Loco for local: Minifanfan

Malaysian artists: a special feature!

This week’s Malaysian artist is the lovable Minifanfan, whom I’ve had the pleasure of meeting a few times around crafty events in the city! She’s one of the handful of artists I’ve had the honor of befriending who is friendly, as she is talented. Read on for more, and at the end of the interview, there’s a discount code especially for Pikaland readers to be used in her Etsy shop!

Minifanfan

Name: Eng Gee Fan aka Minifanfan
Location: Kuala Lumpur
Website: minifanfan.com
*Etsy shop”: minifanfan.etsy.com
Blog: minifanfan.blogspot.com
Illustration media: Computer drawing, paper and markers

Tell us a little more about yourself!
I have a wonderful Chinese name called “Yī Fán”, and I am the eldest children of three. I was born in Malaysia and raised in a small town called Kota Tinggi, but I now live in Kuala Lumpur. Currently I work as an artist in my small bedroom studio (yes, I work and sleep in a same place!) I’m in the process of saving up enough money to move into a bigger place.

Minifanfan

You live in Malaysia — what stands out about living here, and what is your daily schedule like?
I found that cooking is a very interesting hobby since I decided to pick up my pen as my full-time job. Normally I will cook my breakfast before I start working. For me, thinking about what to eat for dinner is my way to keep working without feeling lonely.

Sometimes people ask me what is the benefit of working at home? I always told them the happiest thing is I won’t need to get stuck in our super horrific KL traffic jam! My working time is flexible, and usually depends on what mood I’m in. Sometimes I take a break and go for movies or watch funny videos if I feel stressed. Browsing internet for fresh ideas also is a thing I must do everyday.

And does being in Malaysia influence your art in any way?
Being a Malaysian, I have been raised in this land for many years. Malaysia’s multi-racial society contains many ethnic groups, so I the best word to describe our country is “Colorful”. Colorful is what I use to easily connect my audience to my works. Besides, I’m glad that we have internet today. I’m able to share my thoughts through my works on different platforms with few clicks. At the same time, I can easily appreciate other people’s works from different countries. I’m not only learning in my own country but also through the whole world.

Minifanfan

In Malaysia, I find that the progress of the art and craft community has yet to catch on. What do you think can be done to increase awareness of art and craft locally?
We can see a lot of art organizers promoting their events as a “creative art market” in recent years. This is good news to artists because people are becoming more interested in art events.

Unfortunately, I found that most of the art organizers are merely looking to gain quick benefits from these “creative art markets”. To me, they are not sincere in wanting to further and promote our art community. So, I only take part on creative events that are reputable. Instead of wasting your time and energy to take part different events, it is better to choose good quality organizers to win more potential customers. At the moment, I find that more people are joining our art community. It’s supposed to be exciting news, but I don’t see it is a good sign to the community. Why? If you look closely, most of them take it as a platform to make money. They are thinking of making more money but are not really keen to improve their skill and ideas for their works. Some products are sold at cheap prices with bad quality. I don’t think people will go for art and handmade if we continue to ruin the community. My advice would be to go for the price you deserve and never lower down your value. Stick to your principles because it will be difficult to educate people on the importance of handmade in the future!

Minifanfan

How did you get your start in illustration?
I started drawing ever since I was a kid. My first attempt of drawings was inspired by the Japanese manga, Sailor Moon, and I have drawn about hundred pieces of these “modified” Sailor Moon characters. It seemed inconceivable that through my drawing styles, Japanese Manga was my first inspiration. Luckily I learned some basic skills in my secondary school’s art class. Graphic design is my main course during my college time, but I choose illustration as my major for graduation project. After graduated, I started my full time artist career after one and half years working in office. I have been consistently creating and illustrating a series of characters and illustration with a lovable and whimsical style.

Could you tell us more about your thought process when you start a piece?
I will note down in paper or quick note in my notebook when ideas are coming. Ideas come from everywhere, mostly come from music, movie and my boyfriend. I love to talk with him as I always discover lots of weird ideas after our nonsensical talks! A good idea is unpredictable and it comes when you least expect it.

Minifanfan

What’s your favorite project so far?
I demand a lot of myself. I never feel satisfied with my works when I look back on them. If I really have to choose, Better Together is my favorite project so far. This is my first zine and is dedicated to my grandmother (she is in heaven now) and in it, I talk about the reasons I choose not to be alone.

Do you keep a journal/sketchbook, and would you mind if we had a sneak peek?
I do not have the habit of using sketchbook. I tried to cultivate this good habit, but it didn’t work out for me. Usually I will have a draft in my brain before I start to draw a new illustration. If possible, I draw without any sketch, because I don’t want to limit my chances of getting new ideas in the process of drawing.

Would you care to share your studio space as well?

Minifanfan

Minifanfan

Minifanfan

What or who inspires you?
Beautiful things, movies, music, people… they always inspire me!

What keeps you motivated?
I want to make beautiful works. I become highly motivated when I se a lot of brilliant works.

Could you share with us your progression as an artist — compared to when you first started out, how has your style changed since then?
I always feel that there’s something lacking every time time I look back on my works. My work still has much room for improvement. My style has become more whimsical and I hope it can be a remedy for people when they need something to cheer up in the future.

Minifanfan

What’s your favourite tool?
Markers from Kuretake (please share with me if you have better!) and my hand.

Are you a full-time artist?
Yes!

What advice would you like to give people who are interested in being an artist full-time?
Welcome to underworld! Haha. You won’t get any overtime (OT), allowance, holidays, annual leaves, bonuses… if you’re really interested to forge ahead as a full-time artist! You must be prepared to work overtime for completing all jobs, such as paper works, emails, regularly updated your new works, and website… This work is much harder than your previous job in office. And be sure you have enough saving for covering your monthly expenses. I encourage young people to give it a go when they’ve saved up some funds!

Minifanfan

Where do you see yourself within the next few years?
Moving to bigger space, have my own studio and I hope to have my first solo exhibition very soon.

What message do you want to send out to people about your work?
My purpose is simple — I hope people will feel happy and cheerful when they look at my creations, hence my tagline “Happy drawing for Happy People” that I’ve created for my works.

Tell us something random about yourself!
1) I love to have tomatoes and potatoes in my every meals.
2) I wish to be a professional cook when I have my own kitchen.
3) I am only 152 cm tall, and I’m proud of it!
4) I never have long hair.

Minifanfan

Minifanfan is offering Pikaland readers a 30% discount on everything in her SHOP in conjunction with her one-year anniversary of being a full-time artist — just key in “HAPPYBIRTHDAY” during checkout!

Loco for local: Sam Hepburn

Malaysian artists: a special feature!

Continuing from our first Loco for Local interview, we talk to Sam Hepburn, a KL-based illustrator and writer who just launched her book, NO! (featured previously).

Sam Hepburn

Name: Sam Hepburn
Location: Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Shop: hepburnco.etsy.com
Website: www.samhepburn.com
Illustration media: My favourites are pastels and black ink pens

You live in Malaysia — what stands out about living here, and what is your daily schedule like?
One of my favourite things is how the culture all smooshes together here. When I’m chatting with my friends, we string sentences together using a bunch of the local languages – we even make up our own words here and there. I often joke with my sister about how if we ever go back to Scotland and meet up our old friends, we’re going to have to bring a translator along.

My daily schedule is insane because I work a few jobs. (It’s less about the going being tough than it is about my greedy ambition and criminal shopaholic tendencies!) So I’ll often go for a massage on Saturday or Sunday just to clear the week out of my head and work out the keyboard wrists.

Sam Hepburn

And does being in Malaysia influence your art in any way?
Well I was born in Scotland and lived there until I was about 15, but I think I only really grew up in Malaysia. Being thrust into a completely different culture, environment and way of life at that critical point when all your important (or at least you think they’re important!) opinions are being formed – yes, it definitely affected the way I express myself. Actually, it’s a long story but I might not have even gone back to drawing if I hadn’t travelled this path. A lot of people ask me why I moved here when locals with a scrap of potential would rather leave, but I don’t regret being here because I learned so much; the exposure was and is invaluable.

In Malaysia, I find that the progress of the art and craft community has yet to catch on. What do you think can be done to increase awareness of art and craft locally?
I guess we all grumble now and then about how there’s not enough support for the arts here, other countries are so much better, etc. etc. But really, it has to start with us. The resources, networks and opportunities are there if you know where to look or are willing to find out. I think that’s the fun of it as well, the challenge! We’re in a position to do really amazing things here in Malaysia because nobody’s actually stuck their flag in the ground yet. So we just need to be more fearless, more adventurous, more ambitious!

Sam Hepburn

Sam Hepburn

How did you get your start in illustration?
To me, drawing was one of those careers that you enjoy on the side but never really take seriously. And then I met some really amazing people during a college internship – I was lucky because they gave me room to be 100% myself. So while I’d signed up to write ads, I found myself leaning more and more towards my quirkier, cartoony side. Soon I decided to make more room in my career for drawing. I started a web comic, was booked for a couple of commissions from that, and slowly began to take on more projects. It was such a pivotal moment in my internship that changed everything – dramatic as it sounds! – and I’ll always be grateful to the people who gave me that paradigm shift.

Could you tell us more about your thought process when you start a piece?
I use up a lot of paper, all kinds, and mess up my room until it’s a complete landfill and I can’t find my dogs. I spend quite a bit of time feeling guilty about the amount of paper I’m wasting, and then thinking up ways to reuse it. Once I’m over the paper bit, I’ll start actually being productive. I bring a notebook everywhere, and will draw bits of projects or write down little phrases I suddenly think of. I change up my workspace quite often – sometimes it’s just working in different rooms, otherwise I’ll take my materials out to a coffee shop. I take lots of breaks! Whether it’s to watch a movie, grab a bowl of cereal, play with my dogs (or clean up their business) – I guess all the distractions help free up the mind to be more random and creative. (Although if I’m on a tight deadline, I definitely don’t dillydally quite so much!) I also like to pore over old stories, toys and TV shows I knew as a kid because I realize what amazing art they are now; I used to take it all for granted. One thing I never do when creating new work is look through ‘visual reference books’, and I try to avoid image bookmarking sites.

Sam Hepburn

What’s your favourite project so far?
I’m just happy that I even have a ‘so far’ – it means that there’s so much more to come! I’m always proud of projects that really challenged my field of experience – like my first picture book, NO! A Lesson in Love, where I started with zero contacts, zero expertise in design, book layout or production, zero anything! I’m very happy to be doing what I do, and I think invitations to new projects will always thrill me out of my mind.

Do you keep a journal/sketchbook, and would you mind if we had a sneak peek?

Sam Hepburn

Sam Hepburn

Sam Hepburn

What or who inspires you?
I love kids – their random logic and lack of social grace! I had an eight year old come up to me during a school reading session and suddenly tell me ‘you have teeth on top of your other teeth’. I’ll never forget that, it was so weird and awkward, yet wonderful at the same time!

What keeps you motivated?
Just like anyone else, I fluctuate between being a flaming ball of motivation and not being able to roll out of bed. It’s often a movie, the lyrics of a song, a mind-numbing meeting at work, or an interesting conversation with a friend that will suddenly put my gramophone needle back on the LP.

Could you share with us your progression as an artist — compared to when you first started out, how has your style changed since then?
I like to think that my style gets stronger and more defined as my confidence grows, but that it always retains its original naïveté and honesty. I never want to change, only to get better at something only I can do!

Sam Hepburn

Sam Hepburn

What’s your favourite tool?
Pastels! Fat ones!

Are you a full-time artist?
Well, if my career was a pie chart, I suppose the biggest slice would go to my dogs – and then perhaps the second biggest would be the ‘artist’ slice. And then the third biggest would be the jobs that pay for the first two slices. Complicated, isn’t it!

What advice would you like to give people who are interested in being an artist full-time?
Lose all interest in profit, fame and the title of ‘artist’. Just concentrate on being wonderful.

Sam Hepburn

Where do you see yourself within the next few years?
I want to be smarter, savvier, more culturally aware and better traveled – but still feel like everything is brand spanking new.

What message do you want to send out to people about your work?
I think they can see it for themselves – what I do is and will always be honest, lo-fi and a tribute to childhood.

Tell us something random about yourself!
I still have decorations up in my room from two Christmases ago. They’re reindeer and awesome.

Loco for local: Loo Jia Wen

Malaysian artists: a special feature!

When I started blogging back in 2007, there weren’t many illustrators who had an online presence around Kuala Lumpur, where I live. I know that they were out there somehow — it’s just that they haven’t made themselves known to me, or anyone else for that matter. And now, I’m thrilled to see that there are so many out there, and I’ve also had the pleasure of meeting face to face with them at craft markets and events! I’m really proud of what my counterparts have achieved so far, and hence, I’m introducing a special series here on the blog to showcase our local talents to our readers from near and far. And there’s a special surprise at the end of each interview too: there may be a discount code or a giveaway, especially for Pikaland readers!

This week, it’s Jia Wen of Inkypots – a yoga enthusiast, clay artist and illustrator who has loads and loads of energy!

Loo Jia Wen

Name: Loo Jia Wen
Location: Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Website/Shop: inkypots.etsy.com
Blog: inkypots.wordpress.com
Illustration media: ink and paper

Tell us a little more about yourself!
I’m a freelance writer, graphic designer, potter and drawer who works from a book-filled, slightly cluttered (ok maybe that’s an understatement) studio in Kuala Lumpur with a very greedy but adorable dog waiting at my feet.

You live in Malaysia — what stands out about living here, and what is your daily schedule like?
What I do during the day really is decided by the kind of work on my to-do list – this can include anything from designing a logo or poster, writing blurbs or copy for some advertising campaign, throwing a couple of pots, sketching, or just cleaning up the studio (it gets dirty very fast!). But every day begins the same – wake up, make coffee on the stovetop brewer, feed Toro (my lustrous black mixed breed dog who is slightly overweight) some wild boar meat that’s semi-cooked in the microwave, followed by some garden-gazing. I save my most creative work (drawing and potting) for when it’s raining or at night when it’s cooler… somehow the work turns out better that way!

Loo Jia Wen

And does being in Malaysia influence your art in any way?
There is one Malaysian craft that I cannot resist – batik! I love it when someone wears a batik sarong out – rare in Kuala Lumpur, but today there was an old Indian lady at a restaurant eating chapatti and she wore the most beautifully coloured sarong, paired with a tailored sleeved top in a totally unmatching-but-matching print! I want to make a trip to the East Coast in Malaysia to go batik hunting soon… anyone wanna go too? Back to the question, yes, I do get colour inspirations from batik – the colours on ‘Good Morning Plants’ are based on one of my favourite sarongs dug up from a stall at the Kota Baru batik market.

In Malaysia, I find that the progress of the art and craft community is a little slow compared to other countries. What do you think can be done to increase awareness of art and craft locally?
I think the local scene is expanding and there are some really enthusiastic buyers around. We have a great local community of crafters active on Team Etsy Malaysia, where everyone is always helpful and supportive. Places to sell are SO important – right now there are Art For Grabs, Crafty Art Market and Pipit, all great craft markets to sell at. It would be even more conducive if these were held bi-weekly or even weekly (so that it’s a ‘dependable’ weekend activity for the crowds). That way, full-time crafters could potentially use these markets as a regular platform to sell (and maybe the market organisers could have discounted rates for regular sellers (hint, hint!). 

How did you get your start in illustration?
I started drawing big pieces of about a metre wide and upwards on rolls of paper I bought from the art store. This was back in college days, when I had a lot of energy and would be hyper at night. The drawings back then were kinda emo and angst-ridden (gulp!) but did sell at a local art gallery. Which was amazing to me! But I folded away the brushes for a long time, and pursued ‘normal’ work in advertising, only to come back to drawing in recent years.

Loo Jia Wen
 
Could you tell us more about your thought process when you start a piece?
I must have a very strong feeling before I start, for the drawing to work, because that is when I draw fully in the moment. I don’t know exactly what I’m going to draw, but usually I know the emotions that I want to convey, and that translates into a scenario – a figure, a pose… from there, it grows!

What’s your favorite project so far?
The Blahs! Battling the Blahs was my way of turning my own depression around – by seeing it from a more forgiving, kinder perspective. It started with words, led to drawings and then I compiled them all into a chapbook.
 
Do you keep a journal/sketchbook, and would you mind if we had a sneak peek?

Loo Jia Wen

Would you care to share your studio space as well?

Loo Jia Wen

I cleaned up a bit! It’s almost time to do tax, so the form has been sitting on my table for a few weeks and you can see all kinds of scribbles on it.

What or who inspires you?
The wonderful people who teach me yoga, my parents for their unending generosity, books, things that grow, dreams, the sea and mountains, the smudginess of charcoal, animals on TV.

What keeps you motivated?
Beauty.

Could you share with us your progression as an artist — compared to when you first started out, how has your style changed since then?
My art has become more restrained and contemplative.

What’s your favourite tool?
A zero-point-two felt tip pigment ink black pen.
 
Are you a full-time artist?
Not yet! Still have to earn more from my art to do that…

Loo Jia Wen
 
What advice would you like to give people who are interested in being an artist full-time?
I’ll let you know when I get there…
 
Where do you see yourself within the next few years?
Living by the sea, hopefully! In terms of art, I think I’ll be drawing and making pots for a long time…

Loo Jia Wen
 
What message do you want to send out to people about your work?
I hope my art makes your home a brighter place!

Tell us something random about yourself!
I read dragon books… any books with dragons in them, whether they’re children’s lit or fantasy, are my kinda books! Recently I found the Temeraire series by Naomi Novik… love them.

Jia Wen is offering Pikaland readers a 15% discount on everything in her SHOP — just key in “codepika” during checkout!

{Thanks Jia Wen!}

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