Get

In Your Inbox

Catster is reader-supported. When you buy via links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission at no cost to you. Learn more.

Olive & Rye Custom Cat Portraits and Art

tabby kitten painting on white wall

tortoiseshell-cat-art

Today, I’d like to introduce you to Laura Kicey, a graphic designer, illustrator, photographer, and artist currently living in quarantine in her house in the Philadelphia suburbs with her partner and their three cats. While not all of Laura’s creative work is about cats, most of it is, “and if it isn’t, it is in the service of cats one way or another,” she says.

I had a chance to ask Laura some questions about her art, her cats, and her work.

To view Laura’s art, please visit her Etsy Shop or website. You can also find Olive and Rye on Facebook, and follow her cats’ account on Instagram.

divider cat faces oct 2024

Olive & Rye Interview

Tell us a little bit about yourself.

I’ve always had a cat in my life, one way or another, and have always felt very connected to them. One of my favorite things I learned about my ancestry in the past few years is that my last name, which is Americanized Ukrainian, from the original Киці or Kytsy, means “kitty” in Ukrainian. It was very common for Ukrainian surnames to be related to the natural world/animals, so I come from cat people. Cats have left an impression on me in many ways.

laura-rye
Laura with Rye

Olive & Rye Cat Art is named after your two cats. Tell us about them.

I adopted Olive and Rye from PAWS in Philly back in 2014 to help heal my heart after losing two cats in six months. Olive, named for her unusual large olive green eyes, is the alien-looking calico who is about seven years old now. She still doesn’t know how to be a cat and enjoys life in her own special way. She is kind of a loner, but she likes napping and playing on her own, talking to herself, as well as the occasional vigorous belly rubs which I administer happily.

Rye is one of our (now two) tortoiseshell cats, and she is the owner of a very fine #peanutbutterfoot. She is about 6 years old and is the nicest, most gentle cat ever – and as we like to say at our house, “the best in the business”. Rye was named for her beautiful rust and brownish black fur that looks like a loaf of marbled rye bread. She is the peacekeeper of the house. If there is something wrong with anyone, she is the first on the scene to take care of you.

tortoiseshell-calico-cat
Olive and Fig

The most recent addition was tortie #2, Fig, who is most easily recognized by her voice before you ever see her, but then also by the pink/tan dot on the end of her nose. I met her in 2017 for the first time at the cat-themed event I created and orchestrated for two years, Kittydelphia, where she was a visiting kitten in foster through PAWS. Fig loves to play and chat and be the center of my attention at all times. She is such a creative, intelligent and energetic soul. Fig wants to be part of every conversation, she wants to strategize about hunting for toys and incorporating elaborate jumps to keep things interesting. She is a planner and I appreciate that about her.

tortoiseshell-cats

When did you first realize you were an artist?

I don’t think I can point to an exact time because I’ve been creating art of some kind for as long as I can remember. I used to draw and study birds as a kid, and I was fascinated with the natural world at large, which has always been a running theme in my artwork. I always enjoyed soaking up as much information about things that interested me as much as I could. Part of learning about many of my favorite subjects was in observing and drawing and making art about those things.

Though I wanted to be an illustrator going into college, I ended up veering towards graphic design and film photography. After school I worked as a graphic designer in New  York City. I didn’t have the resources to make a lot of art of any kind for a while. Once I left New York, I got my first little 3MP digital camera, which turned into a source of art-making as well as work for most of 15 years, while also working as a graphic designer.

After I lost my first cat, Maggie, who I had with me for 14 years, I adopted another cat, Hazel, who also passed away only 6 months later of cancer. My relationship with my current cats was molded by these losses. It changed the way I made art and became the focus of my photography as well. I started drawing cat portraits not long after I created an Instagram specifically for my cats in October 2014 so as not to overwhelm my friends with the deluge of photos of my recently adopted Olive and Rye. The cat account @oliveandrye and the portrait making took off side-by-side as I got to know so many humans behind the community of cat-centric accounts on Instagram. So now I live, breathe, dream and draw cats.

cat-art

What inspired you to paint cats?

See above – I consider it digital drawing rather than painting because I am useless with wet media :). We could call it pixel painting.

Your style is very unique. How did you develop it?

Thank you! I think everything I make – design, videos, animation, photography, writing, and illustration- is all deeply interconnected in my brain in an organic way, and things that have no relation in the world make intriguing connections in my mind. Making art is also a great way for me to get ideas out of my head to make room for other things because I find until I make a piece of art, I will think about making it until I actually do the damn thing … LOL!

I didn’t really learn how to draw with the program I use most, Adobe Illustrator, until after I was finished with college and working as a packaging designer for a perfume and cosmetics brands. It is not quite like a traditional drawing process because it uses vectors which I have best heard described as “drawing with rubber bands,” but it is also a bit like making cut paper illustrations with digital paper. The designer in me was drawn to bright flat colors and bold simple shapes and that was reflected in my earlier cat portraits. They continued to become more complicated and dimensional-feeling as time went on as I started using more gradients and shadows to create shape and depth, more like photography and sculpture in digital space. I like a balance of a little realistic and a little whimsical and stylized, so it is kind of an idealized version of your cat. I’d love to translate portraits into paper shadowbox sculptures if I had the patience, paper, and wrist strength to cut all that!

jonathan-van-ness-harry-larry

What is your creative process like?

The research phase is really fun for me. Making associations between concepts and visuals makes my brain light up. I love being lead down strange unexpected trains of thought and reading when I start with a really simple kernel of an idea. I’ve been doing a daily drawing while in quarantine this April, and each day I love thinking about the day’s prompt word and seeing how I can build visuals around that idea that relate to cats and what is happening in my life right now, so it becomes kind of a journal and snapshot of how I feel that day and what is going on. I also have been enjoying talking to my partner about the concepts, which has lead to some really interesting ideas. I feel like living like this in quarantine has forced me to be creative in different ways, with how I interact with everything I come into contact with each day and carefully consider everything in a new light. That goes for everything including art-making down to something as simple as getting a glass of water. I am very fortunate that I have a safe place to live and the ability to continue to do something I love, while awaiting the next shift. Everything I do is an experiment and there are no failures.

tortoiseshell-cat-art
Torties of a Feather

You offer custom portraits. Tell us about that process.

When I am working on custom portraits, I love looking through Instagram accounts getting to know both the cat and the human as best I can through how they share their lives in images and video. Which is a little creepy possibly, but I find it inspiring and who can argue with looking at cat photos for work? I approach it kind of like a design project, where I am trying to distill the essence of a cat, their person and their relationship, and make something that feels like it is an extension of that in the most natural way possible. I like that challenge of finding what feels like the right thing for them.

For the person ordering a portrait from me, they can just send me their Instagram account or 4-8 photos of their cat. I like to know the cat’s name. I will ask if you have any specific instructions for the background as  far as colors, theme, location, or style. I also like to know if they have a signature pose/behavior you would like to capture or other things you would like to highlight about your cat. Stories about your cats are highly encouraged.

digital-cat-art

What does a typical day look like for you?

My life before quarantine started has not significantly changed since it began, since I primarily worked from home before for my main graphic design job. I start every day with a shower and breakfast for myself, my partner and cats. We like to sit out on our sun room porch as much as we possibly can, because it is about as close to being outside as any of us can get safely, lately. My job hours have been greatly reduced since this began, so late morning, I will start doing my few daily hours of design work in my home office, surrounded by cats. All of whom I might add are pretty respectful of the work space.

After I finish work part one, I have been making a point of going back on the porch in the early evening so the girls can soak up the golden hour warmth and I play with whoever is interested. After playing and dinner, I move on to the cat drawing shift which usually goes late into the night and involves, sitting on the living room couch under a pile of blankets, cats, my laptop, tablet and stylus. The most major change since #stayathome started is that I used to always be “watching” something on TV while doing this (I use “watching” loosely as I mostly just listen and glance). I have been craving peace these days so the TV has been off, and now I just listen to music or snoring cats while I draw. We were already homebodies, so I feel like this pace and way of life agrees with me. It is absolutely not a bad life to be leading right now and I know how lucky I am. I wish everyone could be so lucky.

Custom portrait sale through the end of April

I am getting a little backed up with portrait orders right now as I have thankfully had quite a few come in over this last month! I am still running a sale on custom portraits through the end of April. I will just keep on fulfilling portraits as they come in. There may be some delay in my starting them in the coming weeks, but I will get to them all!

olive-and-rye-cat-art

For more information about Laura’s art, please visit her Etsy Shop or website. You can also find Olive and Rye on Facebook, and follow her cats’ account on Instagram.


 

How useful was this post?

Click on a star to rate (you can leave written feedback after clicking submit)

Help us improve Catster for pet parents!

Your feedback really matters.

What did you like about this post? Also how can we improve it?

Join the conversation

Leave a Reply

You’re very welcome to leave a comment or question. Please know that all comments must meet our community guidelines, and your email address will NOT be published. Let’s have a positive and constructive conversation.

Talk With A Vet Online

Peace of mind,
anywhere, anytime

Affordable vet advice

Cats’ Experience With Leash Training: Adventures, Challenges & More

I previously introduced you to Laura Kicey, a graphic designer, illustrator, photographer, and artist living in the Philadelphia suburbs with her partner and...

a woman and her cat with harness and leash sitting on the bench at the park

We Chat With Pet Portrait Artist Thomas Dalsgaard Clausen

Pet portraits and artists are prevalent online, but rarely will you find someone who captures the essence of the animals he draws like...

Artist Sasky D Talks About Her “Crap Drawings” of Cats

One of the greatest cat-related distractions on the Internet is a little something called Crap Drawings Drawn Crapily. It’s the brainchild of a...

We Talk to Mari Lowery About Her Marvelously Creepy Cat Art

The other day, I came across a small image of some cats looking like they were plucked from a Victorian-era horror story. Reading...

More related

Smoking Cats? Jesus Dogs? We Interview Artist Michael Caines

Art is most profound when it stirs up our minds, when it presents the world in ways we’d not consciously considered or even...

Up Close and Purrsonal with Simon Tofield, the Creator of Simon’s Cat

On Sunday, I was lucky enough to be one of only a few local media members to get a private interview with Simon...

Meet Aleister, the Devilishly Dapper Cat of Dita Von Teese

Originally published on 27 October 2016 and republished as a tribute to Aleister Von Teese, the distinguished Devonshire Rex cat. Dita Von Teese...

We Chat With Colin Egan, Also Known as “the Catoonist”

When I discovered Colin Egan’s artwork, I was drawn in by the way his style seems to blend bold and vivid street art...

Keep reading

Has Your Cat Imprinted on You? 15 Signs to Look For

Imprinting is a term that is usually used to describe when a young animal accepts another animal, person or object as its parent or object of trust. In this article we are discussing cat imprinting as a sort of love...

Tabby cat smelling a young man in front of the window

Can Cats Drink Chocolate Milk? Vet Approved Facts & FAQ

There have been images and videos of cats drinking milk for decades. As such, the habit perpetuates, and most owners believe that it is acceptable to give their cats milk. However, the truth is that milk is bad for cats....

Can Cats Drink Chocolate Milk

Why Do Cats Sleep in a Ball? 3 Possible Reasons

There’s something delightful about watching your cat sleep while curled up into a tight fluff ball. They look so sweet and serene, and it’s amazing how their supple bodies can sleep comfortably in this position. If you have ever wondered...

cat sleeping on the patio

Cat Humping: Reasons They Do It, Prevention, Facts & FAQ

Dog owners are usually embarrassingly familiar with the sight of their pets humping other pups, objects, or people. If you have a cat, you probably never expected to deal with this behavior, but do cats hump as well? Yes, cats...

cat-humping

5 Vet-Verified Reasons Why Cats Need a Scratching Post

A scratching post may seem like an unnecessary purchase for your cat, but this cat-friendly item is actually critical for your cat’s comfort, happiness, and their ability to develop their instincts. Plus, scratching posts help to keep the rest of...

Bengal cat plays with a plush mouse on a scratching post

How Many Hours Does a Cat Sleep? Vet-Reviewed Facts & FAQ

If it seems like your cat sleeps a lot, it’s probably because it’s true. Cats love nothing more than having a few cat naps throughout their day. The average number of hours a cat sleeps a day will vary depending...

close up cat sleeping on the sofa

Why Does My Cat Stare at Me While I Sleep? 6 Vet-Reviewed Reasons

Most cat owners can recount waking up on at least one occasion with their cat staring straight at them. It can be uncomfortable, especially if you wake up to direct eye contact. But what is your cat trying to say?...

Adorable furry cat of seal lynx point color with blue eyes

Can Cats Drink Coconut Milk? Vet Approved Facts & FAQ

It’s a tale as old as time—a cat’s thirst for milk. But with advancements in feline nutrition, we know that cow’s milk is actually bad for cats. So, in an attempt to give your kitty a cool sip of milk—what...

Can Cats Drink Coconut Milk