Search results for: “shaun tan”
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Illustrator Shaun Tan Draws Conclusions on Spiegel Online
In a delightful twist on the usual interview format, Australian illustrator, author and concept artist Shaun Tan replies to a series of interview questions on Spiegel Online with pictures instead of words. The images have a little magnifier icon for viewing them larger. See my previous post on his beautiful wordless graphic story The Arrival.…
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Shaun Tan on InFrame.tv
InFrame.tv, a video podcast out of Melbourne, Australia with a focus on arts, design and culture, has a nicely done segment on multi-talented illustrator and author Shaun Tan, who I wrote about previously here and here. In it, Tan talks about the adaptation of one of his books, The Lost Thing (images at top) into…
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Shaun Tan (update)
When I first wrote about Australian illustrator and writer Shaun Tan back in March, it looked as though his site was on a server with limited bandwidth, which visits from lines and colors readers quickly overloaded. This unfortunately rendered his site inaccessible for several days, if not weeks, so many of you didn’t get to…
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Shaun Tan
Shaun Tan is an Australian artist who creates and illustrates “picture books“, which in his case usually means wonderfully bizarre and imaginative flights of fancy that look, at least at first, like somewhat dark children’s fantasy, but are often aimed at both younger and older readers. He sometimes works with a writer, as in the…
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Cartoonist interviews on David Wasting Paper
Since 2009, David Paccia has been posting short interviews with cartoonists, comics artists and cartoon illustrators of various backgrounds on his blog, David Wasting Paper. The interviews are a standard set of questions, the same given to each artist, the answers to which, of course, are varied. The questions range from interesting and useful, like…
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The Lost Thing animated short
The Lost Thing is a wonderful children’s book by Australian artist Shaun Tan, with an unusual story and a unique look. With the help of co-director Andrew Ruhemann and a small production team, Tan has been working for several years to bring the book to life as a 15 minute animated short. It was finally…
