Paradises are there to inspire, regardless of its slightly course making, and its flashy Chinoiserie style, it is not its exotic nature that is most important in the Museum of Childhood. The Paradises are instead, left to be explored by an audience who have the ability to draw out its most significant feature – a story of wonder, a playground for imagination uninhibited by the boundaries of society and age.




All photographs from the V&A Search the Collections website, accessed here.