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Amber Muir
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Jessica Walsh-creative agency, &Walsh

Sagmeister & Walsh, as we know it, is no more, as founder and partner Jessica Walsh is setting up her own agency. The solo venture &Walsh has a new identity and vision – to help brands “find their weird” – yet keeps the same 25-strong creative team and headquarters on Broadway, as well as many of the same clients, including Apple, Snapchat, Kenzo and Adobe. This is the culmination of ten years of collaboration with Sagmeister and seven years as a joint studio.

Sagmeister will be stepping away from commercial work “for the foreseeable future” but will be undertaking non-commercial work under his own studio, Sagmeister Inc, and the duo will continue to work together on art and exhibition work.

&Walsh joins the 1 per cent of women-owned creative agencies, a statistic Walsh has said she wants to do something to change. A key focus for the agency will be its social and non-profit initiatives, including Ladies, Wine & Design, which aims to empower women and non-binary people through mentorship, portfolio reviews, talks and meet-ups. The project now has over 250 chapters worldwide.

In a blog post about the agency’s launch, Walsh professes (in typically honest style) that she had wanted to open her own agency before she met Stefan, and while her time with the man she refers to as “a design legend” was “a great decade”, her desire to go it alone hadn’t faded. “Have you ever felt a deep voice inside telling you that it was time for a change, but you didn’t know why?” she asks. “Why did I want to ruin something that was going well when nothing was wrong? What if I had to start from scratch? ‘Don’t break what isn’t broken,’ they say. It’s much easier to make a life-altering decision when there is something very wrong. Things were going just fine.” In the end, she explains, “I woke up one morning and realised if I didn’t take the leap, I’d always be wondering ‘what if?’”

Explaining the name &Walsh, its founder states it isn’t purely a reminder of its origins in the renowned duo; it is to highlight the collaborative nature of its approach. “Our clients are true partners and collaborators and that synergy is so vital to everything we do. Every part of our process will reinforce the agency-client bond and convey that our clients always come first.” Hence why the ampersand is at the centre of its brand identity, and will be customised to each new client or creative partner.

Another part of the agency’s offering to clients will be a so-called “brand therapy” stage, which Walsh says helps clients to “uncover their brand’s true personality and voice”.

True to Walsh’s roots in unusual online projects, such as 40 Days of Dating, &Walsh’s website is full of Easter eggs for visitors to find, such as “unconventional client tools”, animations and games.

Article courtesy of itsnicethat.com

Wednesday 09.18.19
Posted by Amber Muir
 

Introducing Miss Appropriate

1: One of five Planeteers with the power to summon Captain Planet. Linka can control the element wind.

 

2: I love to Op shop. A womble at heart

3: New creations/transformations

Sunday 04.30.17
Posted by Amber Muir
 

More brand work! (sneak peek)

Wednesday 02.22.17
Posted by Amber Muir
 

Sneak Peek

Recent work...watch this space!

Monday 01.30.17
Posted by Amber Muir
 

Imperfect animation- loving the process

Found this sketch I did a while ago and decided to animate it. I love the process.

Enjoy xx

Saturday 11.26.16
Posted by Amber Muir
 

Busy 🐝

It is not enough to be busy. So are the bees. That's it- I'm too busy making honey to write any more. Full stop. I found this crazy dance video I did a few months back. Don't forget to dance.  Love YOU

Wednesday 10.12.16
Posted by Amber Muir
 

Happy Birthday Greta 🎂

Today is Greta Gerwig's birthday. She plays Francis Halladay in my favourite movie, produced by Noah Baumbach.

It's monochromatic. Francis is young woman who's so frenetically trying to fit in that she can't. So desperate to grab onto something that she slips off every time.
Francis really wants to be a dancer. So did I. My clumsy, clown-like poise did not look amazing in ballet. Off to dancing for fun for me. As hard as I tried at maths I never understood Pythagoras theory. What I could do was paint, design and sing.

My point is focus on what your good at, what you can control. Decide on what you want and go for that. Be clear. Clarity equals power. Purpose fuels perspective.
Oh and if you haven't seen this film....Adam Driver features :)

Thursday 08.04.16
Posted by Amber Muir
 

How To Make A Living Doing What You Love - Brianna Wiest

This article really helped me realise that you need a base. Find your 'bread and butter'. Work that sustains you. The sweet is on the top. 

Accept that you will not always be doing what you love.

In fact, “doing what you love” day-in and day-out is exhausting. Things that are a little more rote will be often be a welcome relief.

Accept that it may not be the only way you make your living.

Accept that, especially if you’re in a creative field, the monetary value of your work will usually not be generated by how highly you think of it. It’s how highly editors think of it. The degree to which it piques public interest. How consumable it is or gorgeous or worth their money or space in their sites and magazines and whatever else.

If you have a problem with that, don’t create things to be consumed.

Do not expect a rally. Do not expect a following. Do not expect a name. These things are byproducts, not goals. Not everything will get you an applause, and it doesn’t have to.

Learn to work when you’re not inspired.

“Writer’s block” is a load of bullshit. It is not knowing what you’re trying to say, or trying to say it in a way that is too far removed from how you naturally think and speak.

Creativity is an infinite force. The more you do, the more you strengthen your capacity to continue. If being consistently creative is draining to you, or if it depletes your mind and you aren’t able to recover within a reasonable amount of time, consider that it may not the right path for you.

Because it probably isn’t.

There are creative people all over the world who can produce every single day. There is nothing wrong with you if you aren’t one of them.

Learn to work out of purpose, not passion.

Passion is the spark that lights the fire, purpose is the kindling that keeps it burning all night.

Everybody has ideas for books and songs and companies and businesses. They remain ideas unless they are married to purpose and productivity. Logistics.

Accept that the comment section exists, and if you can’t take the heat, you should get out of the kitchen. Part of doing anything in the public eye is receiving various feedback. This is not partial to the internet, or your life, it is the nature of the beast.

(Tip: if you note which comments bother you the most, you can learn a lot about yourself and what you need to work on.)

Accept that you will need to work. And work will still feel like work. And when the thing you love becomes the work you do, it might lose some of it’s magical, soothing, glittering joy. This is okay. This is more than okay. This is what happens when you start applying purpose to what you love. This is what happens when you start pushing the boundaries of your skill. These become the deciding moments.

Accept that it is not how gifted you are, it is how consistently you can produce that will determine your success. Accept that the latter is something you develop. It is something you control.

There are thousands and thousands of technically gifted artists and writers and musicians whose work will never see the light of day because they assume “doing what they love” is synonymous with never struggling.

Accept that doing what you love is more difficult than doing what you don’t. Everything is at stake. You are more raw and vulnerable than you could conceive. You are building a legacy. It is terrifying. It is gorgeous. It will be worth it. Because this is not just how you build a living – this is how you build resilience.

And creative resilience is the rarest kind.

Source: https://medium.com/@briaeliza/how-to-make-...
Monday 08.01.16
Posted by Amber Muir