Showing posts with label SCBWI Conferences and Contests. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SCBWI Conferences and Contests. Show all posts

Saturday, May 18, 2013

NESCBWI Spring 2013 Conference Poster Contest Winners



I am constantly astounded at the amazing talent that the folks associated with the Children's Book Illustration program have and the incredible work they produce. Faculty as well as current and former students won prizes in this year's poster contest at the spring NESCBWI poster contest, illustrating a challenging poem by Jane Yolen.

The poem reads:
Infirm Pachyderm by Jane Yolen
Elephant.
Elephaint.
Ele-phinished.
Eleph-ain't. 

RISD contest winners included:


R Michelson Gallery Emerging Artist Awards


Runner Up 



Winner






1st place Published
 Marlo Garnsworthy 



(Sorry, no photo)



3rd Place Unpublished 
Mary Davison



1st place Unpublished 
Dave Bird
(see above)

Many other talented RISD CBI students and graduates submitted posters. I don't have images of all of them, but it was an impressive body of work.




Thursday, February 7, 2013

Tom and Becky

posted by Marcela Staudenmaier

I  had so much fun working for the 2013 Tomie de Paola Contest!

My illustration was inspired by an excerpt from the Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain (Chaprter VI). And, I decided to use my three-dimensional cut-paper technique. This piece measures 40" x 30" x 2" and it was done entirely with Canson MiTentes paper.


Tom and Becky by Marcela Staudenmaier
(click on the image to see more of my cut-paper work)
Double-page spread presented for the Tomie de Paola's Contest
(click on the image to see it larger)

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

RISD CE students enter Tomie dePaola contest

Well-know children's book illustrator Tomie dePaola has an annual children's illustration contest through SCBWI, with the winner chosen by Tomie himself. This year the prompt was to choose a passage, line or description from one of the following classics: "Little Women," "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer", or "The Yearling." The illustration had to be in black and white, including half-tones. For more information about the contest itself, go to the contest guidelines at SCBWI.  

A number of our students did fantastic illustrations and entered them into the contest. Although they were not among the winners, in my book they're winners for taking on an assignment and doing terrific new work! Those that I saw on the website were:

Jessica Halley
Linda Norman-Lyman
Brook Gideon
Milanka Reardon
Kristina Hickman
Cindy Cornwall
Marcela Staudenmaier
Jeanette Bradley

To see the unofficial Gallery of entries go to http://scbwicontest.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Three days after the conference and I am still "decompressing" after what for me was the best of the three NESCBWI conferences I have attended. That is saying a lot since last year I won second place "People's Choice" in the poster conference, and this year I didn't win anything. Last year I had taken to heart Jane Yolen's keynote about getting and understanding rejection letters in which she mentioned that even though she has over 300 books published she still gets rejection letters. To hear her talk about that was important to me since I arrived home to find my first rejection letter. This year Jane gave the ending keynote, most of which I missed for reasons I will talk about later.

At the Carle "Mix and Mingle" which kicked off the conference, Cindy, Brook, Marcella and I were standing talking to each other and up walks Jane Yolen, who started talking to us. I just realized that we talked for about five minutes and I didn't think to take the camera out of my purse and get a photo of all of us with her. She was very generous with her advise, wisdom and encouragement. It was magic!

Since I was a volunteer, I missed the first part of Sara Zarr keynote as I was wrapping up my volunteer duties for that morning. As Jeanette, I think, already posted she read from Frog and Toad and then relate it to our journey as Children's Book Writers and Illustrators. As in Frog and Toad in the Garden, we all want our careers as writers and illustrators to grow RIGHT NOW and not give the stories or our abilities time to develop, nurture and grow. We are impatient. There were many other lessons from her keynote that makes me want to keep a copy of Frog and Toad next to my work area.

What made this year better for me personally is that things started falling into place, barriers falling. I was very happy with my crit on the YA novel that I am writing, in which many positive things were said, but just as many, if not more suggestions for improvement were given. One needs to hear what one is doing wrong, or not quite right to make the changes needed for success. I came into the critique with that mindset. The man who was my critiquer said that I had done some of the very hardest things very successfully and that I needed to tap into the "bad" place and use that emotion to create more dialog. He also gave me a typed page of strengths and areas to improve. After the crit I ran into Tina, one of my RISD friends, who knows me well enough to see that there was something behind my eyes that wasn't quite right and asked me if I was OK. I had no idea what she was talking about and surprising myself, I burst into tears. The crit was so perfect, made me so happy and yet there I was crying.  Finally I realized that I was already tapping into the "bad" place thinking about the process that lay ahead. I had the emotions ready for the work that lay ahead of me.

I attended workshops both for writers and illustrators that were perfect for for the work ahead of me. One was for creating authentic, believable dialog. One was writing for picture books and one was on illustrating picture books. The person who gave the workshop on illustrating picture books was very generous with her time. She started the workshop an hour early, for those who wanted to come early, missing the morning panel discussion. She worked through lunch, through the autograph signing hour, and finally through the second session of the day ending just after the start of Jane Yolen's ending keynote. I learned so much from listening to her critiques of everyone's portfolios and the book dummies that they brought to the workshop. She told everyone at the start that she was not their mother so she was going to be brutally honest with her critiques. She said that if she wasn't that she would be doing us a disservice and wasting our time and money. Her critique of my portfolio told me exactly what I needed to change. She told me that I should send my postcards out to educational publications and that my digital work is perfect for that right now. She loved how I could create emotions and interaction between characters. She told me that even if I continue to work digitally, that I need to get back to hand work, sketching, painting and sculpting. Her favorite pieces in my portfolio were the clay sculptures. She made some suggestions as to how to get my digital work up to the next level to be ready for "trade publications". All in all a great session. Throughout the day, since my portfolio was the second one she looked at, whenever she said something that might be upsetting to the person getting the critique, she would say, "Just ask Lin", or "remember what I said to Lin about her portfolio." It was tough, but what I needed to hear.

Spending time with all of my RISD friends that attended is part of the magic of the conference as is meeting new people and networking. We were all excited for Marcella and Milanka for their success at the conference! What makes the group so special is that everyone is genuinely excited for the success of anyone from the group, or the people that they have met. Jealousy does not the rule in this group! As I heard in some of my workshops in other groups it does. We are blessed!

Finally, here is my "post-apocalyptic" New World poster I made for the poster contest. I imagined who would be the next to rule the world after people had gone the way of the dinosaurs.

Lin

Monday, April 23, 2012

2012 New England SCBWI - Poster Showcase Contest

 
Third Place Unpublished Category by Marcela Staudenmaier
 
Talking about awesome surprises! My entry to the Poster Contest Showcase was awarded the Third Place in the Unpublished Category!

Congratulations to my friend Milanka Reardon who won the First Place with her beautiful poster; to A.P. Sabourin who won the Second Place; and to all the participants whose work was seen by dozens of writers, illustrators, authors, editors, art directors and SCBWI friends at the 2012 New England Conference this year! 

I am so grateful to my all my Instructors and classmates at RISD CE! Since I signed up for classes back in 2010, I feel that I belong to a big loving and supporting family of talented, hard working and generous people.

2012 NESCBWI Poster Contest

 
2012 NESCBWI Poster Contest - 1st Place unpublished by Milanka Reardon




Milanka and Marcela (3rd place poster contest winner and winner of the Ann Barrows scholarship)!


I was so honored and surprised to have my poster win in the 2012 NESCBWI poster contest! And especially happy for my friend Marcela! Last year when I attended my first New England conference I realized something really amazing. I am part of a group of RISD students, teachers and alumni who are probably the most supportive artist group around. Last year as I looked around at the large number of people attending the conference and then at our RISD group which numbered at least 8 or 9 people, I was amazed at how many times someone in our group got up to win a prize - Jeanette for 1st place poster contest, Lin for 2nd in People's choice and Caroline for 3rd place unpublished and Kristina for 3rd place published! Wow, how lucky was I to be a part of this group! Even though I didn't win, I was among a group of the most talented and hard working people I know. And if I keep learning with them and from them, someday my turn will come!

I learned so much at this conference but even more from our RISD class critiques and group critiques. It is essential to step back and look at your artwork with a different set of eyes. I don't know how many times I've listened to advice from my classmates or teachers and thought wow, that's great - how did I not see that. But all of this wonderful advice is always given in such a positive way that everyone benefits and learns. Thank you to all of the RISD teachers for not only giving us great critiques but for teaching us how to give a critique! And a complement - it goes such a long way when someone says something nice about our artwork. It may be the incentive needed not to give up on our art altogether. That is why an award or a kind word from our peer group means so much to all of us. It's what we need not to give up on the hope of being published someday soon!

My poster this year has so much meaning to me because it was the result of me finally returning to Yugoslavia (where I was born and which no longer exists) after more than 40 years. I was finally reunited with my Croatian cousins who survived the wars over there. On our quest to find where I was born (now the country of Montenegro) we drove through Bosnia and to this beautiful bridge in Mostar, Bosnia. I was amazed to learn that this bridge has been rebuilt since the war in the 1990's. It was blown up to keep the Muslims on one side and the Christians on the other. And while some buildings next to it are pristine, others still have hundreds of bullet holes in them and trees are growing through the middle of the houses. This image was haunting me until I put pencil to paper and in my story the dragons live on one side and people on the other. But really, the ordinary little ones just want to be friends.

MilankaReardon.com




The SCBWI New England Ann Barrow Scholarship

I am honored to have been chosen as the Recipient of the Ann Barrow Scholarship at the 2012 New England SCBWI Conference!

The Ann Barrow Scholarship is awarded to an illustrator based on the quality of a submitted portfolio of ten images. The winner receives one day's free tuition to the SCBWI New England event of their choice during the next calendar year.

Ann Barrow, an important member of SCBWI New England, illustrated over 20 children's books including Big Blue, published by Charlesbridge in 2004, Butterflies in My Garden, published by Mondo in 2003 and Growing up Abenaki, written by Joseph Bruchec, published by Rigby in 2003. Her career began in 1977 and included book jackets, children's magazines, greeting cards, giftware and portraiture. Ann passed away in 2006. In her memory, the SCBWI New England Memory Fund created this scholarship.

http://marcelastaudenmaier.com/
http://marcelaillustration.blogspot.com/

NESCBWI Poster Contest

A Whole New World.

That was the title of the 2012 NESCBWI conference in Springfield, MA. Two students from the RISD-CE Children's Book program placed in the poster contest, but many of our students produced and entered  fabulous art. I hope more of you will post your entries.
Congratulations to everyone.

Here is a piece by Cindy Cornwall, who graduated from the program last year:
© Cindy Cornwall, A Whole New World
To see the poster by Caroline Gray, go to her blog: http://carolinegrayillustration.blogspot.com

Now Seeds, Start Growing!

"What's wrong with me? Why are all the other seedlings bigger than me? Am I ever going to grow that big? What if everyone else grows but me?"

Conferences are strange moments outside of everyday space and time. In artificially lit, air-conditioned hotel ballrooms you sit and take in more information than you can possibly absorb. You swing wildly between bored, exhilarated, overwhelmed, inspired, eager to get to work, and intimidated by those around you.

I just returned from my third New England Society of Children's Books Writers and Illustrators (NESCBWI) conference. I felt (and still feel) all of the above, and more.  Last year I had great success with my poster contest entry. This year I didn't manage to get my poster done on time, and my portfolio looked like it had been slapped together at midnight (which it had.) I've had a year of getting more and more frustrated with the work I am producing - when I manage to produce anything. I have many incomplete projects on my desk and desktop.

So I was in exactly the right place-outside-of-time to hear Sara Zarr's talk on living the creative life, interspersed with readings from Frog and Toad Together by Arnold Lobel. She read "The Garden", a story in which Toad plants seeds and then yells "Now seeds, start growing!" at them. I had a flash of insight into my creative troubles.

Of course nothing I make will be as good as last year's poster, as long as what I am trying to make is "something as good as that poster." How dull is that as a goal? My work needs to change and grow organically and trying to force it to live up to something else is as damaging creatively as comparing my rate of progress to that of classmates, colleagues, or other conference-goers.

I'm not the same person I was when I made that poster - I've had all sorts of life experiences since then, including having a baby. I would never yell "Grow faster!" at my baby, so why am I doing it to myself?

My big take-home message from this year's conference is not how to produce an ebook or the best way to approach a book packager (which I learned.) It is to take a step back, trust that the seeds are there, and stop trying so hard. Have fun. Play with paint. And pencils, and old newspapers, and sticks. And whatever else inspires me at the moment. And just don't worry about how professional my portfolio looks or how marketable something is. 

Play. The seeds will grow. When? Soon, Toad, soon. 

Monday, April 16, 2012

Deep Breath...

Call it a leap of faith.  A daring do.  Being brave.  Just like in high school when you had that phys ed class that made you drop backwards into the (hopefully) waiting arms of friends - that is what this is like for me.
I wanted to post my NESCBWI poster (post my poster?) to my risd friends who may tell me gently that I've lost my mind.  For this illustration I walked on the wild side; not the predictable, marketing safe, typical Tina.  I went with my gut. Let me know what you think.
And thank you for catching me.  ;^)

© Kristina Hickman

     

Monday, March 26, 2012

CBK folks attend Whispering Pines retreat

I just came home from a wonderful and inspiring writer's retreat, Whispering Pines at the University of Rhode Island's Alton Jones campus. (sponsored by SCBWI, Society of Children's Book Writer's and Illustrators.)

I'm happy to say that several others from the RISD CE Children's Book certificate program were in attendance.

CBK soon-to-graduate student Brook Gideon, advisor Cheryl Kirk Noll, writing instructor Marlo Garnsworthy, and new student, Sue Fraser-Perotta.
 Among the writing mentors was award-winning author-illustrator Suzanne Bloom. Among the titles that she has written and illustrated are a series about Bear, which begins with "A Splendid Friend, Indeed" and is done in "brilliant pastels." (Kirkus Reviews)

Here, Brook Gideon discusses Suzanne's pastel technique as she works on a piece during the conference. 

 
Brook and Suzanne Bloom
To read more about this year's Whispering Pines, check out my my blog post, with many more pictures, information about editors, agents, and illustrators who spoke and attended the retreat.

Friday, February 17, 2012

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Eric Carle Museum/SCBWI offering workshop about Marketing

I thought this might be of interest to some of you:












Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators Presents
Marketing Consultants:  What They Can Do for You
March 10, 2012
10:00 am - 3:30 pm

Many children’s book creators are supplementing their publisher’s book promotion efforts with the advice and tactics of marketing consultants. Hear authors and illustrators discuss their relationship and work with their marketing partners, Deborah Sloan and Kirsten Cappy then ask questions of your own.
Taking place at the Eric Carle Museum in Amherst, MA.

Click here to go to the Eric Carle museum site.

Full day – registration required. Visit nescbwi.org beginning January 1.

Afternoon Session only – Free with Museum Admission (Limited Seating)


Tuesday, January 17, 2012

NESCBWI Spring Conference: 2012 Poster Contest

If you are planning to attend the 2012 NESCBWI Conference, may be you are ready to participate in the 2012 Poster Contest!

The challenge: A Whole New World

How do you go about building an entire world in just one image? How do you use illustration to "keep it real"? Explore a new world in your poster.

The contest is open to all illustrators, and prizes will be awarded in the published, unpublished, and people's choice categories.

For more information and details visit the conference hub page at http://regonline.com/nescbwi12

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Tomie dePaola Award

Great to see your post, Lin.

A number of students entered the Tomie dePaola contest. There is an unofficial Gallery of entries at scbwicontest.blogspot.com

Jeanette Bradley is up there. I hope others will post there and on this blog. Some are posting on Facebook, too. If you post here, you can click Share (top menu line) and send it to Facebook, Twitter or Google Reader.

To post to the unofficial gallery, go to http://scbwicontest.blogspot.com/p/faq.html
and follow the instructions under "How can I join the blog?"

Linda Norman-Lyman's 2012 Tomie dePaola Contest Entry

Here is my entry in SCBWI's Tomie dePaola contest. Winner will be announced on January 9, 2012. The text selected by Tomie this year is from the Chicken Licken story. I've included the text below so people can see the part of the text that was illustrated.

So they went along and went along until they met Turkey Lurkey
“Good morning, Goosey Loosey, Ducky Daddles, Cocky Locky, Henny Penny,
and Chicken Licken,” said Turkey Lurkey, “where are you going?”
“Oh, Turkey Lurkey, the sky is falling and we are going to tell the King!”
“How do you know the sky is falling?” asked Turkey Lurkey.
“Ducky Daddles told me,” said Goosey Loosey.
“Cocky Locky told me,” said Ducky Daddles.
“Henny Penny told me,” said Cocky Locky.
“Chicken Licken told me,” said Henny Penny
“I saw it with my own eyes, I heard it with my own ears,
and a piece of it fell on my tail!” said Chicken Licken.
“Then I will go with you,” said Turkey Lurkey, “and we will tell the King!”

Sunday, May 15, 2011

NESCBWI Conference 2011

Yesterday was a great day for RISD-CE Children's Book Illustrators!  Collectively, we won more than half of the poster contest awards - evidence of how wonderful our professors are and what a talented group of students are in the program!
This year's poster contest theme was "Reimaging a Classic" - we were asked to redesign the cover of a book we felt was a milestone in children's literature.
  • Jeanette Bradley won first place non published, third place people's choice and best of show. As part of the award, her poster will be exhibited at the Michelson Galleries in Northampton, MA in November.
  • Kristina Hickman won third place published. (That's right - Kristina is now in the published category, after the publication of Snow Secrets)
     
  • Caroline Gray won third place in the unpublished category for her 3-D Peter Rabbit cover.
.
  • Lin Norman-Lyman won second place people's choce for a 3-D depiction of Pippi Longstocking. 

  •  Cindy Cornwall exhibited a digital redesign of The Secret Garden.
  • Milanka Reardon exhibited an urban retelling of Little Red Riding Hood.
Several other RISD CBI folks attended the conference. Some of us had portfolio reviews or meetings with editors. I hope many will post their experiences at the conference.

Monday, January 31, 2011

SCBWI Conference Reflections

After an amazing weekend of the typical conference roller coaster of highs and lows, inspiration, motivation and self-doubt, here are some of the things that I've learned:

1. That all authors and artists, no matter how successful they are, no matter how many excellent reviews they have received, all are still filled with self-doubt. For me this is an important thing to remember.
2. Live for the work. It helps to put things in perspective if you realize that the work is what is important and take yourself out of the equation.  Linda Sue Park said don't believe in yourself, believe in the work. She uses tricks to accomplish this whether it is for a school visit, or when she sits down to write. Find some sort of routine that helps you get past yourself and into the work.
3. Lois Lowery said to look for stories that have strong emotional content. give voice to happiness, jealousy, grief, etc. Illustrators can also give voice emotions. She told us the inspiration for 9 of her stories. Here are a few:
A Summer to Die - Inspired by the passing of her sister. "Give sorrow words"
Anastasia Krupnick - Inspired by a photo of Amy Carter
Number the Stars - A story told to her by a friend about her life in Denmark during WWII
The Giver - Based upon her father's inability to remember the death of her sister because of his Alzheimer's.
Gooney Bird Green - Based upon her own story of moving around due to her father's military postings and how she wished she could have coped with being the new kid in class.
Silent Boy - Inspired by a photo taken by her aunt that she was always trying to understand. 
4. Jane Yolen said that picture book authors need to craft each sentence with lyricism, but not necessarily rhyme. Each sentence must be crafted with words that explain as much as possible in as few words as possible, in what she called compression. The books need to have child centeredness, finding the emotional key that resonates with children.  The "three F's - family, friendship, frustration".  You need to have a great hook at the beginning.  If you need to re-write the first few sentences 50 to 100 times, it is worth it to get the wording just right. One should pick their words as carefully as a poet. Love big words as well as little words as long as they are the right words. Picture books should have motion, emotion and resolution. The reader should find the book satisfying every time. "Culture starts in the cradle. Write as if it is important because it IS an important cultural moment in the life of a child."
5. Mark Teague  said that Illustrations need to be worthy of the text and extend the story to new depths. It is good to copy other illustrators that you admire to learn the craft, but the most important thing is to find your won voice.  We have already heard that many times, but it always bears remembering. The job of the illustrator is to take a good book and make it a great book. Find the miracle of page turns.
6. Patricia Lee Gauch said to let go to the story,  to go to where stuff is stored in your gut, to mine the stored fear. To grab ideas as they fly by. Find the mischief because attitude leads to voice. Picture book narrative is like a wave,  Feel the swell and make sure it goes far enough. Get to the "catch in the breath - a moment out of time". This is best when it doesn't come from your head, but when it comes from your inner child. She quoted TH Lawrence who once said, "Don't squeeze an idea too hard or it runs." She said "not to squeeze pacing, character, plot climax..... too hard."
7. Don't try to fit in with what is selling at the moment, the style of illustration or the genre of text. Stay true to yourself, but be open to changes in delivery method, new technology.
8. Jules Feiffer - Sometimes it is more effective to get your point across with humor. Don't shout at the reader, get to them through the back door. Allow the reader to be involved with the story, to participate and give up their passivity. Also that he decides on what style his drawing will take by the text. His loose, dynamic style had me staring at how effective so few lines could be,
9. Marvin Terban told us about how he was cast in several of Woody Allen's movies based upon the recommendation of one of his children, and his wife's uncle is Henny Youngman.  Neither of these men were funny in person, but their work is funny. He said that word play is important in creating something funny, as is reversal of expectations or the unexpected.  And his book on humor that he kept mentioning is...."Funny You Should Ask".
10. Lenore Look said to choose topics that are not funny. Tell it in a very gray manner so they don't see the punchline coming. Create diversions, distractions. Let bad unexpected things happen to the characters, give them flaws. Keep a diary of the funny things kids say.
11. Mo Willems said that funny is a form of athletics. You really need to work out and find out what is not funny before you figure out what is funny.  this won't happen if you haven't done the work.

And last of all, I discovered that scary RL Stine is a very funny person who kept us laughing throughout his keynote speech at lunch.  I found out that he was successful at writing humor long before Goosebumps and his other successful scary books!

Read 1,000 Picture Books: My notes from SCBWI Winter 2011


I’m going to work backwards from the closing keynote speaker – Linda Sue Parks. Her advice to all aspiring authors was to read. Doctors spend 7 years in medical school, writers need to read 1,000 books.

This reminded me of my ceramics professor in college who would give people the “throw 100 bowls” assignment. After 100, your fingers just know how to do it – you don’t have to think about it any more. In the same way, writers (and illustrators) need this vast base of experience – not to draw on consciously, but to shape your concept of what works.

I think I probably have read 1,000 picture books in the last 6 years – but not all with an eye toward design, plot, character development, or style. So I’m going to try to take this challenge and write up a few notes after each new book I read. Who knows how long it will take me to reach that goal!

Sara Zarr gave an inspiring speech about living a sustainable creative life – a life in balance, in which you make time for your creative work, but also time for family, friends, day jobs, reading, and exercise. This is something I struggle with – finding time for everything – or even for just the most important things. She suggested giving up TV and facebook time to read.  I don’t watch TV, but am certainly guilty of wasting time on facebook!

Jules Feiffer, who had just celebrated his 82nd birthday, showed us his spontaneous, loose illustrations and explained that he does no preliminary sketches but will often draw an illustration four or five times until he is satisfied with the drawing and the looseness of the line. He has been working in watercolor markers because he enjoys how out-of-control they are. Another reminder to myself to stop working on an image before it gets overworked.

R.L. Stine had everyone laughing over lunch with his dry, self-depricating humor. He read us letters from readers, such as: “Dear Mr. Stine: I have read 40 of your books and they are so boring.”

The breakout sessions with editors and art directors I found the least useful part of the conference, although I did get a few ideas of where to send my book dummy (once I get done revising it.)

Last of all there was a panel discussion on LGBTQ issues in children’s literature that was really interesting. The panelists all expressed a need for illustrators to show all kind of families in images – not just mom, dad, baby. One book they pointed out was “Everywhere Babies” by Susan Myers, illustrated by Marla Frazee. The book shows babies of all colors in all sorts of situations, including one image of two women with a baby. There’s no big blinking arrow stating “This baby has TWO MOMS!!” but I gather that the book has been controversial to some conservatives for that matter-of-fact inclusion. (The book also shows babies with grandparents, single parents, etc.)

Once again, a reminder that as illustrators we have tremendous power to expand on the text, and we should strive to be as inclusive of the experiences of as many children as we possibly can.