Stu Campbell

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Stu Campbell (born 1981), also known as Sutu, is an Australian comic book artist, writer and interactive designer. He is the creator of the webcomic Nawlz, an interactive episodic cyber punk comic book series. His community work with Big Hart’s project adapted Australian Aboriginal stories into interactive iPad storybooks and created the interactive comic NEOMAD, a space opera based in the Australian Outback.[1][2] Sutu also created the augmented reality comic book Modern Polaxis.[3]

In 2014 Campbell was the subject of the ABC documentary Cyber Dreaming,[4] and was a prominent part of the documentary How do we get to space? with his NEOMAD team.

Career[]

Campbell began his career as a Senior Interactive Designer for Sprint Interactive in 2000, and designed for Suicide Girls, Force Industries, Movement, and Mooks fashion labels. He worked on a range of installations for the National Museum of Australia, including the Harvest Scroll installation as Senior Interactive Designer for Isnt Media.

In 2007 Campbell began working for the Australian Defence Force, as a Creative Director and User Experience Designer working on MRH-90 helicopter simulation and computer based learning software. Campbell developed the online interactive comic Nawlz in 2008. Nawlz consists of 24 episodes spanning two seasons. In 2012 Nawlz Season 1 was ported to the iPad.

The project development for NEOMAD, Ngurra, Warlu Song and the Love Punks videogame began in 2011, along with Campbell’s recruitment as Digital Media Co-Ordinator for the Yijala Yala Project with Big Hart, an Australian National art and social justice organisation. The project won awards including the ATOM Award, for ‘best game/multimedia production’ in 2013 and the Kirkus Reviews ‘best book app of 2013’.

Campbell moved on to develop the augmented reality comic Modern Polaxis in 2013. He has illustrated the graphic novel series The Gatecrashers and throughout 2015–2016 has developed the projects Exponius Museum,[5] The Ocean is Broken, Razorlegs and These Memories Won't Last.[6]

Awards[]

Works[]

References[]

  1. ^ "NEOMAD". Yijala Yala Project. Retrieved 18 April 2016.
  2. ^ "Yijala Yala Project". Yijala Yala Project. Retrieved 21 April 2016.
  3. ^ "MODERN POLAXIS". modernpolaxis.com. Retrieved 18 April 2016.
  4. ^ "Cyber Dreaming". ABC Television. Retrieved 18 April 2016.
  5. ^ "Exponius Museum". exponius.sutueatsflies.com. Retrieved 18 April 2016.
  6. ^ "These memories won't last". memories.sutueatsflies.com. Retrieved 18 April 2016.
  7. ^ [1] The project These Memories Won't Last has been nominated for an Eisner Award for the 2016 year.

[1]

[2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12]

  1. ^ "Yijala Yala Project". Yijala Yala Project. Retrieved 18 April 2016.
  2. ^ http://ledgerawards.org/ Ledger Award Winners. Accessed 18 April.
  3. ^ http://www.sutueatsflies.com/ Official Website. Accessed 18 April.
  4. ^ http://ideasondesign.net/speakers/speakers/stuart-campbell/Conference Speaker Information. Accessed 18 April.
  5. ^ http://virtual-identity.com/story/agentur/air15/ Artist In Residency Programme. Accessed 18 April.
  6. ^ http://yijalayala.bighart.org/neomad/Yijala Yala Website. Accessed 18 April.
  7. ^ "Yijala Yala Project". Yijala Yala Project.
  8. ^ warren. "Stuart Campbell".
  9. ^ http://www.thefwa.com/interview/stu-campbell Interview With Artist Stu Campbell. Accessed 18 April
  10. ^ http://atomawards.org/ Atom Awards Website. Accessed 18 April
  11. ^ http://yijalayala.bighart.org/neomad-wins-best-gamemultimedia-production-at-2013-atom-awards/ Big hART Announcement of Neomad Awards. Accessed 18 April.
  12. ^ http://www.sxsw.com/interactive/awards/past-winners. South By South West Awards Past Winners. Accessed 18 April.
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