A lovely interview with one of our new illustrators Eva Sanchez Gomez! We hope you enjoy a little look into Eva's world...
Where do you live/work?
I am currently living in Barcelona. I have
been living and working in Lisbon for one year and in Manchester for two years
and I came back just a few months ago.
I work at home and my office is a big desk
in front of the window in the living room.
What do you love about working there?
I love being surrounded by my colour
pencils and working materials creating the perfect shell to focus on the new story
that I am working on at that moment. The quietness of the soundtrack that I am
free to choose for each project. And the intimacy and the freedom of a place
that is in the end my home.
I also like the multiple environments I can
find in the city: homely neighbourhoods, ancient markets, hidden cathedrals, big
parks or lots of different architectures coexisting (Gothic quarter, modernism
of GaudÃ, functionalism and Bauhaus of the Mies Van der Rohe pavilion and so on).
Barcelona is a cosmopolitan city fulfilled with cultural inputs, from the
museums and theatres to the wide diversity of cultures and people living here.
What are your dislikes?
Too much cars and bright nights without
stars.
I am from a town in the Pyrenees and I
would love living surrounded by nature.
But one can always travel to take the best
of each place.
What do you love most about being an
illustrator?
I love the feeling of freedom. You can make
anything possible trough drawing, and being an illustrator let me spend quite a
lot of time with a pencil on my hands.
Illustrating is telling a story and I do
believe that books and stories are powerful instruments capable to change our
world. They give us new horizons, expectations or the opportunity to live
other’s life, even an impossible or surreal life. Spending mine trying to be involved
on this feels really challenging and exciting.
How do you work- what are your techniques?
I do enjoy the stroke of the pencil, is the
technique that feels more natural to me.
I usually work with watercolour and
pencils. Using both stain and stroke I keep playing trying to find the right
balance. I also keep trying and experiment a little with new techniques or
different ways to use the same materials.
What is your favourite thing to draw?
All kind of animals!
Are there any tricky parts to being an
illustrator?
Being an illustrator also means for me
accept an economy which won’t let me have luxuries or the calm from knowing
that I will be paid a fix quantity at the end of each month.
This pressure can be an extra injection of
energy to keep working and seeking for projects, but also could be tricky when
I must decide on which projects I should invest my time. When the kind of personal projects I’d love
to do and I have in mind are not commercial I must learn to find the right
balance between the time I invest on those ones and the time I spend on
commissions I know for sure that will be paid for and I also like to do. It is
tricky because it’s very easy keep postponing the personal projects.
In any case, I think that what really
matters is keep working and trying to find my own voice and world whatever the
project is, so I could learn from each one. And reject working in a project
that I can’t believe on.
What or who are you inspired by?
I get inspiration from films, dance, books
and other illustrators that I love like Arthur Rackham, Lisbeth Zwerguer
Lorenzo Mattotti, Andrea Serio, Willimam Grill, Emily Hughes, Juanjo Guarnido, …
to name a few.
But foremost, from daily life and own
experience. I think that inspiration can come from everywhere. The place I have
grown in, my family and friends, the people I’ve known, … Every experience
makes me who I am and influence the way I look at the world and so on how I
illustrated it.
What do you like to do in your spare time
when you are not illustrating?
Baking cakes, watching films, go trekking, learning
how to dance, scubadiving, …
How did you get into illustration?
I like drawing since I can remember, that
was the main reason to study Fine Arts. I already was interested in animal and
naturalistic drawing and while I was studying at the university I signed up for
a short course about “Drawing applied on ornithology”. It was a short test of
scientific and naturalistic illustration and I loved it. I met there a friend
who was also studying children’s illustration in “Francesca Bonnemaison” School
and I realized that it could be an amazing career to explore. Once I finished Fine Arts I studied
Illustration in the same school and it was there where I really discovered this
amazing world. I am very grateful to
these years on the school, to my colleagues and the coordinator of the course
and illustrator Ignasi Blanch, who get us involved in many activities such
exhibitions or contests and pass on his passion for illustrating and the
importance of discover our own voice and personal universe. Thanks to one of
those contests I published my first picture book “Onades i flors” by Noemà Pes.
It was amazing go ahead through the whole project and I just wanted to keep
doing that for a living.
What are your three top tips for aspiring
illustrators?
Never give up
Punctuality
Don’t forget the passion on what you do no
matter what is the project or commission you are working on.
What’s your ultimate dream?
Me on my 90’s drawing on a beautiful studio
full of natural light coming through big windows through where I could see the
mountains, surrounded by my colour pencils, watercolours, perhaps new materials
that I don’t know yet, the people I love, all the characters that will have
accompanied me through all the illustrated stories and hundreds and hundreds of
good life memories.
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