Amy Fieldmouse: Intro Post + Comic

Hi all! This is my first comic for Arts Ink, about one of the things I’m studying this year. I am a 4th-year BFA student in Stamps, but I am also interested in languages! Amy Fieldmouse is my pen name/not-so-secret identity, and I draw fictionalized comics about things that happen in my day to day (like this). You can find more of my work at my website amyfieldmouse.com, or on instagram at @amyfieldmouse. I’ve been keeping a daily comic diary since for about 5 years, which I use to explore new ideas and experiment with my style a lot, so my comics tend to have a lot of variety! I hope you all like this one,  xin cháo to anyone reading who speaks or is studying Vietnamese! (Teach me something in the comments please! My knowledge is very small but I love the language so much!)

Cheers!

Art and Activism: Shannon Zheng

Shannon Zheng is a sophomore at the University of Michigan studying Art & Design and Philosophy. She grew up in the San Francisco Bay area, a hub known for its creative culture. However, Shannon says that “the high school I went to was not diverse, and other high schools around me were really competitive, so that influences the depressing themes in my art. That environment pushed me.” In addition to exploring goriness, the grotesque, and the “dark side of everyday experiences,” she also makes work about activist causes. She says, “I care a lot about animals and justice in general. I’m always ready to fight.”

Additionally, Shannon’s open-minded view of art encourages her to explore new mediums and themes, like watercolor, ink, and digital illustration. To her, art is constantly changing. “Art is anything that effectively evokes some kind of visceral reaction, and new art broadens my perspectives.” She also spent hours of her childhood poring over different books, such as Roald Dahl stories illustrated by Quentin Blake, whose sense of whimsy and playfulness left an impression on Shannon. Other illustrators like Molly Crabapple, who focuses on justice for communities such as immigrants and sex workers, inspire Shannon as well. “I think she has an interesting style that combines well with journalism.”

One of Shannon’s favorite works is a mixed media painting titled In a Pickle, Out of a Jam. Painted in her senior year of high school, she explains that it is a self portrait that expresses her uncomfortable emotions. Shannon says, “I felt like a pickle–isolated and alone. But I’m still growing into that artistic persona.”

In the future, Shannon sees herself as some kind of illustrator or perhaps going into academia and becoming a professor. But, she boldly states, “I hate kids.”

Clearly, Shannon is a talented and multi-faceted artist intrigued by the complexities of life. I can’t wait to see where her work goes next. Shannon’s Instagram!

Crossroads

 

In a Pickle, Out of a Jam

 

Felis Flytrap

 

Felis Flytrap page 1
Felis Flytrap page 2

 

“what is art?” Post #5 – Lauren Kuzee Audio Interview

Lauren Kuzee is a sophomore studying Art & Design, as well as programs in the environment. She aspires to work in the field and to combine her love for art and the environment to make people more aware of the current world environmental issues. Take a listen to Lauren discussing her projects, the classes she has enjoyed taking in the past year and a half through LSA and Stamps, how she chose her majors, and her thoughts on what art is.

Instagram: @larunkuz

 

The Books of Hatcher Library

Walk the stacks of Hatcher,

all the history it contains

Up and down the hallways, 

marvel at what remains

 

Centuries worth of books,

all sitting there in dust

Many of them never picked,

thankfully cannot rust

 

Their wordsmiths have come and gone,

the books as ever young

Their words sit upon these musty shelves,

their contents remain unsung

 

We talk and talk and hope one is listening,

to know that we exist

Like us, these books want to be heard,

it is our eyes that they have missed

 

Close your eyes and pick a book,

leave your texts unsent

The books are celebrating your arrival,

they appreciate the time spent

 

Read the book in an open field,

where flowers are so merry

Where the sun shines upon its spine,

where it isn’t a dark library

 

Walk the stacks of Hatcher

 when you have some time to spare

The books yearn to be opened, 

they wish to feel the sweet summer air

The Poetry Snapshot: Power of Words

Billion of words, glistening in a void.

Toronto, Canada 

All these words shine on their own,
but we string them together into
magnificent constellations to share stories.

Some words are powerful suns
that can bring light to a dark life-
or burn a life down to ashes.

Other words shoot out of us in the moment,
they fulfill spontaneous wishes or cause regret.

People never forget words.

At the end of the day, without fail,
words shine brilliantly
and remind people that we will
forever live under them.