Wednesday, October 31, 2012

an interview: the flying orchestra by clare mcfadden


The Flying Orchestra is Brisbane artist and illustrator Clare McFadden’s first picture book and, just like Clare, it is full of pure whimsy, joy and wonder. Do you know it? It won The Children’s Book Council of Australia Crichton Award and was adapted into an enchanting theatre play by internationally renowned puppetry artist, Peter Wilson (The Red Tree, How to Train your Dragon, King Kong) for the 2012 Out of the Box Festival in Brisbane. My friend Sarah took her two boys to see it and found herself shedding a tear during – it really is so beautiful.

Clare is a dear friend and I watched her work on her precious manuscript in her warehouse studio at Metro Arts. I admired the heart, soul and precise attention she poured into it over many years, never rushing the process. Since it was published in 2010 I have bought it for so many of my friends’ and family’s little ones – wrapping it with love and handing it to them with a warm glow in my heart, heartened by the delight awaiting them in its thoughtful pages. It was so special buying it for my little Bassie when he turned one last month.

In part, I started this blog to interview writers and creatives like Clare to share what happens behind the scenes as they develop their dream projects. I asked Clare some questions and this is what she replied. As you'll find, she has a beautiful way with words


INTERVIEW: 

Frances: What inspired the story of The Flying Orchestra?
Clare: The Flying Orchestra was inspired by a few thing things. Firstly, I wanted to create an entry point into orchestral music for small children. Unfortunately, I think there's often elitism attached to orchestral music, which is ridiculous. Music is for everyone. Secondly, I wanted to honour the deep and complex emotional responses that children have to their world. I think that a child understands their world through aesthetics and through perception - so they have this very sophisticated understanding of art and feeling – and yet, unfortunately, this is not always celebrated.

F: What message do you hope readers find in its pages?
C: I hesitate to answer this only because I think that the book has taken on a life of its own and means different things for different people, which I am thrilled about. The Flying Orchestra symbolises a myriad of things (from being a “soundtrack to your life” to something transcendent or multiple things at once) and I realise in my work with children that, even some very young children, can understand and articulate this, which I find wonderful. Most simply, I hope readers get the message that there are ordinary and extraordinary things that happen to all of us but together, these things form a symphony - and that symphony is always beautiful.

F: How did you learn to draw?
C: I learnt to draw by practicing! I never had lessons and I didn't go to art school. I was drawing from the time I was 18 months old so I still grip my pen like it is a crayon. I sometimes overhear mums say things like “you can draw and paint at kindy” – but it's not enough. I'm putting it out there to the mums reading this blog – give your child paints and pens and paper at the kitchen table. It is simple really. I think I developed some of my techniques for painting while I was at Metro Arts. I was lucky to live next to some great painters who imparted their knowledge and tricks of the trade to me. I still remember Madeleine Kelly teaching me to paint light with Matisse Magenta, yellow and white.  Thank you Madeleine!

F: What do you love about illustrating?
C: I love the challenge of conveying enough of the particular and the detail so that an illustration is grounded and reads as “real”, but still in a way that can be universally accessible and understood. Also, how to capture the essence of something rather than just accurately record - to be evocative in one's work. Vincent Van Gogh expresses this so beautifully in saying (with regards to trying to paint in a way that is not so much anatomically correct but more how something “feels”): "My great longing is to make those very incorrectness’s, those deviations, remodeling, changes in reality, so they become, yes, lies if you like - yet truer than the literal truth." It's really hard! And then having to make each of these pieces artworks in their own right, yet part of a larger body of work. It's a huge job! I tried some of the illustrations for The Flying Orchestra four or five times before I was happy with them. (You can read more about this process on Clare’s blog here)

F: What was most challenging and most rewarding about the process of creating your first children's book?
C: It was really challenging to keep going with no knowledge of how long it was going to take and whether the final product would be any good! It took me, literally, years and I was always going into the studio on weekends, and sometimes (and this may surprise you) I really hated working on it!! Sometimes I loved working on it of course – those moments when you lose yourself in your work, but that process! You just have to have faith that this is a story worth telling and keep going! I can't tell you how rewarding it is to hear children's (and adult’s) responses to the book. To think of it going out into the world and having a life of its own, of being meaningful to children - that would bring a tear to a glass eye! After the stage show adaptation at QPAC earlier this year, I heard that a little boy said to his father on the way home, “That was the best day of my life”. It doesn't get much better than that.

F: How did you secure a book deal with your publisher, the University of Queensland Press (UQP)?
C: Well, I was lucky because I submitted it and they accepted it. I know it is usually not so simple so I am very grateful to UQP for recognising something in it as the first people I presented it to.

F: Can you please share the moment when you held a published copy in your hot little hands for the first time?
C: Well, it was great of course, but you know, probably even greater was seeing it performed as the stage show this year. In many ways, because of all the sign-offs in the publishing process, the printed book doesn't really come as a surprise ... you've seen the proofs etc. But, sitting in the Lyric Theatre, and seeing the brilliant job Peter Wilson and his team at QPAC had made of bringing the book to life ... that was just so wonderful. Like the little boy, it was one of the best days of my life.

F: What's next for Clare and The Flying Orchestra?
C: Well, the second book is coming along at the speed of a relaxed snail. I'm currently based in the US doing my Masters in Arts in Education, which is sensational but all consuming. So there hasn't been a lot of time to sit at the kitchen table with the paints. Perhaps over the Christmas holidays, when it's snowing outside and I'm missing Stradbroke Island. That might be a good time to get cracking on it.


Thank you dear Clare! 

The Flying Orchestra is available at all good bookstores. I get my copies from independent bookstore Black Cat Books in Paddington, Brisbane - they always seem to have plenty of copies on the shelves. 

Images by Yan Chen

An outdoor reading of The Flying Orchestra at South Bank for Father's Day 2010

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

to health and deadlines

A little tear slides down his cheek ... We're both a little worse for wear today. Bassie is teething and I often go down hill after I've put a run of stories to bed. That's when I retreat to my parents' house because mum always makes everything better. Right now she's making me sweet potato and quinoa salad for lunch while the boy sleeps. I love her. 

I'm gluten intolerant and not so great with dairy either, which you think would motivate me to avoid the stuff. I eat mostly whole foods and fresh produce and I love to cook but when story deadlines are looming I tend to let my guard down and eat whatever is easiest, which is often of the bread variety. After I eat bits of gluten for a few days in a row, the nausea sets in, the guilt follows soon after and then I really feel terrible! 

When the deadline fog has lifted, I immediately attempt to repair the damage by visiting these sites for gluten-free eating and living inspiration: Cannelle et Vanille, Sarah Wilson, and Jude Blereau. The Gwinganna Health Retreat recipe book, "Gwinganna ... from garden to gourmet" is also full of delicious recipes for gluten- and dairy-free whole food meals. 

But this self-sabotage has to stop. My new plan of action when I see story deadlines on the horizon is to stock the pantry and prepare protein-filled salads for the fridge. I must start applying the same care and attention to preparing meals for myself as I do for Bassie. I need to apply "aeroplane rules", as my husband likes to call it: it's important to fit your own oxygen mask before assisting others.

Every day is a new day, I like to tell myself. I wonder when I will learn? 

(P.S. Tips for finding dietary willpower are most welcome.)

Monday, October 29, 2012

byw: a mood board

I offer this mood board as part of our Blogging Your Way course - it's a taste of what this blog hopes to share. You'll see I'm drawn to soft hues of blue and green and all things natural. I am fascinated by books and magazines with soul, fresh produce and beautiful interiors. I'm surrounded by baby toys and soft muslin wraps and am often within arm's length of my mac. The "S" (crafted by my thoughtful friend, Jacqui) is for my boy, Sebastian, or Bassie for short.

Monday, October 22, 2012

the nursery - baby steps in photography


It's been a long time since I asked my brain to learn something completely new. Like out-of-the-box new. My first DSLR - a Canon 60D - arrived just days before I attended Tim Coulson's The Nursery photography for beginners workshop in Noosa last Saturday. I had story deadlines to tackle last week so my camera remained in its box - alone in the dark - until the night before the workshop. Hopeless!
 
The images above are two of the first DSLR photos I've ever taken. I know there are so many things wrong with them (for starters, the first photo is blurry and over-exposed!) but I love them just the same. The first is of the gorgeous Steph and the second is of my dear friend Sarah. I love her smile in this shot - she was laughing at just how amateurish we looked. I think she looks like a pro already.

Tim is a natural teacher and his photography style is fresh, honest and beautiful. He confirmed what I suspected - there is no magic trick to mastering the camera. It simply takes buckets of practice and patience. And if you seek an emotional connection with your subject, well that's where you'll find true beauty. It'll take baby steps. Here we go. Thank you Tim, Kesh and sweet little Roo.

Jodi from Che and Fidel writes a beautiful wrap-up of The Nursery here

Saturday, October 13, 2012

on starting a blog

I’ve just begun the Blogging Your Way Boot Camp run by Holly Becker of decor8 and I have to admit, my head is in a spin. I’m desperately trying to digest the expert advice Holly is sharing with us, particularly the issue of being authentic and of finding your voice. This is proving trickier than I expected.

where do you go?

Freelance writing is mostly a solitary business, which is just fine by me. On a productive day, I love spending time alone with my laptop, playing with words to build stories as if they were Lego pieces to make castles. But I also love talking to other writers, which I rarely get to do. So in this space I'd like to share ideas from writers, editors, bloggers, illustrators, photographers, creative types and bookworms about writing and creativity: how they get inspired to write, how they hone their craft, fuel their creativity, triumph over pesky self-doubt demons and switch off from writing when it’s seriously time for shut eye. 

For starters, here are some of the sites I've been visiting lately for inspiration to write. I'd love to hear where you go for creative fodder.
- Dumbo Feather, an Australian mag that shares “conversations with extraordinary people”. Yesterday I re-read the story on Dumbo Feather founder and former editor Kate Bezar in Issue 27 (2011) where she spoke of the inner turmoil she experienced while juggling the dual roles of magazine editor and her new gig as a mum. 
- Sarah Wilson’s blog. Sarah is a journalist, blogger and presenter and was former editor of Cosmopolitan magazine. She is writing a book based on her health journey, which she charts on her blog. She is generous and frank with her advice on how to grow a writing career. This post in particular helped encourage me to start a blog. 

- TED Talks are “ideas worth spreading”. I think Elizabeth Gilbert’s talk on Your Elusive Genius is eloquently put.
- Nobel Prize for Literature website. Dorky, I know, but once in a while I'll visit the Nobel website to read winners' Nobel lectures, which are beautiful pieces of writing that often explain what inspired these great minds to write in the first place. Try Pablo Neruda’s lecture from 1971. 


There are so many more to share. I think I'll make this a regular post.