{"id":28395,"date":"2021-11-27T04:57:21","date_gmt":"2021-11-27T04:57:21","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.thepicpedia.com\/blog\/adobe\/how-yiying-lu-bridges-art-and-technology-across-cultures-with-adobe-illustrator-on-the-ipad\/"},"modified":"2021-11-27T04:57:22","modified_gmt":"2021-11-27T04:57:22","slug":"how-yiying-lu-bridges-art-and-technology-across-cultures-with-adobe-illustrator-on-the-ipad","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.thepicpedia.com\/blog\/adobe\/how-yiying-lu-bridges-art-and-technology-across-cultures-with-adobe-illustrator-on-the-ipad\/","title":{"rendered":"How Yiying Lu bridges art and technology across cultures with Adobe Illustrator on the iPad"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Meet Yiying Lu, the designer behind the Twitter Fail Whale, popular food emojis & learn about her upcoming children\u2019s book \u2018The Very Hungry Red Panda\u2019.<\/p>\n<\/p>\n

Yiying Lu demonstrating her emoji designs with the Hungry Red Panda at the International Big Draw Festival in the Apple Store Union Square, San Francisco, October 3, 2019. Photo Courtesy: Stephanie Jan.<\/p>\n

\u201cCreating emojis is not my job, it\u2019s my calling,\u201d says artist and entrepreneur Yiying Lu. If you have ever messaged your friends about food, then it\u2019s likely that you\u2019ve used her work. That\u2019s because Lu is the designer of the dumpling emoji \ud83e\udd5f among many others, including, for all you lovers of bubble tea, the Boba emoji. Lu\u2019s work is not just a bunch of tiny illustrations on your phone, but rather they are a tool that has given a voice to countless Asian communities around the world. Food is culture, something you can share with others even if you don\u2019t speak the same language. \u201cIt\u2019s an honor to be able to do that. After I created the dumpling and other food emojis, I realized the cultural impact that online art such as emojis can have on people.\u201d<\/p>\n

If there\u2019s a common thread to Lu\u2019s work it\u2019s that it has an impact across cultures, touching the lives of millions of people. She created the Twitter Fail Whale, a whimsical illustration of a whale being lifted by a flock of birds that the social media giant showed on its error page every time the service crashed due to overcapacity (which used to happen very often in the early days of Twitter).<\/p>\n

\u201cThe original name of the Fail Whale was \u2018lifting a dreamer,\u2019 and I designed it to send my good wishes to a friend who lived far away. Through serendipity and fate, Biz Stone \u2014 a co-founder of Twitter \u2014 found it and it resonated with him in a technological way.\u201d The image had a second life when it later inspired hundreds and thousands Twitter Users to create their own creative expressions:<\/p>\n

Yiying Lu was also commissioned to create the \u201cConan O\u2019Brien Pale Whale\u201d art piece for Conan O\u2019Brien\u2019s Team Coco website & its Twitter page. \u201cConan\u2019s \u2018Work hard and Be Kind\u2019 quote has been an important motto in my life. He also shows that you can integrate both fun and professionalism in your work. I hope this is going to be the future of everybody\u2019s life.\u201d<\/p>\n

\"\"<\/p>\n

The Conan O\u2019Brien Pale Whale, courtesy of Yiying Lu.<\/p>\n

This year, Yiying Lu received funding from the Adobe Creative Residency Community Fund to support the creation of a children\u2019s book called The Very Hungry Red Panda.<\/p>\n

\"Cover<\/p>\n

Cover for The Very Hungry Red Panda project, by Yiying Lu.<\/p>\n

\"\"<\/p>\n

Endangered animals for The Very Hungry Red Panda project, by Yiying Lu.<\/p>\n

Every child is born an artist<\/h3>\n

Lu\u2019s name means \u201chappy and creative\u201d in Chinese, which makes sense in retrospect given the work that she creates. A true global citizen, she was born and raised in Shanghai, lived and studied in Australia and the United Kingdom, and is now based in San Francisco. She has worked with clients from all over the world, including Disney China and 500 Startups. Her superpower is being able to create things that break through cultural barriers.<\/p>\n

\u201cThe keys to tapping into another culture are curiosity and respect. You can only create something that resonates with others if you actually care about the feeling of people who are going to be receiving it.\u201d<\/p>\n

Although she has pursued both technical and artistic studies, a big part of Lu\u2019s inspiration comes from children\u2019s books that reach far and beyond her home country. It was the early exposure to myriad stories from realities diverse to her own that shaped how she relates to different cultures. \u201cThe books I read and the resources I grew up with allowed me to see how it was to be a global citizen.\u201d<\/p>\n

To this day, her work is influenced by that of the Italian writer Gianni Rodari (two of her favorite stories by Rodari are The Telephone Tales and One and Seven, the latter of which she read to me during our conversation), and the Argentinian illustrator Mordillo. Before visiting a place for the first time, Lu will research its children\u2019s books and folk tales to pick up cultural references. \u201cThe reason why I love children\u2019s books is that the people who are creating them are doing it from a place of love. Children\u2019s book creators are usually not driven by commercial intentions but by human spirit, and the preservation of culture for the next generation. And thus that content is very nurturing.\u201d<\/p>\n

Another important aspect of Lu\u2019s work is the reliance on an element of play (or as she puts it, FUNction), something that raises the energy levels of those involved. \u201cIn my work, I define fun as the idea that will make you feel better than in your current state. We eat every day because we need to increase our energy, having fun is the same thing, it increases your energy. It\u2019s a positive loop. If you\u2019re having fun, you feel better, and you do better work too.\u201d<\/p>\n

The Very Hungry Red Panda<\/h3>\n

The Very Hungry Red Panda is a visual journey about an endangered red panda that eats its way through the world, meeting other animal friends, and trying food that is unique to their countries. It\u2019s a celebration of all the things Lu is most passionate about: food, animals, and art, with an overall message promoting biological diversity, cultural diversity, and belonging.<\/p>\n

She gave me a scoop into the origins of this project. In May 2019, Airbnb decided to celebrate Asian Pacific American Heritage Month by hosting an Asian-style night market at its Headquarters in San Francisco. It would showcase Asian Pacific Islander singers, dancers, comedians, and local street vendors, with a thousand people slated to show up. \u201cI was creating these designs for the event on a volunteer basis, after a very last-minute request from my friend Mable Huang who leads Asians@Airbnb. Therefore, I have the creative freedom to create what I envisioned. I chose the Red Panda not only because it is cute, but also because its uniqueness to Asia and its \u201cEndangered\u201d status \u2014 its wild population is fewer than 10,000 on earth and continues to decline.<\/p>\n

The red panda is also a lighthearted metaphor for the Bay Area artists and small business owners who need our support. Like the red panda, they are endangered because the tech companies provide breakfast, lunch, and dinner to their employees, which doesn\u2019t help for the local small business and \u201cMom-and-pop\u201d shops. This event was aiming to showcase and support the local artists and small businesses and was run entirely by volunteers from Airbnb Asians Employee Group. Later on, I discovered that the Airbnb event happened to be UNESCO\u2019s World Day for Cultural Diversity, and the following day was the International Day for Biological Diversity. It\u2019s almost like the Universe was trying to tell me something that resonated with what I always care about: Diversity, Nature and Culture. I felt guided into doing something more than a one-off art piece.\u201d<\/p>\n

\"\"<\/p>\n

Mable Huang from AirBnB (left) and Yiying Lu (right) at the Airbnb Asian Night Market in May 2019.<\/p>\n

In early 2020, Lu received an Award of Honor from the United Nations for her logo design of the United Nations\u2019 COP 15 Convention on Biological Diversity, which motivated her to create more art to advocate for biological diversity.<\/p>\n

\"Ilustration<\/p>\n

\"Logo<\/p>\n

Creating the United Nation Convention on Biological Diversity logo with Illustrator on iPad, by Yiying Lu.<\/p>\n

Yiying Lu\u2019s Adobe residency project started on August 4th, 2020 which happened to be the International Clouded Leopard Day. This motivated her to draw the leopard using Illustrator on the iPad. \u201cBecause I\u2019m such a natural procrastinator, I let the Universe show me the way by picking the animals for me. I never even knew that there was a clouded leopard until a spontaneous thought came to me \u2018Let\u2019s google what is celebrated on 4th August?\u2019 \u2014 Turns out, it happened to be the International Clouded Leopard Day!\u201d Other animals followed, including the lion, the wolf, the orangutan, the whale shark, and the sloth. \u201cI basically looked at the date on the calendar and went \u2018well alright, this is what the universe wants, I\u2019m just going to create that animal on that day.\u2019\u201d<\/p>\n

\"Illustration<\/p>\n

Endangered animals for The Very Hungry Red Panda project, by Yiying Lu.<\/p>\n

For this project, Lu decided to do a calendar book first, and later a formal children\u2019s book, featuring the endangered animal associated to any given month. Spoiler alert! Much like in Rodari\u2019s stories, The Very Hungry Red Panda is about finding human connection in a playful way. At the end of the book, all these animal characters will take off their mascot costume to reveal that they were children from different parts of the world.<\/p>\n

\"Illustration<\/p>\n

Endangered animals for The Very Hungry Red Panda project, by Yiying Lu.<\/p>\n

Yiying Lu\u2019s tips for using Illustrator on the iPad<\/h3>\n

\"Yiying<\/p>\n

Yiying Lu tests Illustrator on iPad with Adobe Lead Designer Gabriel Campbell at Adobe MAX 2019. Photo Courtesy: Wayne Hoang.<\/p>\n

Lu\u2019s first tip for creating using Illustrator on the iPad is a very practical one: \u201cA.B.C. \u2014 Always Be Charging!\u201d To her, having Illustrator on the iPad provides more fluidity to exercise her creativity, especially in places where she usually wouldn\u2019t be able to work. This is because she wants to be as close as possible to her source of inspiration. \u201cI went to the zoo and used the iPad to capture photos of the animals, input them directly into Illustrator and draw on top of it. I would also take notes and do quick sketches.\u201d<\/p>\n

She also values being able to switch between different apps and keeping everything in sync on Adobe Creative Cloud. \u201cI often use both Adobe Illustrator and Adobe Fresco to draw on the iPad, and Adobe Photoshop Fix to remove the backgrounds of the photos. The beauty of having Adobe Creative Cloud is that I can start a project on the desktop, and then go to the zoo to continue editing on the iPad closer to my source of inspiration.\u201d<\/p>\n

\"Yiying<\/p>\n

Yiying Lu creating the Koala using Illustrator on the iPad, with the Red Panda peeking on the back.<\/p>\n

Lu believes that having Illustrator on the iPad will allow creators to get closer to their natural state of creativity. \u201cIt\u2019s something I\u2019ve dreamed about since I started using Illustrator in the late nineties. It\u2019s wonderful that the tool has become more humane, more natural, and it will definitely encourage more creators to get into digital illustration because they can feel more comfortable with the tool.\u201d<\/p>\n

\"Drawing<\/p>\n

The Koala taking shape on Lu\u2019s iPad.<\/p>\n

\"Illustration<\/p>\n

Koala for Very Hungry Red Panda project, by Yiying Lu.<\/p>\n

To see a preview of the project, visit the Very Hungry Red Panda on Behance. To learn more about Yiying Lu and her work, check out the links below:<\/p>\n

Work<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n