Port of Lost Wonder

port of lost wonder

We were in a taxi on Singapore’s Sentosa Island as heavy rain was easing. We had come to visit a theme park which I was told by our driver was not actually on the island. Convincing him it was, he continued to drive us around in circles, muttering to himself, before confirming with a toll gate officer that I was definitely wrong, the park was miles away, and definitely not on the island! Lost and wondering what to do next, a glance at the island map displayed the perfect destination, Port of Lost Wonder.

On an island chock-full of destinations designed to empty your pocket quicker then you can say ‘Are we having fun yet?’, Port of Lost Wonder makes for a refreshing change. Aimed squarely at the under 12s, a modest $8 entry fee gets a child through the gate and adults join them for free. Cheery staff in striped,
pirate-inspired uniforms hand a hessian pouch containing a gold coin (used to purchase treats inside), and a Port of Lost Wonder passport to each child.

A giant pirate ship stands as the dramatic centre-piece. A clutter of slides, hoses, buckets and guns protrude from all angles, and gush, spray and dump water in a perpetual downpour of outrageous fun. Here is a theme park well-conceived, imaginative, instantly gratifying. Should the trade winds blow you to Sentosa, a wonderful time awaits at Port of Lost Wonder.

port of lost wonder
port of lost wonder

Heavily booked

kinokuniya2

If Kinokuniya Books on Orchard Road in Singapore were the sole indicator of print’s future, then the paperback book appears to be in rude health. Our casual mid week browse amongst hundreds of shoppers, had a palpable buzz of activity. A queue on the way to check out ran 30 deep, and many cradled several titles each. Stacks of books were imaginatively curated, and bookworms hovered about the freshly pressed sections.
Our visit here two months ago was met with the same scene. With a suitable e-book model yet to be delivered to tech-savvy Singaporeans, it’s ‘long live the book’ … for now.

queue at bookstore

kinokuniya3

Book Champion: Jasmine

Book Champion Jasmine

Jasmine is six-years-old, and lives in Melbourne, Australia. The Rainbow Magic series of books are her current favourite. The series is ghostwritten by a collection of authors under the pseudonym of Daisy Meadow, and they are published by Orchard Books in the UK.

Jasmine, how many Rainbow Magic books do you have?
I have 12 Rainbow Magic books.

There are 100 in total. Will you read them all?
No way!

Who is your favourite fairy?
Jasmine the Present Fairy because she is a party fairy … and I LOVE parties.

What sort of mischief do the Goblins get up to?
They steal the fairies’ party bags and they try to bring the party bags
back to Jack Frost.

What are fairies good at?
Flying and using their magic to turn things into other things.

What is your favourite part of the story?
My favourite part of the story is when Jasmine the Present Fairy lets Rachel and Kirsty come to the King and Queen’s 1000th Jubilee. They make cakes, and when they make the cakes, even one of the goblins helped!

What would you do on a play date with a Rainbow Magic fairy?
I would let her play hide and seek with me. I would like her to turn me into a fairy because I want to fly around.

How about Jack Frost, do you like him?
No, because he’s mean and spoilt.

How about The Goblins, what would you do on a playdate with them?
I would not let them play with me. I would just lock them in the shed and throw them out the window.

Would you recommend Rainbow Magic books? 
Yes, 6 to 10-year-old girls.

Which fairies do you like best?
The weather fairies like: Hayley the Rain Fairy, Crystal the Snow Fairy and Storm the Lightning Fairy because they control the weather … like I do sometimes!

Have you ever seen a real fairy?
Yes, when I’m in bed at night. She turns me into a fairy and then we go and play in the leaves.

What magic tricks can you do?
I can make a coin disappear, and make a ball disappear. I can pull my thumb off, and I can move my finger onto the other hand.

Chatterbox No. 7

Girl Pirate
Isadora:
Are there pirates in the Philippines?

Me: Yes, and other places … on the high seas. How can you spot if
someone is a pirate?

Isadora: They have a scratch on their face and wood leg.

Me: What do pirates do?

Isadora: They do three things.

Me: Three?

Isadora: They steal boats. Steal treasure. And chase people.

Me: Would you like to meet a pirate?

Isadora: No. I want to watch them on TV, when I’m 6 or 7.

Sweet tweet

pre school activity

A kindergarten teacher mentioned that the children in her class always asked how to draw one thing or another. She asked if I would complete a drawing exercise with them. After some thought about a suitable activity, it seemed drawing an object for a four-year-old to  replicate didn’t seem right. The fours and fives seem quite happy developing their own generic symbols: rainbows, sky, bee, dog and so on. What could I add by rendering fancier versions?

This age group is starting to use shapes in imagery. A design using a collection of circles, triangles, semi-circles, assembled to form an object, could be good fun to play with, and show that by using similar combinations of shapes you could make pictures of other animals or objects.

I designed a ‘bird’ picture to recreate in the classroom. First, we looked at the geometric shapes made from coloured paper. We named the shapes, and guessed what we could ‘draw’ from rearranging them. Each child was given their own set to assemble and glue down, after the example, and some children added unique details. All up, the bird was a big hit!

shape_drawings-2

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Book Champion: Derek

Our good pal Aunty Al has provided us with today’s post, an interview with her nephew from Adelaide. You can read her regular blog here. When not making insightful observations, she is charming with her dry wit.
We Returned the favour, and swapped her this piece. Please read on …


Derek is a six-year-old and loves being physical. His favourite book (today) is Ninjago, part of the Lego franchise.

What is your favourite book?
Ninjago. It has skeletons, which are evil.

The leader is called Samurai Kai and he has four arms with knives in them and you have to do them all the same and the boss of him is called Lloyd (sic) Garmadon. And Lloyd (sic) Garmadon and Sensei Wu are brothers, but he is an old man and is very good at fighting. The sword of fire never misses the target.

The four ninjas are blue ninja, whose power is lightning; and a white one called Zane and his power is ice; and Kai is power fire; and the last one is called Cole and his power is earth and his colour is black. Kai has a sister and you have to save her.

There are movies and books and games of this book. I’ve seen the movie a few times. I think I like the game the most if I get to play it, but right now I like the movie the best because I’ve never seen it before.

Oh, and you know how skeletons are white, well Lord Garmadon is black not white, with red eyes and a hat with a bone attached it to it. Samurai Kai looks different because he’s the king. There’s also dragons, which protect the weapons. Well Col, the leader, he’s afraid of dragon.

What do you like about Ninjago?
I just like it. What I like is the skeleton and the weapons. I just really like them.
And I really like the ninjas. Sensei Wu trains the ninjas and they have to do a test.

Which is your favourite character?
Probably Samurai Kai.

What do you like about him?
He’s the king of the underworld. He has four arms. Didn’t you know that? I told you that, don’t you remember? I actually like baddies better than good guys. I think they’re more interesting.

Can you remember what Samurai Kai looks like?
He has this dinosaur spike on his back and the colour of those spikes is brown and the skeletons are white.

Are there any places in the book you’d like to visit?
What are places? There’s no places in the book.

If you could be a character in this book, who would you be?
I would be one of the dragons, I’d be the one protecting the sword of fire.

Do you like reading?
I can’t read. But I like being read to. I get to be awake for a little while when it’s bedtime. I like being awake.

Aunty Al, can I tell you something? You do know I like Star Wars light sabres? Could you get me a light sabre? I’d like that. I want a double-sided one. Could you get me one?

Do you talk about your books with your friends?
No. They’re not really interested. We don’t think about it. We play games at school like Star Wars, but we don’t talk about it.

Thanks for answering my questions about your favourite book, Derek. Would you like to ask me any questions?
I’ve already asked you some questions! I asked you about Ninjago and I asked you if you wanted to get me a light sabre. Do you want to speak to Mummy now?

Gav Barbey (Part two)

Gav Barbey Little Seed America

This time we talk to Gav Barbey, about the release of his new book,  Little Seed America and accompanying music album Trees of North America.

You must be excited. Tell us about the songs on the album. Who wrote them, how did they come about?
The end of the book has a map showing where the trees originally come from, what states they are native to. There are also a few fun and interesting facts about the tree, ones I love. Mark Giblin, whom I have been creating Sunnytime Productions with is a musician; he wrote the six songs for the back of the book and then we made little video clips that play when you tap on the tree icon. We loved them so much Mark just steamrolled out another eight songs for other North American Trees, and these have become the animated album ‘Trees of North America’.

They are a great way for us to expand as we introduced native animals, birds, reptiles, insects and educational word text to these beautiful songs.

The eBook now has the animated pages, an activity tree map and song page, an activity animal page with short animations and the animals unique sound, an at home activity suggestion page, and then there is the animated album … it is really exciting! On my American book reading I gave away copies of the paperback at every reading in the hope of inspiring children and adults to go out there and hug a tree, to plant a tree and to sing, draw and learn with their children.

Gav Barbey tree painting

A friend of mine is training as a teacher and she recently completed an assignment using ‘Little Seed’ – “it’s a gorgeous book” was her comment. Did you think about how it might be used by parents and teachers when you first wrote it?
The only thing I knew was that I wanted it to be educational. Many of Eric Carle’s picture books are educational, and I love that. They have extras and, as a parent, I would fall in love with certain books just like my daughter would. We read them over and over and found ways to expand out the story. The map in the back of Little Seed was for me just that, a meandering off the main trail, an adventure. This is why I have always wanted to team up with an environmental society and a seed company, extend the story outside the parameters of the pages, just like my art, constantly in motion.

When the Sydney Opera House asked to perform the book with their Baby Proms program it made me realise that theatre was another way of expanding the paperback out into the wilderness. The Interactive Animated eBook is another wonderfully exciting way of wandering off the page.
To work with a producer and publisher within a bigger picture would be a collaboration I would definitely love to do. I crossed America towards the end of 2012, reading Little Seed America and doing art classes with children throughout schools, hospitals, libraries, and stores. Being able to read to children is really the whole idea of any book, and children bring a whole other dimension to a story.

With school children, I combine acting out, making sculptural pieces and building class trees and shadow sculptures. Now that’s living! I think if I could travel the world reading, creating and sitting with all those trees I would be a very happy man.

What have you learnt while researching all the different tree species around
the world?
How wonderfully diverse they all are, the small nuances that give each one its personality. I remember the first time I saw a giant magnolia flower, I took it to my studio and created a lithograph printing plate, The flower filled the studio with the most beautiful smell, it was late afternoon, I watched it close its giant petals and in the morning open back up and then spit its stamen over the studio floor. Hugging the giant baobab trees in Africa or feeling the cool trunk of the lemon scented gum tree upon the skin in summer. The thousands of seeds and the designs, the architecture of flowers.

The other morning when I was walking around the river I wondered if trees in the domestic setting got sad being so separated from each other, no longer part of a forest of their species. Then I realised they go through all the adversities we try hard to avoid – the wind, storms, drought, animals and birds attacking and eating them and so on. Yet every season they do exactly what they need to do to survive, and within this they give everything life. They are truly amazing … I often sit and listen to the unique sound each species makes as the wind blows their leaves into song.

Little Seed America is an Interactive Animated eBook
and 14 Animated North American Tree Songs

Little Seed America
Written by Gav Barbey & Justin Monjo
Original Art & Design by Gav Barbey
Original Music Composition & Animation by Mark Giblin
Directed by Gav Barbey & Mark Giblin
Produced by Sunnytime Productions & Urban Fox Studios

Gav Barbey

gav barbey

Could you start by telling us a bit about yourself and your environment.
I am an artist, a single father and dyslexic. Until three years ago my daughter and I lived in a huge warehouse on an old reclaimed rubbish tip in Sydney, Australia.
We built a world within, with paintings and sculpture, films and theatre, a bathtub and a cubby house and tented bedrooms. It was a place of luxury, and I mean this in the most affordable way – luxury when it comes to passion, wonderment, meditation and friends.

Today I wander between Melbourne and Sydney. I often feel like a travelling gypsy, determined to give my gifts to the world, to bring colour and poetry to the heart and draw a continuous line between everything.

And how did you become an artist?
I was 17 years old when I did my apprenticeship as a commercial artist.
I was taught craft, drafting and construction by artisans, reproductionists, illusionists and masters. It was about aesthetics and technique, precision, flamboyancy, extreme colour and movement and theatricality. I did my apprenticeship in one of the oldest commercial art houses in Melbourne, part of a thespian world that no longer exists.

When I studied at the [Australian] National Institute of Dramatic Art it was all about philosophical and intellectual meaning. I learnt to question everything, to influence and be influenced. As a professional designer, writer, director of theatre and film I learnt the art of free form, the art of abandonment.

When did you set up Sunnytime Productions? What is your vision for it?
Sunnytime Productions was set up in 2011, although we have been creating our hand-crafted animation for four years, honing and developing our style.
We originally started with creating a five-minute episode of an animation series called Sunnytime Zoom Zoom. It was to be a series based on vehicles and their relationship with the environment, designed for broadcast television.
We were in development for three years with broadcasters before the digital revolution came about.

Previously, broadcast content for pre-schoolers had been limited to the time slots made available by broadcasters. With the advance of the digital era and hand held devices, pre-school content is now one of the largest growth markets across hand held devices.

Our vision for Sunnytime is to be a dedicated pre-school animation company that creates unique, educational, fun, hand-painted and musical-based content across multiple platforms from animated series, eBooks, apps, games and magazine style learning worlds. Our vision like our heroes Jim Henson and Frank Oz is to enhance, enlighten and brighten the world of pre-schoolers, never just churn out computer generated noise.

1000 Pieces in New York (2009)


You seem to be collaborating with lots of different people as part of Sunnytime Productions – writers, musicians, animators etc. How does that change your creative process compared to your artistic endeavours e.g. your ice paintings?

I have spent a lifetime collaborating, from my training in theatre to my work in film and television. I have been extremely fortunate to have collaborated with some of the most sublime companies over the past 25 years.

I believe that everything is a collaboration, everything is an influence, from the beetle that flies through the wind, to the person that smiles on the street, collaboration is for me the key. My Iceworks are ultimately a culmination of all my disciplines, practices, most have had a degree of live performance; when I created 1000 pieces in New York I asked 1000 people to participate, to choose a small block of pigmented ice and place it on one of the 1000 pieces of hand rag paper then observe the transformation; I have based most of my inquiry over the past four years on the ideal that “The Viewer and Artist are one … as the viewer is artist and artist viewer, for without each other there is no Art”.

little seed america

Tell us about the Little Seed project. You have two in the series published, but I believe you have several more in the work. How did the idea come about and how has it evolved? Which came first for the first Little Seed book – the paintings or the words?
Little Seed America is the second of a series of picture books I have written and illustrated. I wrote the original book for my daughter Bodhi for her first Christmas in 2004, after travelling to Borneo with Verna Simpson from the Humane Society International and the Australian actor Peter O’Brien. Being away from my daughter made me think about belonging, about what I was looking for and about family.

I wrote the original words on the inside front and back covers of my picture book hero Eric Carle’s The Grouchy Ladybug.  As a dyslexic, I write stream of consciousness, words pour out like a fountain, not always right and often made up.
I then painted the large format pages and poured out the text and there it sat in my studio for three years, amongst the countless paintings, books and sculptures I had made before Pan Macmillan published it.

Trees have been an important inspiration for me as an artist and they still amaze me everyday. The original idea was to create Little Seed books for around the world, a different variation on the story with indigenous trees and animals and birds from the country or area of that book. I had always wanted them to not only be beautiful stories and images but educational and environmental, to build like a encyclopaedia, a series that you could collect, to understand other places.

I have always wanted to align the books with an environmental society, a seed company and make them more than just picture books. I guess the digital world is helping turn what started as a humble enquiry into a greater dream. The next two books to be released will be Little Seed South America and Little Seed Asia; my dream is to have a graphic designer and an animator work with me for six months to complete six more in the series.

What did you enjoy doing as a child?
Everything, I was a rapid firefly, I had ants in my pants, I talked like a wild fire
and entertained. I was called Bubbles. I also wanted to go to space …
I still want to go to space. I daydreamed.

Next week in part two, our interview with Gav Barbey continues as he talks about the release of Little Seed America co-authored with Justin Monjo, and original music and animation by Mark Giblin.

A familiar face

trivet
It can be hard to look at certain objects and not see a face. Resting in the shadows of trees, or in the raised metal of drain covers on a footpath, faces are everywhere. Well, I think so, and I’m not alone. The want to anthropomorphise is deeply imbedded in the human brain. Thankfully, the faces I see are benevolent ones, like the one springing from this silicon rubber trivet in my kitchen. It took me by surprise one day, looking for all the world like the head of Charlie Brown, and he has never left the kitchen. Every time I look at the trivet, there he is. Good grief!
charlie trivet