How DYCP funding has changed my creative practice

A year ago I was awarded the Arts Council England DYCP funding. This blog post is about all that I got up to, the wonderful surprises, the parts that maybe didn’t work as I’d expected, and how this explorative year has enriched my creative practice forever.

During the pandemic pretty much all of my work became digital and my screen time increased considerably, which decreased my mental and physical wellbeing. This DYCP funding allowed me time to explore a more tangible, hands on, face to face practice, and take an ambitious step in my career towards working in new and more sensory ways.

Stage 1: Stop Motion Animation

I can’t begin to tell you how the Aardman Academy Stop Motion 2 Industry Training course stretched me as an animator. I relished 3 months of Master classes and Q&As with the most inspirational creatives from the stop-motion world, weekly tasks that took me to my edge and helpful support, critique and encouragement from both my mentor, Maraike Kraemer (who has worked on films like Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl, Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget, as well as series like shaun the Sheep), Stuart Messenger (our incredible course leader), Mark Simon Hewis, head of Aardman Academy and a new giant network of animator peers who have remained a huge wealth of knowledge and support since graduating in July.

Here’s a little taster of where we went with our weekly tasks.

I realise now that using LAVs (Live action video) to inform an animation is the absolute best way for me to add truthfulness and character to a puppets performance, and that this is something I can add into my workshops with children. Until now I would have children creating the characters, storyline, back story, voiceovers, music, sound fx, background and foreground but the physicality of the characters wasn’t something I left to the children. Why not? It is so integral to the story telling.

I learnt, through working with LAVs that we humans do funny things, like when we shift our gaze we blink. I learnt that it looks better to drop some mouth shapes rather than trying to be completely accurate with a lip-sync. I learnt that creating replaceable mouth shapes is WAY speedier than using the sculpt through method.

I also learnt that stop motion would tie me to a screen just as heavily as digital animating. It is a much lengthier process, and what’s more, you have to have controlled lighting and therefore you need to be in a space with no natural light. The saving grace is that you are doing something physical and tangible, sometimes for long stretches of time, between each frame.

Since illustrating Deep in the Whispering Woods: An Imagination Journal for Storytellers by Holly Staniford, I had been hoping to run workshops with children using nature to inspire storytelling, where children could take their dreamt up characters out into the real world and animate them there and then. I was starting to feel like stop motion, in order to be accepted as a piece of art would have too many restrictive elements if I wish to maintain my ethos of fully trusting a child’s creative impulse.

You can imagine how delighted I was when I was introduced, through one of our Q&A sessions to this incredible film by Ainslie Henderson.

The most inspiring, fire in the belly moment of the whole three month course was discovering Ainslie’s work. Here was an artist who wasn’t afraid to break rules in the pursuit of creativity. ‘Shackle’ is a beautiful stop motion film shot outside, regardless of the changes in light. In fact it is made more beautiful because of the changes in light!

His film, Stems is all about his creative process. The VoiceOver is Ainslie speaking his real, spontaneous thoughts accompanied by the most wonderfully appropriate, playful soundtrack which comes to life through the stop motion puppets, playing instruments. Even Ainslie’s voice becomes part of the action as a filter is added and it’s clear it is being played via a dictaphone by one of the little dreamt up characters.

He speaks about creating characters using found objects. From nature or discarded bits and bobs. This is EXACTLY what I wish to be doing with my workshops with kids and here I had a clear example of how wonderful this process can be.

Here is a little peek at part of my final project:

Stage 2: Automata

I have loved diving into the world of automata. There is something satisfying about turning a handle and feeling the resistance of an actual mechanism, knowing that your action has created movement and breathed life into a character or scene. My dream is to use automata within a performance or stop motion film that can then be explore and manipulated by kids in the real world having already seen it in action as part of a story.

I began to mix my stop motion characters with simple automata bodies, dreaming up ways that would be simple to implement in workshop environments. The body was drawn on a 300gsm card stock using kid safe felt-tips. The wire used both to attach the feet to, and as the handle, is made of an easily pliable aluminum wire. Kids could easily help to bend the aluminum into the correct shape if given a paper guide to work from. The base is a simple cardboard structure, which I would probably bring pre-assembled to workshops because it’s boring and fiddly!

Then I took thinks a step further and used stop motion to animate a lip-sync together with the automata action.

I am completely inspired by Stoccafisso Design and wish to implement some of his techniques into performance settings in the future.

Stage 3:  Projection Mapping

I am so excited to be adding projection mapping to my skillset. I wish to be able to bring everyday environments to life by wrapping objects in projected animation, created by children. This creates the most wonderfully playful opportunities in performances and immersive exhibitions.

Spending time with Rebecca Smith at the Urban Projections HQ has helped me realise there are even more ways to weave projection mapping into my process than I had first imagined. We started by focusing on a software called Resolume Arena which will be perfect for all that I am dreaming up. Children will be able to trigger animations around an exhibition space using buttons or sensors. Equally Resolume will work as the backbone of performances, triggering both the sound and visuals. But Rebecca also encouraged me to give Tagtool a go, and I’m so pleased I did.

Tagtool runs on iPads and is a software that allows you to animate live. I love the idea of kids be able to imagine something and then to immediately animate it. Tagtool could be the answer, although the animations are relatively crude and limited they give it’s creator an immediate gratification that would be wonderful as part of a larger immersive experience.

I started to think about using Tagtool to bring our environment to life. Giving kids little handheld projectors, inspired by The Colour Foundry, and my desire to use nature to inspire creativity, I thought I was best to switch the mixed reality testing period to working outside in everyday surroundings, streets or gardens. I tested the process on my 78 year old mother to see if she could handle the software.

Projection mapping onto nature then led me on to thinking about augmented reality and how I can bring children stories into any environment using Adobe Aero. I thought about how this might mean I could cross oceans with stories from children in lands afar, sharing characters, cultures, stories and music in a wonderfully immersive, cocreated way.

I started by using a business card as a base for this idea. Thanks to Jacob from Spectrum WASP for this wonderful VoiceOver and artwork.

I then went on to think about how we can reimagine our towns and cities through the eyes of our children. Using Adobe Aero again, I used Mansfield as my testing ground and the help of Chloe from Spectrum WASP for the awesome artwork.

I also started playing with how projection could work within a piece of stop motion. Here I created an aquarium for my stop motion puppet using my coffee table.

What’s Next?

I am so excited to pull all of these new skills into my practice.

In January I will be in Costa Rica running my first stop motion workshop where children will build their puppets using clay, plus fallen leaves, twigs, petals and rubbish found on the beaches of Nosara. The children will dream up their characters inspired by their hunt and their environment. I will share these stories in further stop motion workshops back in the UK, using the power of augmented reality.

I will be applying for further funding to work with children to co-create an immersive experience that encompasses stop motion, automata and projection mapping, hopefully teaming up with Spectrum WASP again who have been a joy to work with over the last year.

I will also be teaming up with Rebecca Smith in 2025 to create a mini film using her awesome projector bike and projected animations created by children during my workshops.

Sojo in LeftLion Magazine

I do love LeftLion Magazine so very much! Each issue is bursting with everything that needs shouting about in Nottingham.  They champion awesomeness and help artists like me reach new eyes and ears.  I was so very chuffed to be invited in to LL HQ, along with some of Nottingham’s finest illustrators to discuss a new, mammoth collaborative project!  Let me tell about it…

The Goose is Loose

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See the whole cartoon

For each issue of LL magazine a new version of ‘The Goose is Loose’ would be taken on by a different illustrator (or illustrator/writer team).

Our brief was this…

You know that goose on the goose fair round about? Well he’s gone missing. Now make a cartoon about it. Make sure the first frame is two people in a pub discussing the fact that he’s missing.

My Sojo version was mostly made on my iPhone 6, with a cracked screen, using an app called Adobe Sketch. It hit the streets of Nottingham in the September issue, which of course is the big run up to Goose Fair.

And now that the Goose is actually back, I thought it was the perfect time to share a little Sojo post all about it.

I hope you all enjoy it.

Kids Tell the Best Stories!

kids tell the best stories flyer.jpgI’m on a new mission.  I’m collecting stories.  Spontaneous stories told by children.

I am animating a few of them too!  Plus, once the animated series is out I will publish a beautiful book through Sojo Publishing Mouse, so you guys can read the stories every night!

Here is story number 1, written by a 3 year old called Morris.

“The Baby, the Sound and the Bird”

Hop Island @ The Curve: A crafty experience for the whole family.

hop island The Spark Arts have invited me along (wearing my ‘visual artist’ hat, rather than ‘animator’) to contribute to a Family Day at The Curve on Saturday 23rd May 10am-6pm.  There will be lots of wonderful workshops happening throughout the building so pop it in your diary! For those of you that know The Curve, you’ll be aware of what a gorgeous, BIG space it is and I will be taking over a lovely chunk of the mezzanine to fill with some seriously crafty, Sojo fun for the whole family to happen upon and enjoy. Let me tell you more… HOP ISLAND! Mr Dedalus and his son Icarus are trapped on an island.  Can you help to make the island a more exciting place? Families are invited to get seriously crafty and add something tricky onto the model Island for Mr. Dedalus and his son to encounter. You can create ANYTHING!  Perhaps a grumpy bear in a cave or a rickety bridge, a secret maze or a talking tree. What will you add to Hop Island? Take a snap of your crafty addition and it can be added to our online #HopIsland gallery for all to enjoy.  If you have any advice or special tips for Mr Dedalus and his son, to help them pass your obstacle, you can share it on our ‘Tips Board’ for all to see. Pop along at anytime throughout the day to join the fun. Suitable for all ages so bring the whole family and loads of imagination 🙂 This activity is loosely linked to ‘Hop’, a poetic physical dance theatre production for children aged 4+ and their families.  Performances of ‘Hop’ are on Sat 30 May and can be booked by clicking right here.

Lakeside Arts at Cantrell Primary School

DCIM100MEDIA Last week I was invited to run a Sojo Animation workshop alongside the Lakeside Arts learning team at Cantrell Primary School in Bulwell.

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The kids in year five have been thinking about ‘persuasive arguments’ and have been using the book ‘The Great Kapok Tree’ to explore their ideas.  What a cracking idea! Hats off to the teacher that thought of this. In the book the animals try to persuade a man not to cut down their tree. thegreatkapoktree Rachel from the Lakeside Arts learning team transformed the class room into a rain-forest the evening prior to the workshops, ready for the children to discover in the morning. When I arrived at the school even the reception staff were full of smiles and excitement about how fabulous the room looked. I was in a less rainforesty (made up word alert!) room, but armed with a projector.  The children animated their rain forest animals in ONLY 2 FRAMES (that’s extra tricky) and then handed over their freshly snapped jpeg files to me, to take away and compile into one, quite frankly, BRILLIANT animation. Well guys…I promised you that your characters would come alive in seven days so here you are. 🙂

You should all feel extremely proud of yourselves.  I was blown away by your creativity!   DCIM100MEDIA DCIM100MEDIA

20/20 Eastmidlands Filmmakers Showcase: featuring 3 Sojo ‘Thunk of the Day’ Animations.

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I am over the moon that my 3 little ‘Thunk of the Day’ animations have been selected for this! Here’s Thunk no.1, incase you know not what I speak of.

The concept is brilliantly simple… 20 short films from 20 filmmakers based in the East Midlands.  Thank you Beeston Film for another excuse to celebrate the huge pool of creative talent we are surrounded by.

21st March at 19:25

24 middle street, NG9 1FX Beeston, Nottingham, United Kingdom

The beautiful simplicity of a flip book.

Not long ago I was invited along to Lakeside Arts to get involved with some research into learning how to better design and make sensory theatre experiences for young audiences.

The research was conducted by University of Nottingham PhD student, Roma Patel. You can follow her work here.

Anyhow, this is all by the by, the point of this blog post is this…

On Friday I walked into university and my tutor, Sean Myatt, handed me a fabric covered, cube shaped box with a lovely card from Roma, thanking me for my help with the research.

And this lovely cube was packed full of the most gorgeous flip books. I couldn’t believe it! I hadn’t expected a pressie at all, but as far as gifts go, this was pretty perfect for a Sophie.

There is something very special about seeing the raw line art, those very simplified early thoughts of the designers and animators, and being able to hold those still sketches in your hands and with a nifty move of your thumb suddenly make those sketches come alive.

It’s fascinating!  My kids agree.  I think it’s time we make a flip book of our own.

 

Walt Disney’s Nine Old Men is a beautiful tribute to Walt Disney’s original animators and their matchless skill. Though the animators were mostly in their 30s and 40s, Disney jokingly called them his “Nine Old Men” in reference to a 1937 book of the same name. These animators are acknowledged as Disney Legends and unparalleled contributors to the history animation. Now their work is being celebrated in a collectible box set comprised of nine flip books, each featuring a beloved classic Disney scene.

So thanks Roma, you are very lovely.

‘Finish me, colour me!’ T-shirts: Are they a good idea?

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Everybody loves a good scribble on their clothes, right?

…Just me?

Well it was my birthday last week (Valentine’s Day actually, incase you want to pop it into your diaries for next year) and we had planned a great big family walk and play in Rushcliffe Country Park

Bro and M :) followed by a pub lunch.

Now here’s something every sneaky mama knows…if you’re taking the kiddos to a restaurant, bring fun stuff to do at the table. Standard.

I thought this would be a fabulous opportunity to test drive a new Sojo product idea I’ve been toying with…

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…”The No-headed (but potentially 3 Headed)Monster- Finish me, Colour me, T-Shirt” and a bundle of lovely fabric pens.

Ok, the name needs a bit of work.

Anyhoo, everybody LOVED them (apart from my little girl, who was “…FAR too hungry to draw monster heads, are you crazy mummy?!”)

Here are some sneaky pics I took of the lunchtime madness 🙂

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The 4 year old’s approach: First things first, let’s swishle (new word) some colour all up on this Tee.

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6 year old’s know their stuff when it comes to designing a monster.  Easy peasy!

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My 9 year Old hard at work.

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The 32 year old’s approach: Serious. Very serious.

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Tadaaaah!

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Tadaaaah!

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Tadaaaah!

So tell me, what do you reckon…Should I go for it and develop these bad boys into a  crafty product?

Is it the type of thing you might consider buying?

What age range would most enjoy it?

Tell me, tell me 🙂

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‘Boo’s Nativity’ is to be screened @The Beeston Film Festival.

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What a wonderful start to the year.  ‘Boo’s Nativity’ has been selected to be screened at The Beeston Film Festival. Look at the lovely laurels! Click the link to find out more!

I am a lot a bit excited about this!

Holly’s Glowing Snowman

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As ‘The Glowing Snowman Workshop’ fast approaches I thought you might like a sneaky peek at one of the little snow-fellas. This one is called Tom. He is six, lives in the woods and is apparently best friends with a bear. He is definitely not a baby duck and he doesn’t fancy wearing a hat.

I wonder what your snowman is going to be like 🙂

To reserve your place on the workshop click here. Alternatively you can send an email to hello@sojo.pro

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