The Design Files Daily

film

Interview – Gavin Youngs and Lily Coates of The Apiary

The Australian Ballet – Health and Lifestyle film by The Apiary.  Music – ‘Bummer’ by Aleks and the Ramps.

Cinematographer Marden Dean with Lily Coates of The Apiary – filming for The Australian Ballet

Gavin works with dancers from The Australian Ballet

I’ve known Gavin Youngs and Lily Coates for a lot longer than I’ve been writing this blog.  I studied with Gavin many moons ago at university – he is truly the most talented multi-disciplinary creative, and used to make the most amazing short films full of rich visual imagery (on the most shoestring budgets!) back in those days.   These days Gavin collaborates with equally talented film maker Lily Coates, and together this industrious pair launched their production company, The Apiary, in 2009.

The Apiary aren’t like any other film production company.  They don’t make TV commercials, and they don’t make corporate videos.  They specialise in films about creatives in various disciplines – fashion designers, musicians, theatre-makers, dancers and visual artists.  Gavin and Lily conceptualise, shoot, direct and edit all their work in house – pulling in skilled collaborators when need be.  They share the roles of director and producer equally.  They’ve carved out their own perfect niche in the world of independent film making – creating exquisite morsels of filmic beauty, commissioned by cultural and arts organisations including The Australian Ballet, Arts Victoria and SBS’s subscription channel STVDIO.

In less than three years, Gavin and Lily have already established a stellar reputation in Melbourne for their unique documentary work.   They’re jetting off next week to shoot a series of commissioned films about Australian artists living overseas. I have a feeling we’ll be hearing a lot more about this dynamic duo… watch this space!

DO support this talented pair by checking out The Apiary website and Vimeo channel to view more of their beautiful work! Truly stunning stuff.

*Many thanks to The Australian Ballet for supplying many of the behind-the-scenes shots for today’s post – they asked me to mention that Aus Ballet season packages for 2012 are  available now!

Tell us a little about your backgrounds – what path led each of you to working in film, and to setting up The Apiary together?

LC : We both came to filmmaking almost accidentally – Gavin had come from a theatre background and I was doing design and illustration when we started at VCA Film & TV. We both wanted to be production designers and then through that realised that we wanted to tell stories as well as making beautiful images.

GY : And be very controlling in how those stories looked visually.  VCA was a bit of an endless film camp. We bonded over a shared distaste for the tech-boy speak that populates a lot of film circles, and also over the many late nights spent converting our student homes into film sets, trawling hard rubbish, visting kinkos at 2am to print out make-shift wallpaper… A lot of big ideas with no money.

Gavin and Lily on location

What were your initial goals when launching The Apiary in 2009 ? Did you sit down and make a plan for the type of work you wanted to do? Or have things unfolded a little more organically?

LC : We came back together after a few years working strange and sometimes unpleasant jobs, and we had this idea that we’d create a collective of creative people making the sort of work we really wanted to make – conceptual films, collaborative work with musicians and artists – it was a bit of a utopian fantasy actually, but it kind of ended up happening, in a round about way.

We did some gratis work for The Australian Ballet and immediately fell in love with the company and its dancers – and the contrast between the serious requirements of this very old-fashioned art form, and the freakishly modern work the dancers were doing at the time with Wayne McGregor, and fortunately they asked us to keep working with them from there.

GY : From working with The Australian Ballet so many other opportunites have arrived. We toured with the company to Japan last year and we have started to move into creating visual work for the company on-stage which is super exciting. After having made a doco on emerging choreographer Alice Topp last year, we worked together again this year and made a ten minute film that was integrated into her latest piece – Scope, at the Sydney Theatre in May. So this has opened up a new bridge between our doco work and theatrical projects, which we are really excited about.

The Apiary made these beautiful video projections which were integrated on stage with choreographer Alice Topp’s work Scope, performed at the Sydney Theatre in May this year.  These stills by Stefan Duscio.

LC : So from working with dance we started to make films on other artists. First with STVDIO, a series on the studios of artists from all disciplines, and more recently a series of web docos profiling Victorian Artists for Arts Victoria.

Gerald Murnane’s Studio – film by The Apiary, produced for STVDIO

The Apiary fills a unique niche within the Melbourne film making community – you focus on independent films about artists and creative people, and have been commissioned by leading cultural organisations including The Australian Ballet, Arts Victoria and the NGV. You seem to successfully avoid making overly commercial work – TVCs or corporates, for instance. Is this a conscious decision? Would you take on a less creative film project if the money was AMAZING!?

LC : To have a job making films with people who are creative and who excite us is pretty special, and it’s unusual I think to make a business of it. It’s obviously been a decision we’ve made to focus on making things that we would want to watch. So… if an AMAZING client came along offering us AMAZING money and asked us to work on something that we felt we could make visually interesting or clever or striking – we’d certainly not tell them to go away!

GY : We work pretty crazy hours, so it’s not so much only wanting to make films about art as realising that if we’re going to be channeling all our crazy energies into something, it should be something we care about.

Stillframes from a film covering design/sculpture partnership Korban/Flaubert.  See the film here.  Commissioned by STVDIO.

Can you give us a bit of an idea of how your creative partnership is structured? Who is responsible for which tasks, and what significant tasks do you outsource to keep everything running smoothly?

GY : Its pretty much 50/50. We do have different styles and approaches and in some of our work you can see it evenly divided, while other times it might tip closer to one end. I do admit I like a good excel spreadsheet so sometimes I do the numbers.

LC : Gavin always does the numbers. Sometimes I think he does them before sleep in lieu of bedtime stories. Though we both direct, and interview, write and film and edit, I prefer shooting. Editing, I’m very finicky and obsessed with detail and I often envy Gavin’s ability to see a project’s ‘big picture’ while I’m ferreting away in the undergrowth. So to speak.

GY : We also have a very talented animator/editor, Aleks, who works with us on projects that require that additional shazam and we also occasionally use a super cinematographers to get the real beauty beauty such as Marden Dean or Stefan Duscio.

LC : Music also is very important to our work. The one thing we have no hope in achieving ourselves is real, beautiful music and we are so fortunate to have found our amazing composer Lisa Illean before Michael Haneke snatched her up.

GY : Yeah that’s something I’m really proud of is that we always use originally composed music in our work.

Which other designers, artists or creative people do you admire?

Theatre maker Romeo Castellucci (amazing)

Conceptual artist Julie Rrap

Visual artist Michael Borremans

Composer Jonny Greenwood

Art Director Nagi Noda (sadly deceased)

Actor and forever muse Isabelle Huppert

Can you each list for us your current top 5 go-to resources for creative inspiration across any media – websites, books, magazines, a combination?

GY

http://ffffound.com/

Metropolis Bookshop

http://videos.antville.org/

Alejandro Jodrowsky collection of work

Polyester Records

LC

http://ffffound.com/

http://bookcoverarchive.com/

The sadly defunct Art World

Fantastic Man

GZA

What does a typical day involve for you?

GY : Hmm there isn’t really a typical day — editing, filming, editing, importing, meetings, writing, sourcing, encoding, grading, editing.. something like that… but in saying that, we have a lovely studio in an old converted school library that’s filled with light in which to do all that editing, editing.

LC : For instance yesterday was made up of filling a photography studio with cabbage, gravel, pineapple rings, dry ice and perfectly plucked clovers on which our model lay – We were shooting a fashion film with Annika Seidel who is launching a new lingerie line Light Years very soon.

The Apiary on set earlier this week, making a fashion film with Annika Seidel for her new lingerie line Light Years

Stillframes from The Apiary’s new fashion film with Annika Seidel

Lily sees stripes on set this week, making their fashion film with Annika Seidel

What would be your dream creative project?

LC : I’m getting a bit itchy to make a written film as opposed to a documentary, but not necessarily a conventional narrative. It would be a dream to collaborate with some of those artists I really admire on a non-doco film.

GY : I’m excited to do something event/installation based that involves film but also live performance. I am also looking to further explore dance on film – I recently saw Pina by Wim Wenders which was amazing.

What are you looking forward to ?

GY : We are off to Europe for a few months next week making some documentaries on expat Australian artists living and working in Europe. Exciting! We are making the series of 5 works for STVDIO across three European cities.

LC : We’ve also got two exciting on-stage commissions with The Australian Ballet next year, one of which will debut at the Lincoln Center in New York, which is terrifying and a great challenge.

We Love Japan : The Australian Ballet in Tokyo – Part one of a three part film series by The Apiary, following The Australian Ballet’s 2010 tour of Japan. Music by Lisa Illean & Alex Badham.

Melbourne Questions –

Your favourite Melbourne neighbourhood and why?

GY : I’ve just moved from Collingwood to East Brunswick so I guess I still love Collingwood

LC : Collingwood for me too. It’s kind of love hate, which makes it feel familial. We’ve recently moved to a studio in the old Sophia Mundi school in Abbotsford (Schoolhouse Studios) and it’s very beautiful around there, all leafy backstreets and piles of produce and aneurysm-level café sua da on Victoria St, so that’s a lovely place too.

A favourite location you’ve filmed at in Melbourne?

LC : Studio 7 & 8 at The Australian Ballet Centre.  It could be a case of brainwashing due to the immersion of the past two years… but so much beauty is in that room. And sweat, and control, and intellect and dedication to an art form that I haven’t witnessed on that level before. And the light is lovely for filming.

What and where was the last great meal you ate in Melbourne?

LC : Beef pho at Pho Hung Vuong 2 on Victoria Street.

GY : The weekend CIBI breakfast plate yum yum

Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?

GY : Coburg tip shop (perfect for finding gem furniture and treasures). I actually also went there on my last birthday because I love it so much.

LC : Still in my dressing gown drinking coffee on the balcony otherwise I’d be on my way to the studio.

Melbourne’s best kept secret?

GY : Daiso for Japan memories

Gavin shoots The Australian Ballet in Japan


Greenhouse by Joost – The Design Files first ever FILM!

Greenhouse by Joost film

It is a little known fact that I actually studied film making many moons ago at uni.  But in the 10 years that have passed since then I completely forgot how much freaking effort it is to make a short film.  Agh!  It is a LOT of work and also requires a vast amount of help and favours and the kindness of strangers (and independent musicians).  THANKYOU YOU KNOW WHO YOU ARE!

ANYWAY.  How exciting!  This is the first ever Design Files film!  It is just 5 mins long and documents the fantabulous GREENHOUSE BY JOOST sustainable restaurant currently in the best location money can’t buy on the foreshore at Sydney Harbour (it’s still there for just a few more weeks!)

If you have any trouble viewing the film, or would like to watch it a bit BIGGER, pop over to view it on Vimeo.

Please watch it! Also please forward it on to help spread word of the Greenhouse, because Joost truly is one hell of an inspiring guy and you know, he’s not bad looking either.

Nick Lovell and Eli Wolfe kindly gave permission for us to use their music in the film  – please show your support by visiting their websites!

Tali Gal-on + illustration giveaway!

Quirky characters by Melbourne animator / illustrator Tali Gal-on

Character studies for Tali’s award-winning animated film ‘Lucille’

Lucille from Tali on Vimeo.

Melbourne-based Tali Gal-on is a web designer, animator and super talented illustrator.  She originally studied multimedia – which led her intially to web design, but after a number of years working in this field she went back to uni to pursue a passion for animation at the VCA.   Here she made two fantastic little animated films – ‘Lucille’ and ‘Crooked’ – both of which went on to screen at festivals both here and abroad.  ‘Lucille’ was even nominated for a swag of awards, including Best Animation at the Sydney Film Festival.  Tali’s  husband Matt is a Musician, and makes all the music for her films – ‘it’s rather convenient having a muso in the house… I’m sure he feels the same about me when he needs a new album cover!’ says Tali!

I love Tali’s naive illustration style, and her quirky characters!  Each really does seem to have it’s own unique personality…. my fave is her 3-eyed, mint-flavoured ‘Octogirl’ above – she is awesome!

Tali is pretty busy right now!  She’s currently working part time as a designer / animator at ABC Kids, writing a script for a new animated film, doing some freelance illustration, and has also has recently launched an Etsy shop!  Her shop, called ‘Milk and Cookies’, sells her super cute illustrated prints, greeting cards, and also a gorgeous calendar she has made for 2011.  I really think you need to snap up some of her artwork NOW, because when Tali is the next Tim Burton, I’m guessing she won’t have an Etsy shop anymore, and you will have totally missed your chance :)

Tali has kindly offered one lucky Design Files readers a gorgeous giveaway pack of  illustrated goodies!  The winner will receive a Tali Gal-on print of their choosing, one of her 2011 calendars , and a giftcard 3-pack.

To be in the running, please leave a little comment here today!  The winner will be selected at random and contacted by email tomorrow.  If you subscribe to these posts by email, please don’t reply by email, just pop over to thedesignfiles.net and leave your comment over there!

And don’t forget to Visit Tali’s online shop, folio site and blog to learn a little more about her work!

2011 Calendar by Tali Gal-on

2011 Calendar by Tali Gal-on

Interview – Narelle Sheean

Narelle Sheean documents a Sudanese beauty pageant in suburban Melbourne




I met photographer Narelle Sheean on the last TV series I worked on. We came across each other on set in between takes – I’d be carting some furniture around or tidying up a set, and she’d be lurking behind the camera, poised for the perfect shot of the actors or crew in action. Can’t remember exactly how it came about, but at lunch one day we got chatting and I mentioned the blog… so it was only a matter of time before Narelle made an appearance here!

Narelle’s folio is fantastically diverse – as with many emerging photographers, her spectrum of work is extremely broad, covering film stills to travel shots and wedding photography. She’s been to more weddings than anyone I know(!), but this part of the job doesn’t faze her – she welcomes each new challenge enthusiastically, and says wedding photography has taught her so much about photographing people and emotion, and about the importance of always being ready!

I think my favourite shots (although its so hard to choose!) are the series she took earlier this year documenting a Sudanese beauty pageant in suburban Melbourne (images above).

Thanks so much for your time and for sharing your beautiful work with us Narelle!

film still

Tell me a little about your background – what did you study and what path led you to what you’re doing now?

I grew up watching my brothers draw, paint, make little movies and stop animations.
They influenced me a lot to keep myself amused by being creative.

After doing photography at high school, I did work experience with HWT, Australian Geographic, JWT, photography studios and design agencies. I found it really interesting to have insight on what it is like to have a creative job.

I studied Media at Deakin Uni, which included Photography and Film. At the same time I started doing stills for my brother’s short films and loved being on set watching the DOP’s.

film still

Your work is really varied – from wedding photography to travel photography and film stills. Do you enjoy this variety, or would you prefer to focus on one particular area of expertise?

The most attractive thing about photography for me is its diversity. I really enjoy the variety. This year I have photographed Jewellery, Sudanese beauty pageants, Dating game shows and funerals…You just don’t know what’s next.

I’ve learnt so much from shooting weddings. The lighting conditions and emotions are going up and down and you just have to be ready.

I’d definitely like to do more commercial work, film stills and travel pics.


candid wedding shots

Working for yourself can be really difficult for creative people. What are the challenges you have faced working for yourself – do you struggle with the business side of things, for motivation to get started on a project, or marketing yourself? Do you collaborate with other creatives?

I guess I’m pretty lucky; I do work by myself a lot but have a really great network of other photographers. Mainly people I have assisted on other shoots. They pass on jobs that they can’t do and I try to do the same for them.

I struggle with keeping receipts, tax etc the book work is really boring. I’d like to more collaborative work for sure. Unfortunately it tends to get pushed aside when paid work comes up.

Which photographers, artists or creative people are you inspired by?

Gregory Crewdson, Loretta Lux, Lee Dongwook, Erwin Olaf.

film still

Where else do you find inspiration (books, particular magazines, the net, everyday life?)

The net, magazines and everyday life.

Just keeping a look out for things that catch you eye and then think – why am I looking? Why is that interesting?


What does a typical day at work involve for you?

Battery charge and gear check the day before. Well it’s always a bit different… I may set up a backdrop and lights or be in a studio.

Come home to download Raws and start the culling process.

travel photography

What’s the best thing about your job?

Being my own boss.

And the worst?

Invoicing and waiting to be paid.

What would be your dream project?

Making a film set for a stills project.

film still

What are you looking forward to – professionally or personally?

Buying my own place with a little studio.

Melbourne Questions –

Where is the best gallery in Melbourne to see the work of emerging Australian photographers?

CCP in Fitzroy.

What/where was the last great meal you ate in Melbourne?

Kilim Turkish Restaurant on Victoria Street, Richmond.

Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?

Sleeping

romance!

Stefan Sagmeister – Things I have Learned in My Life So Far




Images from the Hillman Curtis film which documents Stefan Sagmeister’s exhibition in New York
(that ‘Self Confidence’ billboard is made up entirely of bananas!)

Stefan Sagmeister is a supremely talented designer, whose work blurs the distinctions between art and design. He also seems like an incredibly humble, thoughtful and generally nice guy. His ongoing project ‘Things I have learned in my life so far’ is such a simple, powerful idea. In its simplest form, its been described as a ‘typographic project’… but its become more than that.

Stefan’s design studio in New York have transformed these simple sentences into typographic works, from billboards in France to sign-toting inflatable monkeys on the streets of Scotland. People from all walks of life have also contributed their lessons learned on the website. It seems these simple truths have resonated with many, and have in some ways taken on a life of their own.

A reader sent me a link to this amazing little film by Hillman Curtis, which follows the set-up of Stefan’s exhibition in Soho New York, as part of this ongoing project.

There’s something incredible about this little film. The universality and sheer simplicity of Stefan’s life lessons? Stefan’s delicate voice-over, that sounds somehow like the voice of an old friend? Or is it the glimpses of New York reflected in the gallery windows?

They seem elementary, but there’s something in the re-telling these age-old lessons that gives them more meaning…

Worrying solves nothing
Self confidence produces fine results
Helping other people helps me
Having guts always works out for me
Starting a charity is surprisingly easy
Being not truthful always works against me
Everything I do always comes back to me
Money does not make me happy
Trying to look good limits my life

Such lovely ideas to start your week…!

watch the film here
buy the book here


Interview – Matt Wilson

Vision City TVC

Nokia TVC

Jean Yip TVC

Matt Wilson is a Melbourne based freelance film director. He’s highly regarded in ad agency land – he’s worked for many prestigious clients here and internationally… big names like Coke, Pepsi, McDonalds and Nokia, to name a few. His work has taken him to all the corners of the globe – from Melbourne to Mexico, Egypt, America, India, China… the list goes on!

The standout feature of Matt’s work is its unmistakable visual appeal. His creative vision is clear and uncompromising – from the production design, through to the cinematography and final effects in each of his projects. His trademark, though, seems to be his masterful weaving of motion graphics and type into his films. These superimposed elements are seamlessly intertwined with the live action footage, in a way that is rare in TV commercials these days. The result is delicate and thoughtful… not brash and full of branding!

His website is really worth a look… be sure to check out his reel, but also take a look at his photos… beautiful stuff.

BUT before you do that… read his interview! He gives a candid insight into his creative process, his inspirations and the development of his personal style. Also – nice to know coffee making does lead to success in the end!

Thanks Matt!

Tell me a little about your background – what did you study and what path led you to what you’re doing now?

I studied Graphic Design/Photography at Monash then went immediately into a small film production company; it all grew from there….from coffee maker to tvc director! I never formally practiced graphic design but I have kept an interest in design and photography and that’s constantly influenced my work.

What are some of your projects/clients that we might be familiar with?

Projects you might recall here in Australia are Kayser, HWT, Kit Kat, Nutri Grain, Big M, Melbourne Central and Greenpower. Over the years I’ve shot for most of the big advertising agencies in many different countries. The clients you would know are Coke, HBA, Nestle, M&M’s, Kellogg’s, McDonalds, Toshiba, Pepsi, Nokia, VB, Corona, Mazda, Hewlett Packard and Heineken.

How do you approach a brief – what process do you go through when coming up with your initial treatment?

My approach varies a little based on how I am briefed and what style of film it’s proposed to be. Sometimes a brief is restrictive and sometimes it more open, same for all of us I guess?

I receive briefs as scripts, usually including an agency storyboard and sometimes with some other reference. I only write up a treatment after I have spoken with the creative team, it’s a way I can learn what their creative vision is, and what they have gone through to get to this point. I listen to the verbal brief and I’m able to ask questions and get deeper explanations.

I use a notebook everyday and I start a treatment by writing and drawing up my ideas, also importantly I create my own storyboard. I just go for it at this point, it’s stream of conscious, scribbles, hunting and gathering, chopping things up, tearing things out, very organic. Then I simply cross out the dud ideas or leads and circle the things I like and begin to refine them.

I find the time consuming part of doing a treatment is sourcing and creating visual reference. I try to avoid showing the work of others as reference. I prefer to combine things together to illustrate the mood I’m after. In SFX jobs it’s a bit different, I really enjoy piecing the puzzle together so we can get (shoot) the best with a finite budget. Stuff like the possibility of shooting two scenes at one place to avoid moving the crew, and little tricks of the trade. Also stuff like, should I shoot everything in-camera on location or maybe a combination of 3D and in-camera etc. It’s in SFX jobs where my version of the storyboard and matching shot list can become very, very detailed.

My final document with images is written up in Pages and sent out as a PDF.

Your work has a very stylised design aesthetic – how much freedom do you have when determining the ‘look’ of your commercial work? And what factors do you think have determined your style over the years?

I have quite a lot of freedom creating a “look” because this is what my clients are looking for from me; they are not looking for someone weeping after an auto accident, that’s for a different director. I’m the “give me a look” director!

What’s determined my style is my ongoing interest in design and my ability to combine on set experience and knowledge with what can be done in postproduction. When a job calls for graphics I have been very fortunate to collaborate with fantastic designers, I can talk “design-speak” with my team.

One of the recognisable features of a lot of your work is a really interesting use of superimposed text and motion graphics… how do you design these graphic elements? Do you have a clear idea of how these effects will look before shooting, and if so, how does this effect the production design and composition of the shot on shoot day?

Yes I’ll certainly go into a shoot with a very clear idea and I know the capabilities of what can be done in post. It all starts with a pen and paper and the pen and paper method continues throughout each project. When a client needs instant explanation I’ll flip open my book, sit beside them, draw and explain.

I’ll design and suggest a style once I’m comfortable with the overall personality of the project – is it to be bold aggressive type, delicate, fast or slow etc. This appears in my treatment, usually on still images.

When I am into pre-production I lay graphics on the stills I take at the chosen locations (I may have presented with stills from my collection), or ideally I have the designer I’m working with take over and create a test design and animation also over a still image. This way we know how much negative space we’ll use for type and decorative elements, get a feel for texture and importantly how much screen time is required.

Are there any particular designers, artists or creative people you look up to or are inspired by?

There are so many inspiring people! This week it’s Tomokazu Matsuyama, Thomas Campbell, Robert Frank, Guillermo del Toro, Lee Friedlander, Stephen Shore, Bill Henson, Daido Moriyama, William Eggleston, Ed Ruscha, Eugenio Recuenco, Psyop, Shilo, Stardust, Imaginary Forces, David Lynch, Michel Gondry, Steven Soderbergh, Wilco, Devo, The Editors….

Are there any jobs you would turn down?

I’ve knocked back cigarette commercials.

What does a typical day at work involve for you?

There’s no typical day but they all start with coffee.

What are you most proud of professionally?

That I still have ideas flowing and that I’ve successfully collaborated with people from other cultures and passed on knowledge. Also I have evolved as our industry changes and won a few awards along the way. One week I’m proud of a certain job, the next week I’ll hate it!

Where do you find inspiration?

From my son Curtis, wife Joy, from friends, from surfing and music. I find inspiration when I relax, when I take away the pressure of “got to think up something cool right now”. If I distract myself something materialises!

What’s the best thing about your job?

It’s spontaneous. New ideas and ways of thinking, variety, interesting people, travel and when I receive genuine positive acknowledgement and thanks for my work.

And the worst?

Disappointment, exploitation and misinformation.

What would be your dream project?

A sci-fi film or a Radiohead music video.

What are you looking forward to – professionally or personally?

Learning and moving forward, working again with some of the people I have become friends with and enjoy collaborating with.

What’s on your ‘to do’ list this week?

I’m in pre production for a 2 day shoot, I’m working on a number of treatments, I’m helping a photographer with some shots, I have a location survey, my website and reel update is in progress and to see Died Pretty and drink beer.

Melbourne Questions

What/where was the last great meal you ate in Melbourne?

Capellini at Blue Tongue.

Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?

Surfing early, then taking my son Curtis to Taekwondo.

Melbourne’s best kept secret?

Albert Park Bookshop.

Related Posts with Thumbnails