RIP Dr Jane Goodall

Such sadness at the news of the loss of Jane Goodall. Her book of Hope gave me the courage to write “City of Lost Trees” and strengthens my resolve to make art that speaks up for the plight of anyone, like Wolfie in the story, who is forced to flee their home due to climate change.

The NewYorker quoted from the book: ‘Amid flooding and wildfires, impassivity and eco-grief, the question she was asked most often was “Do you honestly believe there is hope for our world?” She did. Hope, she argued, is not merely “passive wishful thinking” but a “crucial survival trait.” She noted, “If you don’t have hope that your action is going to make a difference, why bother to do anything?’

Sometimes it can be hard to decide how to spend your time when it often feels time is in such short supply. I always wanted to make art, and I always wanted to help wildlife. I thought I couldn’t do both. Volunteering at shelters took up so much of my time and emotional energy that there was little left to devote to art afterwards. But when I began to write and create my own puppet shows I realised puppetry was the perfect medium for me to tell the stories I wanted to tell, to spread hope and awareness and compassion for all living things.

I will forever be grateful to Dr Jane Goodall for persevering in her mission to spread hope – without it I would have struggled to see the point in writing, creating and performing stories like City of Lost Trees and to share it with the public.

Raking the meadow

This morning’s reportage illustration on the community raking of a local wildflower meadow.

There was a hint of Autumn in the air today at a local school’s wildflower meadow but the morning sunshine and hard work almost fooled a few of today’s community volunteers into believing summer hasn’t quite left us.

For the native plants that adorned this meadow, there can be no doubt about the change in season. They graced us with their beauty from March to September, until the time finally came for them to produce seeds for the following spring. Once their work was done, the work of the local residents began.

What a pleasure it was to illustrate these scenes of women, men and children working together in nature for a common cause.

Make it eye-catching

Some examples of illustration work I have done over the years to create eye-catching posters and flyers for a variety of different companies and events.

In the 19th Century, a newspaper discovered that sales increased if the articles were accompanied by pictures.  When photography wasn’t advanced enough to capture movement, artists were used instead. Can you imagine the world of advertising without pictures? Words are powerful, but imagine trying to advertise an upcoming event with nothing but 5 lines of Times New Roman text on a sheet of A4 paper. A drawing catches the eye and invites the viewer to find out more.

Laughter

A comic from Falseknees.com by Joshua Barkman

What makes you laugh? Probably several things come to mind.

For me it might be a funny dog-meme, an unexpectedly witty comment from a child, a scene in a film or book, a story told by a friend….  Sometimes they make you laugh just once, and other times, they make you laugh with every repetition. 

Without fail, the drawings by certain comic artists (such as this one by Joshua Barkman of Falseknees.com) make me laugh not once, not twice, but every single time I look at them.

Isn’t it almost like a magic sort of medicine for the soul, that something as simple as a drawing can make someone laugh over and over again?