Graphics for Film and TV

All the Light we cannot see

 

All the Light We Cannot See traces the stories of three characters whose lives intersect during the bombing of the German-occupied French town of Saint-Malo in August 1944.

 
 
 
 

Censored letters sent from Werner Pfenning to his sister from his boarding school in Schulpforta, one of the National Political Institutes of Education.

 
 
 
 

Madame Manec asks everyone to give Madame Blanchard their money. “You’ll get it back,” she says, “don’t worry. Now, Madame Blanchard, you’ve had beautiful handwriting all your life. On every five-franc note, I want you to write, Free France Now. No one can afford to destroy money, right? Once everyone has spent their bills, our little message will go out all over Brittany.”

 
 
 
 

At dusk they pour from the sky. They blow across the ramparts, flutter into the ravines between houses, flashing white against the cobbles. Urgent message to the inhabitants of this town, they say. Depart immediately to open country…Werner takes it. The ink so fresh it smudges beneath his fingers

 
 
 
 

Sketches of Paris (mostly fictitious)

Sometimes he and Jutta draw....She loves most of all to draw Paris, a city she has seen in exactly one photograph, on the back cover of one of Frau Elena’s romance novels: mansard roofs, hazy apartment blocks, the iron lattice of a distant tower. She draws twisting white skyscrapers, complicated bridges, flocks of figures beside a river.”

THE Night Circus

 
 

The Night Circus tells the story of the rivalry between two different forms of magic—the old and the new—and the competition and love affair between two young magicians who are destined to face each other in a magical duel to the death.

 
 
 

The man billed as Prospero the Enchanter receives a fair amount of correspondence via the theatre office but this is the first envelope addressed to him that contains a suicide note and it is also the first to arrive carefully pinned to the coat of a 5 year old girl.

The letter inside greets him with his given name, Hector Bowen, he skims over the contents, any emotional impact desired by the author failing miserably… he pauses at the only fact he deems relevant, that this girl now left in his custody is obviously his own daughter and that her name is Celia.

 
 
 
 

Invoice from Herr Fredrick Thiessen upon the completion of an ornate clock for the Circus.

 

Boxes of tickets in the Theatre office

 
 
 

Prints of past productions that hang in the Theatre office.

 

Kate MEYRICK

 
 

Known as the 'Night Club Queen', Kate Meyrick was a night-club owner in 1920s London. During her 13 year career she presided over several clubs, made, and spent, a fortune and served five prison sentences.

 
 

Event invites to a few of the many clubs under Meyrick’s proprietership.

 
 

Matchbooks from various clubs.

 
 
 
 

Clubs would be shut down and reopened under a different name weeks later. Here are just a few of their membership cards.

 
 
 
 
 
 

Other bits

A selection of work from other projects

 

80’s soda cans

 

I made a GIF everyday for the first 100 days I lived in New York

 
 
 

My mother’s birthday happens to fall on April 1st (April fools day). So, I decided to photoshop my brother and I into a few of her childhood family photos and see how long it took her to notice

 
 
 

I made my holiday cards into an animation. 32 hand drawn cards, 32 frames

 
 
 

Illustrations

 

Animations

big fan of playing with clay

 
 

Packaging for covid Hoarders

 

Made a Gingerbread house inspired by Aleppo, as you do.