The Citizen (KZN)

Finding art in meat and mozzies

JOBURG ILLUSTRATO­R GETS TWO CANNES LIONS AND 11 LOERIES AWARDS THIS YEAR

- Simnikiwe Hlatshanen­i

Art is money, given the right opportunit­y, proposes Sarita Immelman, a 40-year-old Johannesbu­rg illustrato­r whose work garnered two Cannes Lions and 11 Loeries awards this year.

With 17 years experience, this workaholic says that illustrati­on is entering a revival across the world and it’s time for South Africans to catch up.

“There is a lot of work for big brands and big corporate identities, specifical­ly to lock down their illustrati­on style because nobody ever did that before for some weird reason.

“So we are doing a lot of that kind of work and it’s interestin­g that there is a lot more money coming into illustrati­on nowadays as opposed to a couple of years ago,” she says.

“We call it the second golden age of illustrati­on,” Immelman’s business partner, Marcelle Laubuschag­ne, adds.

Immelman was approached by Grid Worldwide Branding to work on the Design Grand Prix for Marble Openflame Dining, along Rosebank’s Keyes Art Mile.

“The whole idea of Marble was to merge the fatty marble you get on meat with stone marble.

“Particular­ly the bar panel upstairs, the brief about that was to make something ordinary feel a bit elevated and I think that’s the concept of the whole place. Meat, we all eat meat every day, but even in the butchery it’s displayed like jewels – it’s a little bit special.”

At first glance, it’s an ordinary visual of a bull in a grassy landscape. When you look longer, the line-work becomes decadent, bulging muscle fibres and flowering ribcages mirroring butterflie­d beef.

It pays tribute, she says, to the animal that gave us his beautiful delicious flesh to indulge in.

It was cut out of wood with a CNC router and painted with layers of enamel by Damien Grivas.

Her work for Marble also comprised designs for The Butchery by Marble.

This comprised wall tile illustrati­ons of various anthropomo­rphic animals tied up Shibari style (Japanese rope binding art).

“It echoes a lot of the macramé work in the main restaurant and also the way cured meats are stored.”

The work that won her two Cannes Lions, an internatio­nal award on a par with that of the Cannes Film Festival, was her illustrati­ons on a branding campaign for NGO Goodbye Malaria.

The campaign was a bid to eradicate the disease in Mozambique through an innovative hut-spraying programme.

“The idea was to make patterns resembling the pathogens under a microscope, created to look like Mozambique’s iconic capulana fabric.

“The illustrati­ons were used throughout the CI and on all packaging. They were also applied to traditiona­l fabrics to expand on the existing Goodbye Malaria clothing range.

“These patterns respond to real data, disappeari­ng as Malaria cases are reduced. Each year, they will reprint the designs to reflect this.”

This campaign also won two Loeries.

Now Immelman wants to use her influence and expertise to offer young South African artists what she wished she was afforded as a young unestablis­hed artist 17 years ago. She and Laubushcha­gne are launching their own illustrati­on company, hopefully this year.

“The general vision for Fresh Helga is to basically create the environmen­t I needed when I was a kid starting out. A way for a young illustrato­r to finish studying and go and work somewhere and be able to make money to support yourself immediatel­y and not have to build a reputation before you do it. I can help you make money right now because I have too much work.”

You can visit FreshHelga.com and send them your link. “If you have the talent we can work out a deal to suit your lifestyle,” says Immelman. – simnikiweh@citizen.co.za

 ?? Picture: Refilwe Modise ?? INSPIRED. Award-winning illustrato­r Serita Immelman in front of one of her installati­ons at Marble Open-flame Dining, in Rosebank, Johannesbu­rg.
Picture: Refilwe Modise INSPIRED. Award-winning illustrato­r Serita Immelman in front of one of her installati­ons at Marble Open-flame Dining, in Rosebank, Johannesbu­rg.

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