The Girl in the Castle: Interview with Illustrator Nicoletta Ceccoli
Italian illustrator, Nicoletta Ceccoli, creates dreamy dimensions inhabited by delicate creatures caught in a fantastical fresco. Her work is sublimely surreal and evokes a feeling of looking at an ethereal microcosm. In addition to her prolific painting collection, Ms. Ceccoli has illustrated several children’s books and has also been commissioned for commercial work. Whether illustrating an ad which befittingly highlights the sleeping comforts of an aircraft or collaborating on The Joy of Spooking for children, Ceccoli’s work beautifully retains her signature palette of cotton candied hues and porcelain characters.
Nicoletta Ceccoli is a three-time winner of the Award of Excellence from Communication Arts and was awarded the silver medal from the New York based Society of Illustrators in 2006.
1) Do you remember one of your first paintings or drawings as a young child?
A portrait of my favourite doll. I called her ‘Birillina’. I still have that doll on my shelf in my studio between my favourite objects and toys.
adoration for the Mexican artist Remedios Varo, too… and for the comics of early 1900 like Little Nemo by Winsor McCay-so imaginative and full of whimsical surreal inventions. Paul Klee once described an artist as being like a tree, drawing the minerals of experience from its roots – things observed, read, told and felt – and slowly processing them into new leaves.The principle of ‘originality’ is more about a kind of transformation of existing ideas than the invention of entirely new ones for me. Words like ‘inspiration’ can easily convey a false impression that ideas or feelings appear spontaneously and of their own accord. My own experience is that inspiration has more to do with careful research and looking for a challenge; and that creativity is about playing with what I find, testing one proposition against another and seeing how things combine and react.


Sorry, I don’t mean to hound and I know it’s really a small point, but if Ceccoli cannot better articulate Shaun Tan’s eight year old paper on “Originality and Creativity”, at least be polite and put the quotation marks where they’re due. I don’t at all object to people sharing the views of their contemporaries, especially Tan’s when he was pretty succinct in his conclusions. But I do object to the copy and pasting of his words with your signature at the end.
‘The principle of ‘originality’ is more about a kind of transformation of existing ideas than the invention of entirely new ones for me.’ Aptly put.
Suzie
January 19, 2010 at 1:22 am
wonderful! you have your passion, i love your art work, strong personal character, consistent. and i like the way you applied something to your purpose. i like your words which those words are make me inspired. i don’t really care is that your words or somebody else quotation, but you did good and apply it to your self and u become like this now. superb!!!
beth
August 20, 2010 at 10:03 am
Thank you!
corvusblue
August 20, 2010 at 2:42 pm