#carll cneut
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kundst · 6 months ago
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Carll Cneut (Be 1969)
Drawing in book “O Pinokkio”
Imme Dros / Carll Cneut
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robinhcneysuckle · 2 years ago
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study of an eye from an illustration by carll cneut, and two personal interpretations inspired by the magnus archives
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blushingcheekymonkey · 7 years ago
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carll cneut
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ilverde · 8 years ago
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carll cneut
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paranatellonta · 8 years ago
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The painter's secret
They all stood around him, waiting. Staring at his hands. A lesser man's fingers would have trembled, but he went through the motions as he did every day: squeezing out the blobs of paint, taking a piece of paper, a brush. He started explaining what he was doing. The secret was really simple, he said. There wouldn't be some magical moment.
The spectators glanced at each other. Did he really believe that this wasn't magic? One moment he had dropped small blots of colour in seemingly random places on the page; the next, the face of a new character was looking at them, complete with shadows, depth and emotions.
However closely they studied his dance of brush and paint, the tricks with which he reshaped reality kept eluding them.
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Starring a painting by the real Carll Cneut!
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uriello-bello · 3 years ago
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[Part 3.zip] My current obsession are the illustrators for children’s picture books who are clearly capable of performing and make detailed illustration with a sapient use of the Munsell color system
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Il Vermo (Peppo Bianchessi) The Badger's Birthday (Carll Cneut) Midi Pili (Rebecca Dautremer) The Rainbow Goblins (Ul De Rico) The Apartment (Anna Desnitskaya) Cabinet De Curiosites(Jeanne Detallante) Miss Galassia (Luci Gutiérrez) Et Puis (Icinori) Michi (Junaida) Pierre the Maze Detective (Hiro Kamigaki) One of a Kind: A Story About Sorting and Classifing (Neil Packer) Haunted House (Jan Pienkowski) History of Science Fiction (Ward Shelley) The Ultimate Alphabet (Mike Wilks) It Might be an Apple (Shinsuke Yoshitake)
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campsis · 6 years ago
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Witchfairy by Brigitte Minne and Carll Cneut
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theadriananobrega · 4 years ago
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AULA 1 
Tiago Manuel - Max Tilmann ; Tamayo Marin ; Terry Morgan
Heimich Huffmam - Pedro Esgroviado; Struwelhitler
Jacques Tati - O papagaio de Monsieur Hulot
Mattotti - Estigmas
Carll Cneut - O senhor Ferdinand; António
Richard Zimler - O cão que comia a chuva
Luís Scafati - A metamorfose de Franz Kafka
Lisbeth Zwerger - Alice no Pais das Maravilhas; O feiticeiro de OZ
Daniel Silvestre Silva - Amanhã rebatarei uma besta
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pinkstarlightcomputer · 7 years ago
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Carll Cneut
Google
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ultrajumpinthings · 7 years ago
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Geert De Cockere, Carll Cneut - Greta la Matta  
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sneevish · 5 years ago
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As she flew by, Rosemary emptied a bucket of berry juice over their heads. “What a naughty witch,’” the others said with a sigh. “She could teach us a thing or two.” From “Witchfairy” by Brigitte Minne and Carll Cneut. . #bookisland #witchfairy #brigitteminne #carllcneut #picturebookillustration #kidlit https://www.instagram.com/p/B8RXmgOnxxl/?igshid=15yy6yvdh7thh
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seaweedsoup · 7 years ago
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Interview with Carll Cneut, illustrator of 'Witchfairy'
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juftillydeweidewereld · 5 years ago
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'Gekke vogels in de herfst'
Geïnspireerd door Carll Cneut
Uitgevoerd door de leerlingen van klas 6A en 6B
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blushingcheekymonkey · 7 years ago
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carll cneut
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andresollie2019 · 6 years ago
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Expo André Sollie
André Sollie – illustrator, schrijver, dichter en mooie mens tout court – wordt gehuldigd met een tentoonstelling van zijn werk. 
‘André Sollie is zonder enige twijfel de peetvader van de Vlaamse illustratie. Zijn invloed is nauwelijks te overschatten. We mogen het werk van André Sollie nooit vergeten’, aldus de meester-illustrator Carll Cneut.
Sollie heeft wel meer illustratoren wakker gekust die daarna tot grote hoogte zijn gestegen en verdient dus een hommage. Het ijzelt in juni is een rond Sollies prachtige prentenboeken opgebouwde tentoonstelling, die tegelijkertijd een glimp laat zien van de grote rijkdom, variëteit en spanwijdte van zijn oeuvre.
Aangezien de illustrator in de aan het park grenzende Unitaslaan woont is het met enige verbeelding een tentoonstelling in de tuin van André Sollie.
‘Het ijzelt in juni’ loopt van 19 mei tot en met 16 juni in de Pagode van het Boekenbergpark. De expo is elke dag geopend van 12u tot 18u voor publiek, scholen en academies. 
De expo is een initiatief van Rietepetite en is mogelijk dankzij de steun van het VFL, IJsberg vzw en District Deurne.
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picturebookmakers · 7 years ago
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Carll Cneut
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In this post, Carll talks about the creation of ‘De Gouden Kooi’ (The Golden Cage), and shares lots of stunning illustrations and work in progress. This equisite picturebook was written by Anna Castagnoli and is published in Belgium by De Eenhoorn.
Visit Carll Cneut’s Facebook page Visit Carll Cneut’s Instagram page
Carll: I met Anna Castagnoli many years ago in Italy. Shortly after our first meeting, Anna wrote to me saying she had written this story about a princess. I can’t say I was immediately enthusiastic on hearing it was about a princess. But when I read the first line, I was already smitten with it...
The daughter of the emperor was called Valentina. She was unbearable.
The full title of the book is: ‘The Golden Cage: The True Story of The Blood Princess’.
Valentina, daughter of the emperor, is a spoiled brat, who loves and collects birds in the gardens of the palace. For her tenth birthday, she receives a golden cage from her father, and she decides she wants a talking bird to put in it. So lots of servants are sent off to all corners of the world, searching for a talking bird. But all they find are parrots who can only repeat. Days, weeks and months go by and the golden cage remains empty.
Until one day, a handsome young servant with blue eyes arrives at the palace...
And that’s all I can say!
Anna’s story has everything of a classic fairy tale.
To start with, I sat down and sketched, and made endless dummies of the book until I got everything as I felt it should be. Then I painted for months and months. I painted from dark to light, the opposite of what is usually done. I picked that up from painters like Anthony van Dyck in his Italian period. It is painstakingly slow as a process. For example, to paint a yellow plume (every plume is painted separately), first I paint the plume dark brown. On top of that goes a layer of dark red, then a layer of bright red. Then orange. Then dark yellow, mid yellow, yellow, light yellow... I paint with acrylics.
Sometimes I curse myself for working with this process!
Parts of the images in this book are left unfinished, and show my pencil drawings underneath. Being used to always completing every detail, this was a hard thing for me to do. I was doubting it, so I put an image on Facebook and got an awful lot of ‘don’t touch it anymore’ reactions. I tried to be brave and keep unfinished parts throughout the book. But throughout the whole process, I had this little voice in my head questioning: shouldn’t you finish every detail?
I have always felt that a picture book is an object to be used. An object which has a function and is not just a collection of words and accompanying images. So, every detail is important. The rhythm of the story, the turning of the pages, how the paper feels, the size of the book, and so on. I think a lot about all this before starting a book. So by the time I start work on a project, I usually have a defined idea of how the book should look, feel, and be designed.
Once the project is finished, I sit down with the graphic designer and we design the book together, search for the right paper, etc. Actually, I was originally a graphic designer who never meant to become an illustrator!
With ‘The Golden Cage’, I knew what the book had to look like right away. It had to be big, and there had to be handwriting in it. (I did the handwriting in most language editions of this book.)
For years, I had wanted to do some kind of graphic activity book. When getting so into painting birds it just struck me that this was a good opportunity to make an activity book alongside ‘The Golden Cage’, using the same graphic design to create some visual unity between the two of them. But of course, both books can be read or used separately.
After ‘The Golden Cage’, I made another picture book with De Eenhoorn called ‘Witchfairy’, written by Brigitte Minne. It is actually a story I illustrated at the very start of my career. And so, many years later, I decided to illustrate it again. Same story. New illustrations. New book!
It will be published in English by Book Island in October 2017.
My main publisher, De Eenhoorn, has always given me an immense freedom. I have been working with them for many years, since their early days, so there is a complete trust between us. We both know we are trying to make the best book we can make at that very moment. And we both have the same vision of books and publishing. So they give me all the freedom I need.
At the moment, I am starting work on a book with Dutch writer, Toon Tellegen. One of my long-time heroes. Exciting but also a bit scary. And I am preparing a big exhibition of illustrations in France, in Moulins, and also a show at an art gallery here in Belgium.
Alongside the books and exhibitions, I have taught illustration for many years at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts (KASK) in Ghent. Something I try to teach my students is that you should always try to safeguard your authenticity. I realise this is not always easy. But I believe it is imperative if you want a long career.
Illustrations © Carll Cneut. Post edited by dPICTUS.
Buy this picturebook
De Gouden Kooi / The Golden Cage
Anna Castagnoli & Carll Cneut
De Eenhoorn, Belgium, 2015
Valentina, the spoiled daughter of the emperor, loved birds very much. In the garden there were hundreds of cages with beautiful species. But Valentina wanted a special bird: one which she could talk with. Many servants died during their dangerous quest for this bird. And when they dared to come back empty-handed, or with a wrong bird, Valentina, the ‘blood princess’, had them beheaded. Until one day, a handsome servant comes to the palace gate...
Winner of a White Ravens Award.
Dutch: De Eenhoorn
French: Pastel
Italian: Topipittori
German: Bohem Verlag
Spanish: Barbara Fiore Editora
Polish: Wydawnictwo Dwie Siostry
Chinese (Simplified): Petrel Publishing House
Preorder the English edition
Heksenfee / Witchfairy
Brigitte Minne & Carll Cneut
De Eenhoorn, Belgium, 2016
Rosemary is bored of being a fairy. She’d much rather be a witch. Much to the disapproval of her mother, she takes off to spend time with the witches in the dark wood. Rosemary thoroughly enjoys her new life as a witch but eventually decides to take the best of both worlds and becomes a witchfairy.
Dutch: De Eenhoorn
English: Book Island
French: Pastel
Italian: Topipittori
German: Bohem Verlag
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