Yuko Shimazu Yuko Shimazu Yuko Shimizu

Award winning Japanese illustrator based in New York City and instructor at School of Visual Arts.

this iPhone case helps fund someone get clean and safe water for a year

Now it is easier than ever for smaller companies and individuals to make products, we artists get contacted about product collaborations more and more.  I get those e-mails almost every day. As a person who lives in the time when the world is filled with ‘stuff’, and sometimes a lot of stuff that just end up piling up in landfill,  I tend to stop and think. I try my best to pick and choose projects that works for me, and works for collaborators and have some kind of meanings to the projects.
It may be that the product is so well designed or well constructed I just want to be a part of it, or it’s my friend’s small company I am supporting… Or, something like this one, a company that is started by two well-minded young women who’s goal is to sell products that fund clean and safe water for someone in need somewhere in the world. This is why I decided to collaborate with RedDirt.

I just spoke with one of the co-founders of RedDirt as my iPhone cases just got released. She told me she just spent her holiday break volunteering in Uganda. Well, that may not be something everyone can do, but if you are nice enough to buy one of my (or many other designs to choose from) iPhone cases, you can contribute to their charity effort by funding one person gets clean and safe water for a year.

PS: for those who just got iPhone 6 for Christmas, the case is now in production, and will be released on their site not too far in the future.
Purchase the iPhone case here

Society of Illustrators’ ILLUSTRATORS 57 show opens

The first of the two-part annual exhibition will open at The Museum of American Illustration at the Society of Illustrators (New York) on January 7th, and will be up till January 30th. The first segment is Advertising, institutional and uncommissioned categories.
I have one piece in this show, in Advertising category. This was a poster image created for Tokyo Night Show, a music festival in Tokyo, Japan.
List of all the medal winners here.
Buy your ticket to the opening reception (Friday, January 9th) here. Hope to see you on the opening night.

print shop holiday sale is on!

updated: December 16, 2014
Holiday sale has ended. Thank you so much for all the orders. The last orders received is scheduled to ship within this week. Thank you again. 

Last few weeks, my assistant and I have been working non-stop to pack and ship prints from my shop. We’ve decided to have our very first print shop sale for the holiday season. The sale goes on throughout the weekend, so please take advantage, and get (a) print(s) of your choice for 20% off each with promo code: HOLIDAY2014 at checkout.
For on-demand print, please e-mail us at [email protected] to check the availability of the image(s) you are interested in. Or, any other questions, please get in touch with us by e-mailing. Thank you and happy holidays!
shop print here

Criterion Designs event at Society of Illustrators

Known for their beautifully designed special edition DVDs and blu-rays, Criterion Collection just came out with a coffee table book of their original package illustrations.
To celebrate the release of Criterion Designs, Society of Illustrators in New York will be hosting an event on December 3, 2014. With Eric Skillman, art director of  Criterion Collection, as the host, there will be a panel of 6 contributing artists (Greg Manchess, David PlunkertLeanne Shapton, Adrian Tomine, Ron Winberly and myself) discussing our experiences.

There will be a book signing, followed by reception at Society of Illustrator’s famous bar upstairs.
Admission is $15 for non members, $10 for members, and $7 for seniors and students with valid ID. Please read more and reserve your tickets here

Looking forward to seeing you on December 2.

Some of the projects I worked with Criterion Collection below.

my contribution to Zatoichi box set
Zatoishi big box set package was designed by Ron Wimberly

Little Nemo Dream Another Dream is ready for pre-order

After a successful Kickstarter campain earlier in summer, Locust Moon Press’s Little Nemo: Dream Another Dream, a tribute book to Little Nemo in Slumberland is ready for pre-order.
Over 100 comic artists and illustrators contributed to the book, and the final result is massive 144 page, 16″ x 21″ monumental book! I have contributed a full page illustration for this book as well.
Pre-order your book here


My contribution to the book (above), and seen in the spread, next to Peter Diamond‘s masterpiece. I am so happy my former student and now a good friend is on the same spread. (Thank you friend and also a contributor to the book James Yang for taking this photo)

you can see how big the book is!!!

Original drawings were shown at recent Locus Moon Comic Festival. 

pre-order starts! limited edition silk scarf is in making

I am excited I can finally reveal the secret project I have been working with MAE Gallery Editions. Limited number of just 100, made in Japan high quality  silk scarf project is almost complete. MAE Editions is UK based, but they have moved their studio to Japan to work on the last part of the project. They just started taking pre-orders, and shipping starts in January, if not earlier.

The scarf is 93cm square (about 37inch square), comes in collectors numbered box, and price is $185USD. You can also choose pition with signed large print  for $285.

Read more and pre-order from MAE Gallery Editions online store. 

life condensed to 5 minutes, and consequences of being on TV

Thank you for those (mainly in Japan) who watched the TV show I was in on Monday night (明石家さんまの転職de天職). I have been getting overwhelming (mostly positive) responses since.
My website is getting a lot of new visitors,  I got reconnected with some of my old friends and cousins, and some strangers wrote nice e-mails, to which unfortunately I won’t have enough time to write back to everyone, so please do forgive me in advance.

I have not seen the show’s final edit (except for 4 minutes segment they shot in NY previous to studio recording), so I cannot speak for the whole thing, but I believe I do owe some explanation, because at the end of the day, it is one person’s life condensed into just 4 short minutes. Everyone’s life looks a lot simpler in 4 minutes, you know.

TV producer asked me if I like the host of the show, Sanma Akashiya (明石家さんま), one of the most respected Japanese comedians. I said yes, of course. I grew up watching his shows. I said it may be my one chance to actually meet a person I only know from TV screen. Then on the final show, they edited as if he is the biggest crush of my life. I can laugh it off, but I want to clarify, that one comedian I am in love with is, actually, Stephen Colbert.

Some strangers asked me about how I learned English. The show did not mention I grew up in New York as a kid. My English was, of course, kids’ English, and it was not great, I still had to study intensively for TOEFL exam in between and commute to work, so I get high enough score to be able to apply for US colleges. One of the reasons I left Japan was that I felt I was always treated as a ‘weirdo gaijin’ rather than one of them, and I felt much more comfortable being in New York where being different is appreciated.

There are other things like my former coworkers pointed out sarcastically like “I didn’t know you were an ordinary OL (office lady)”. I was working in PR department, researched, edited and written company magazines, brochures, annual reports, went onto multiple foreign business trips in that tenure. So, the image the term ‘ordinary OL’ evokes, which is you sit at the desk and do paperwork, maybe a bit out of context, but I won’t get too much into details. (photo is during a business trip to Hong Kong office around 1997, with now my life-long friends I met there.)

They have asked what is the typical lowest rate in illustration as well as one of the highest rate you can earn. If you felt that we illustrators get paid that top rate all the time, I can reassure you, that is like ‘one in the lifetime’ jackpot, if you ever hit it. Though, for that jackpot, one probably needs to work for months and months of long hours to complete the project. Nothing is easy.

I had to pick one job that turned my career around (from struggling to not so).
I always say there is no ONE career changing moment. If your career skyrocket with one project, then your career would most probably fall as fast as it has gone up. I truly believe in this.
I did pick a New York Times Travel Section cover from very early on in my career that got my work seen by a lot of people. My first big job. Till this day, I remember how excited I was to work on that job, and to see the actual paper. (Thank you AD Barbara Richer)  However, if you have seen the show and you thought that changed my life 180 degrees, I want to clarify that it totally DIDN’T.

I worked  365 days a year, 10-12 hour days, without any day off, for first 2-3 years of my career. I don’t think I can do that now, and nor would I want to, However at that point, I didn’t mind because I was new, I had little money with big dreams, high ambition, and I was ready to work as much as I possibly can to get there.
Looking back, that kind of motivation and work ethic was absolutely necessary. If I wasn’t ready to do that long and hard work stretch, I should have picked another occupation where I would not mind doing it. Life of freelancer is not easy, and the secret of success is how much you want to do it, and how much you actually do it.

All and all, it was a great one time experience being on TV.
I learned a lot about how a TV program is made, and how much work goes into it. I got to meet a comedian (not my crush) I only knew from watching TV, and realized why he has a successful career for over 30 years (he was the pro of the pro!), and I have even higher respect for him (again, not my crush).

Last but not least, here is a portrait I got commissioned by the program to dedicate to him. The title of the piece is “The World Heritage of Comedy (お笑い世界遺産)”. Hope he put this up on a wall in his house…

 

limited edition Murakami in the UK: make your own Tsukuru Tazaki cover

Recently published UK version of Haruki Murakami’s Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and Years of Pilgrimage come with a big surprise: stickers. First edition of the book comes with stickers illustrated by five different Japanese illustrators to represent each of the five main characters in the book. The idea is that readers can create their own covers using them.
There are multiple versions of stickers, and the one that include stickers of Ms. Black by me is in the UK book store chain Waterstones edition. Check out the chain before the first editions are gone!

 

And below are some photos I borrowed from Haruki Murakami Facebook page while the sticker competition was going on. Each reader used his/her own ideas and creativity to make one of a kind cover. Top one is probably my favorite. Lots of work went into that piece.

cool NY guide: 60 creatives share our secret spots

known for their innovative and cutting edge design books, Hong Kong’s Viction:ary just came out with, this time, pocket city guides! And of course, they are not your ordinary guidebooks. For each city, 60 local creatives share their favorite spots.
In the New York version of this CITIx60 guide series, I shared my love for one-and-only Strand Book Store, what I believe to be the best bookstore of NY (if not of the world).

And to add to the fun, each cover opens up to mini map-poster of the city illustrated by local artist Mike Perry
CITIx60 is currently available on six cities: Barcelona, Berlin, London, NY, Tokyo and Paris.

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