I’m delighted to share the newest header picture for the Brown Paper Bag. Colleen Tighe, a Brooklyn-based illustrator, has created this gorgeous illustration of girls playing with marbles. I love the texture and subtle nature of the image.
Leran more about Colleen and the illustration below. As always, the work is for sale in the Brown Paper Bag shop as a 4″ x 6″ print — perfect for framing! Grab one before they’re all gone.
Location: Brooklyn, NY
Website: www.colleentigheart.com
What was your dream job when you were 7 years old? I wanted to be an artist, novelist, and vet. I’m at least one of those, and I live with someone else’s dog, so 1.2/3 isn’t bad.
Your profession now: Hopeful illustrator and a customer service email robot on the side
What’s your favorite thing to draw? Oh hm, I’ve always had a thing with hair, I love drawing hair, and I like drawing simple repetitive patterns on things. I’ll end up doodling little flowers and leaves over everything.
How did you create your illustration? Was it any different than your regular process? No different than my usual process. I do a sort of photoshop collage now, where I’ll block in the image on Photoshop with flat colors and create the shapes of the people or objects, and then I go back and add in textures I’ve scanned in and brushes I have in Photoshop, and then I’ll add the lines and defining features last.
You mentioned to me that you were inspired by the Margaret Atwood book titled Cat’s Eye. Can you describe what that story is about and how it influenced your illustration? Cat’s Eye follows the life of a woman named Elaine from her childhood to her present day life, cutting back and forth from the past to the present. It focuses on a lot of things, but especially women and their friendships. I found the most interesting parts were of her childhood. Elaine has a manipulative and abusive best friend, and it shows how weird and disorienting it is as a child to experience that, and how intense toxic friendships can be. This illustration was inspired by that relationship, and Cat’s Eye comes from the cat’s eye marble Elaine carries with her, so that’s where the marble circle came from.
Do you have any exciting projects on the horizon? Currently I don’t! I’m doing another Margaret Atwood inspired piece for the second volume of Ladies of Literature, a great zine, that will be coming out I think sometime in early 2015. Besides that, I graduated from art school in the spring and I’ve been trying to let myself get really inward and experiment with my stuff privately to try to figure out what I want to do without the pressure of showing it on the internet or to a group of people. I would actually love to continue on this theme of young girls and games, though, and create some more pictures based on that.