Meet Cristiana Couceiro and her whimsical geometry

Cristiana Couceiro‘s artwork is the kind that will never cease to amaze you with the variety of colours and depth. Multiple layers of shapes and textures overlaying in a collage manner is the basis that opens a glimpse into the feeling that Cristiana wants to convey. Each illustration is an endless fascination as you always see new aspects upon each look.

It takes her lots of effort to achieve the good work, and we had the opportunity to get an insight into her passion for pursuing illustration.

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Hi, please tell us a bit about yourself.

Hello! I’m Cristiana, I live in Lisbon, Portugal and I do collages for a living. Most of my work is editorial, so I like to go free on personal projects and explore abstractions, patterns and colours.

I have a grey cat as my work assistant, which is very helpful because I work for different time zones and he likes to work during the night.

I also like to collect old gems from Portuguese graphic design history and to dig in the flea market on Saturdays.

How did you get into illustration at the first place?

I’ve been making collages for many years since I was a kid, really. Expressing myself through pieces of paper, old photos and finding stuff was always a joy. To reconstruct stories and new realities with scissor and glue is powerful for me.

Professionally I started working only as an art director but spent my insomnia hours making collages. Night hours, glueing and cutting papers were a great mix which I started sharing in a blog. And that was the beginning of a beautiful and more serious relationship with illustration.

Could you share some tips for promoting your work?

First of all, keep sharp and fit with your work. Take notes, find new stuff, walk your city. Eat, breath and drink. There’s no promoting if you don’t try to keep up the good work. And then share, show it, take criticisms, make new friends, talk to people, send emails, pay visits, open your door to visits and work, work, work.

How do you think being featured on Kuvva platform will help you?

It’s really good to be here with illustrators whose work I admire. It is also a new challenge as the curation has such high standards. And then I believe it will help me reach a new audience.

Do you have any future project in mind?

I do but it’s too soon to get further into details. Animation is my next move.

Thanks for the chat!

Thank you!

Feel free to scroll down to see the artwork Cristiana has for sale on Kuvva!

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“All That Evening”

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“The Voyage Out I”

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“Early Next Morning”

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“One Afternoon”

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“It Was So Late That There Was No Time”

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“The Voyage Out II”

This blog was first published on Kuvva blog.

Meet Cristiana Couceiro and her whimsical geometry

Introducing the cool art of Dan Matutina

We’re very happy to have Dan Matutina featured on the new Kuvva platform! We’ve long been big fans of his grungy textures combined with clean and cool shapes. His illustration style is a mix of handmade and digital, clean and rough, old and modern aesthetics. So we had a brief chat to catch up with what Dan’s been up to.

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Hi Dan! Please introduce yourself to our readers.

Hi I’m Dan Matutina, I’m a designer & illustrator based in Manila, Philippines.

How did you come to do illustration?

I loved drawing and doodling when I was a kid, but I professionally became an illustrator when I started my own studio and worked as an illustrator on the side.

Is there any advice you can share with our readers to help them get out of creative blocks?

It’s always important to take a break when you have a creative block. You can either play video games, read books, talk to friends or just take a simple rest to free your mind.

What are some tips to promote your work?

It’s important to put your work online and get feedback from people. If you don’t get a lot of views, don’t be discouraged. Just continue curating and adding new works to your folio. Using social media can also help spread your work around.

How do you think being featured on Kuvva platform will help you?

Getting featured on Kuvva will help spread my work to more people. Yay!

Are you up to anything at the moment?

Finishing two personal projects that I’m currently working on now : )

Thank you for the chat!

Below are the works Dan put for sale on Kuvva. Check them out and feel free to let us know what you think!

“Marvel Boy”

“Minor Lakes”

“Versus Hearts”

“Rock”

“New Hope”

“Moon”

“Tug O War”

This blog was first published on Kuvva blog.

Introducing the cool art of Dan Matutina

Meet the Kuvva team: Pieter

Together with the hype of the opening of the Unseen photography fair and Kuvva Gallery’s super amazing show Omnipollo, we’re very excited to welcome the next person in the hot spot of Kuvva team interview series: Pieter!

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Hi, please tell us something about yourself, the more surprising stuff the better!

Yo! I’m Pieter, currently 23 years old, living in Amsterdam and I like to build beautiful pieces of internet.

Other than that, I run this online magazine called Versheid.com. I’m a sneaker enthusiast and a sucker for nachos.

When did you join Kuvva?

It was 2 years ago, in the fall of 2012.  My first working day was the first day the team moved into the Westergasfabriek. This reminds me that my two-year anniversary is near!

What is your role on a daily basis?

As a front-end developer, I’m the link between the designers and the other developers. My work varies everyday: from creating prototypes for new features to developing the actual website, or fixing bugs whenever we come across them. I also make sure that the website of our gallery is up-to-date.

What is your favourite illustration on Kuvva?

Easy one! I really want to be Tony Stark when I grow up, so I really like the illustration “Man Made” by Liam Brazier. I also like all the work from Jack Hughes and Dennis de Groot. Their stuff is very good.

Which illustrator do you think is missing on Kuvva marketplace?

I would love to see some work by Skulljan on our platform. I’m amazed by his art, whether it’s on paper, a screen or skin!

Thanks! And stay tuned for more team interview next Friday!

This blog was first published on Kuvva blog.

Meet the Kuvva team: Pieter

Meet the visual poetry of Eleni Kalorkoti

This week we’re very happy to feature the poetic illustrations of Eleni Kalorkoti on Kuvva app. Her work features clean cuts and geometrical, minimalistic shapes. The compositions are prismatic, the layouts are dynamic and the aesthetic is distinctively organic. Earlier this week we had a chance to chat with Eleni and have her share of inspirations to work as an illustrator. Enjoy!

Please tell us a bit about yourself : )

My name is Eleni Kalorkoti, I’m an illustrator from Scotland now living and working in South London. I do quite a lot of editorial work, but also spend much of my time making and self publishing zines. I mainly like to work in ink but also enjoy experimenting with other media. I recently made some collage zines and sometimes I like to work digitally (though always from the starting point of a hand drawn image).

That’s nice. How did you get into illustration at the beginning?

In retrospect, I think the artists that have the strongest impression on me in my life are probably illustrators: from reading (or being read) Janet and Allen Ahlberg’s The Jolly Postman as a wee kid to Clowes’ Ghost World as a grumpy and confused teenager. By the time I was at art college and chose what subject to study, it became clear that illustration was right for me. It seemed to collect everything I was interested in and enjoyed doing together into one art form and to have much less potential for driving me insane than painting!

Could you share some tips with our readers to help them get out of creative blocks?

I often experience creative blocks so I might not be the best person to ask! Though recently I’ve been keeping a brush pen sketchbook that I use to draw the same thing over and over again (there’s a pie page, a lamp page, a tin can page…). I’ve found it helpful as a way to let myself forget about trying to come up with some great idea all the time, and just focus on the act of drawing something. Then when I go back to my ‘proper’ work I feel more relaxed about it and ideas come more easily.

How do you think being featured on Kuvva platform will help you?

I hope it’ll help to introduce a new audience to my work. It’s very beautifully and thoughtfully designed and curated, which really helps to show the work in the best light, and it’s wonderful to be featured amongst so many talented illustrators whose work I love.

Do you have any future project in mind at the moment?

Right now I’m working on a zine for Jazz Dad Books, it’s called Glitch and it’s about things going a bit haywire. I’ve been having fun drawing glitchy girls and 60s computers for it. It should be out in a few weeks so keep an eye out!

Thank you for the chat!

Thank you!

Feel free to scroll down to see the whole collection of Eleni’s artwork available on Kuvva for sale. Don’t hesitate to let us know which one is your favourite by leaving a reply below!

“Media”

“Flowers”

“November”

“Garden Witch”

“Reading Club”

“Waiting”

“Space Witch”

“Superhero”

“The Deep”

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“Tiger”

This blog was first published on Kuvva blog.

Meet the visual poetry of Eleni Kalorkoti

Explore the Beer and Art of The Omnipollo

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We’re super excited to see Kuvva Gallery become host to illustrator and designer Karl Grandin and the world of Omnipollo. This is a nomadic beer-brewing project initiated by Grandin and Henok Fentie. Together they design and brew small-scale batches of craft beer in cooperation with breweries around the world.

This exhibition’s story is told through the exploration of Grandin’s illustrations and designs; graphic, minimalistic, and colourful, they nonetheless maintain a psychedelic, even dark, air, tinged with a nagging incomprehensibility. Rather than creating a prepackaged world to be consumed, Grandin’s works create a surreal atmosphere in need of translation, into which the viewer is plunged.

In the few hours before the show commences, we had an opportunity to chat with the artist about this labour of love called Omnipollo.

Hi Karl, could you tell us how you got into Omnipollo at the first place?

It started with Henok. He’s a home brewer and he told a mutual friend of ours, an art curator, that he wanted to release a beer. She saw some sketches and got worried because it just looked like any other beer. She was like “He has been talking about this project for so long, it’s like the beer of his dream, and it would be nice if it looked like the beer of his dreams as well!”

I’m into beer but not seriously into making beer packaging. So I thought it was a great opportunity. We met and became great friends and we have been making beers since then. I thought at first it would just be the one beer, but it turned out to be more and more and it’s amazing. I like being involved in projects like this. It has complete artistic freedom. Henok can do whatever he wants with the beers. I can do whatever I want with the graphics. We never even have arguments and just slowly build up the world of Omnipollo together.

Omnipollo is quite personal to me. In general, when you make something you have to adapt it to your audience or buyers. We approached this at a personal level from the beginning. Instead of trying to make something that will fit in, now we make something that we can enjoy.

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Are you afraid of losing coherence in the design as well as the beer?

I never worry about it, but our sellers tend to do so. Our importer was freaking out because we didn’t have a name on the bottles and each of them had a different design. They were thinking I was hiding some dangerous political or religious messages, while I just try to keep it simple, and a little loose and poetic. Most of my designs look quite clear and the basic idea is to take a sneak peek into the bottles, but people can have different way of interpreting it.

People often say that it’s easy to recognise our beers. I guess once you see it, you can connect to it personally. One advantage is that we’re quite small and we’re doing well enough to consistently make new beers and a strong fan base. There is a guy sending emails and letters rating every new beer we make. There are guys sending us emails and letters rating every new beer we make. There is a lot of community building and they keep an eye out for us so we don’t need to worry.

The nice thing is that I can do whatever I want basically. Just challenge the way beer usually looks, it will immediately stand out and people will remember it. But you have to keep changing. We probably spend more time than any other beer brands on the look. It’s not the cheapest beer. It sounds a bit silly, but we try to make an experience for the alcohol. I would like people to enjoy the bottle in the same way they enjoy a nicely designed sleeve for their favourite record.

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What do you think about Kuvva Gallery’s space? 

I really like it! I lived in Amsterdam for two years when I did my Master’s here at the Sandberg Institute. I used to come by this part of town quite a bit, and to have my old friend Samuel run a gallery here is perfect. And the Kuvva Gallery itself is also really nice, because it focuses, along with Present Plus, and other projects, on art that falls between categories. Like how WeTransfer is both a very useful, practical site, and an exhibition space for young artists. And that’s kind of how Omnipollo is as well – we create a product, but we are also artists, both me and Henok. We’s not pushing any sales here. It’s more about giving a showcase of an experiement like making something magical as alchemy. I think it’s going to be laid back and nice.

Do you have any future plan with Omnipollo?

We’ve been around for almost 4 years. I think we still need to grow a bit more and expand a bit more. We’re already selling in Brazil and even in Thailand but we would like to sell more maybe in East Asia or Ethiopia where Henok’s parents come from. We also have a plan to open a bar in Stockholm or somewhere else. But it’s not necessary to make bigger profits. We have enough beers to make non-profit beers every now and then. I really enjoy what we’re doing now. We keep on changing and doing the alchemy: two things come together and become something new.

Are there any projects like Omnipollo out there that combine beer and cool illustrations?

There aren’t that many actually, but I can tell you about three breweries with interesting label designs.

Jean Broillet is making some really strange and beautiful designs for his brewery Tired Hands in Pennsylvania.

Mikkeller is a nomadic brewery operation from Denmark with energetic and beautiful label art by Keith Shore.

Colin Healey is one of the two brothers behind Prairie Artisan Ales from Oklahoma and he’s responsible for the brewery’s crazy and intense label designs.

Thank you for the chat!

Thank you!

The beer that was created especially for Kuvva Gallery by Omnipollo was made at Brouwerij de Molen. A purple-pink sour wheat made with raspberries and key lime, this special brew will be the first step the visitors take into the Omnipollo world, before being led around the space decorated with prints of past bottle designs, murals, and even a tipi designed and illustrated by Grandin.

Come for the beer, stay for the art!

Join us for the public show opening on Thursday September 18th, 17:30 – 22:00

Kuvva Gallery, Pazzanistraat 33, 1014 DB, Westergasfabriek, Amsterdam, NL

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This blog was first published on Kuvva blog.

Explore the Beer and Art of The Omnipollo