ORIGINALITY AND CREATIVITY - BY Shaun Tan
ORIGINALITY AND CREATIVITY - BY Shaun Tan
ORIGINALITY AND CREATIVITY - BY Shaun Tan
Original thought is like original sin: both happened before you were born to
people you could not possibly have met.
- Fran Liebowitz
Books! Bottled chatter! Things that some other simian has formerly said.
- Clarence Day.
Paul Klee once described an artist as being like a tree, drawing the minerals
of experience from its roots - things observed, read, told and felt - and slowly
processing them into new leaves. The palaeontologist Stephen Jay Gould
notes that the greatest discoveries are to be found not in a freshly hewn cliff
of shale, but in old museum collections, by rethinking the relationships
between the objects that have already been archived in our knowledge.
Often the most interesting stories are ones which tell us things that we
already know but haven’t yet articulated in our minds. Or more precisely,
they encourage us to look at familiar things in different ways, as if to remind
us of their true meaning; the way we live, the things we encounter, way we
think and so on. Looking at my own work as an illustrator, I can discuss how
this has a lot to do with combining various ideas from different sources to
produce unexpected results, very much like rubbing different stones together
for sparks, and gradually working these into flames.
The Rabbits is a good example, and perhaps my most widely circulated and
discussed book. On one hand it is a story we should all be familiar with as an
historical narrative, the European invasion of Australia and subsequent
injustices perpetrated against the indigenous population. More universally,
it’s the story of colonisation everywhere, about power, ignorance and
environmental destruction. It is also an animal fable, a dark and serious one,
a storytelling strategy we can also recognise. One might think of Richard
Adams’ Watership Down or George Orwell’s Animal Farm as precedents, for
instance, but already there is an unexpected combining of elements we
haven’t seen before, quite strange and ‘original.’
When I received John Marsden’s text for this book, via my publisher, I
experienced a sensation that usually accompanies the beginning of a new
project: not knowing what to do! By itself, the half-page fax of text generated
no ideas visually - none that were appropriately interesting at least (the
image of Beatrix Potter bunnies with redcoats, muskets and British flags was
not going to work - that’s one thing I did know). I eventually realised that
what I had to do was extend the metaphorical logic of the text even further,
and introduce more unexpected ideas to build a parallel story of my own. Not
an illustration of the text, but something to react with it symbiotically.
As well as visual sources, many ideas for the illustrations emerged from
reading history. Almost every image can, for instance, be footnoted with a
reference to Henry Reynold’s “The Other Side of the Frontier”, my most
valuable reference book. Accounts of Aboriginal impressions of the arrival of
European ships, animals, customs and technologies, the immense cultural rift
between visitors and inhabitants, the patterns of escalating violence: all
these proved to be indispensable in the creation of an equivalent imagined
universe populated by strange animals and machines.
I’m often thinking of different things I’ve read, or particular words, while I
draw and paint which best express the particular poetry of colour, line and
form I am after. A passage from David Malouf’s Remembering Babylon, which
I happened to have been reading just before working on The Rabbits,
suggested to me one way of illustrating a particular scene as a bright, lyrical
landscape; “…alive and dazzling; some of it even in the deepest shade
throwing off luminous flares… and all of it crackling and creaking and swelling
and bursting with growth.” The illustration itself is vibrant and yellow,
swimming with hidden shapes and organic tensions.
The illustration used on the cover for The Rabbits is a particularly good
example of developing imagery from reference sources. It is based on a 19th
century painting of Cook’s first landing at Botany Bay, a colour reproduction
of which I found in an old encyclopaedia. The arrangement of figures striding
ashore from left to right is mirrored by the rabbit figures, with similar
clothing, flag and gun; two Aborigines on a distant dune in the original
painting have been replaced by two marsupial animals. There are similar
lighting and atmospheric effects at work, although quite exaggerated, and
the use of oils on canvas with thin yellow glazes emulates the technique used
in paintings of the period.
These are ideas that we are invited to read in a less recognisable and more
challenging form in my own illustration. The ship leaps forth like a skyscraper
or knife, echoed by scalpel-like shadows and pointed feet, collars and guns,
the lighting is more theatrical than ever. I wanted to introduce a surreal
dreamlike quality, ambiguous in terms of mixed awe and dread, exaggerated
but not caricatured or didactic. Most of all, I wanted to produce an image that
was enigmatic and thought-provoking. It’s up to the reader to draw whatever
meaning they wish.
Like The Rabbits, The Lost Thing is quite a strange book, but its success
among readers is due in no small part to a familiar premise, a boy finding a
lost animal at his local beach and taking it home. In itself, very unoriginal,
except that this is just a point of departure, much as the history of
colonisation is for The Rabbits. The lost animal is, after all, not a stray dog,
but a huge tentacled creature evolved from drawings of pebble crabs and
old-fashioned cast iron stoves, among other things. Furthermore, the setting
of the story owes more to my visual research of industrial architecture,
including a local derelict power station in East Perth, and the urban
landscapes of artists like Edward Hopper, John Brack and Jeffrey Smart, than
your average residential suburb (although it started off as an average
residential suburb).
Many other elements based on various references are combined; ideas from
looking at a 1930’s copy of Popular Mechanics, some of my Dad’s old physics
and calculus textbooks which I used as a collage medium in the final
illustrations, photographs of cloud formations and Melbourne trams. I also
had a reproduction of the medieval artist Hieronymous Bosch’s bizarre
painting “The Garden of Earthly Delights” stuck on my kitchen cupboard, next
to a photograph of air-intake pipes on a ship by Charles Sheeler, and
American modernist painter. All of these elements came together in the
production of a visual narrative that is at once very simple and accessible,
yet complex and irreducibly enigmatic, even for me - it wouldn’t work if I
understood too much about it.
For me, that’s what creativity is - playing with found objects, reconstructing
things that already exist, transforming ideas or stories I already know. It’s not
about the colonisation of new territory, it’s about exploring inwards,
examining your existing presumptions, squinting at the archive of experience
from new angles, and hoping for some sort of revelation. What really matters
is whether we as readers continue to think about the things we have read
and seen long after the final page is turned.