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Sunday, 31 October 2010

Choosing Content - final.

Create a simple portrait of the character, using the reference that you have gathered.



Sketchbook images.

Hand drawn in pen then photoshop.






I'm sticking with the film-noir type picture of a head and shoulders image partly submerged in the shadows, with the face partly highlighted by a shaft of light. Ive tried to include the sight of bomb-hit London and St Pauls in the window.













Same pic but I tried adding a bit of dramatic colour to the image, which I think works well.










My final pic in this exercise is another version of the themes I have worked above, I like the drama of using black and white with a hint of sepia brown. I think the reference I have gathered has led my
thoughts and ideas along the route of the 'film-noir' look with such films as The 39 Steps and The Third Man used as inspiration.




Sunday, 24 October 2010

Exercise - Choosing content continued...


Mood-board for colour and texture
Next step - create a simple portrait of the character, using the reference gathered;


pen & ink sketch

 
pen & ink





These initial sketches were based around the word 'infuriated' but on reflection seem a little extreme
for and too far from the storyline, so went back to the brief and my initial ideas on what the character would look like, at least in my mind. 




Watercolour sketch
  

This is along the lines of what I envisaged when reading the passage. Its starting to encompass a lot of the words I originally brainstormed like frustration, anger, and I think there is an underlying representation of this in the sketch.
I will work on this theme and image some more, along with the background setting. Bit confused as to how this is to be achieved, but will work it out.



watercolour sketch





 This guy looks a little too serious for me but maybe thats a good thing....not happy with it, but thought I would post it anyway to show my thought process, or lack of it.
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Thursday, 14 October 2010

Exercise - Choosing content.

Task - to read the following text and then answer questions to follow;

The room was void and unquickened; it was like a room in a shop window but larger and emptier; and the middle-aged man who sat at the desk had never thought to impress upon what he entered every day. Comfort there was none nor discomfort; only did the occupant deign to qualify the pure neutrality of his surroundings, it would surely be austerity that would emerge. The spring sunshine turned bleak and functional as it passed the plate glass of the tall-uncurtained windows.

The windows were large; the big desk lay islanded in a creeping parallelogram of light, across this and before the eyes of the man sitting motionless passed slantwise and slowly a massive shaft of shadow.

Perhaps twenty times it passed to and fro, as if outside some great joy wheel oscillating idly in a derelict amusement park. And the man rose, clasped hands behind him and walked to a window - high up in New Scotland Yard. He looked out and war-time London lay beneath... on his brow was a fixed contraction, this he had carried from desk to window, and now there was neither hardening not relaxation as he looked out... during 15 years he had controlled the file of police papers which dealt with the abduction and subsequent history of feeble minded girls. Here lay his anger as he looked out over London... year by year the anger had burst deeper until it was now the innermost principle of the man.

If this were to be made into a film what would the main character be like?
What clothes would the character be wearing?
What furniture is in the main area in which the action takes place?

I see the main character as a middle aged man, as the text says, tall, athletic, dark hair, greying at the temples. His features are strong,  distinctive, and he has a clipped moustache. I've just realised that I have described Clark Gable...not sure about the moustache now.
He would be wearing a grey wool suit trousers and waistcoat. His jacket would be off, his sleeves of his white shirt rolled up, and a burgandy tie  hangs loosely around his undone collar. His black overcoat and trilby hat are hanging on the hat-stand.
In the centre of the room is a large mahogany desk on which  is a black telephone, in and out trays, typewriter and a leather-framed blotting pad. A brass desklamp sits on the desk and in the background is the hatstand and some metal filing cabinets.


Image search moodboard.
In the moodboard above are images that reflect my interpretation of the story. Dark spartan offices, Dick Tracy type detectives with the hat and mac, bombed out London, 40s furniture pieces, adverts and comic books and samples of tweed patterns along with some of the colours I would like to incorporate into my pic.

Choose a word, which captures the mood you would like to convey and collect  and create colours and textures to form a moodboard to give a general impression of the word.

Word brainstorm - moody, determined, frustrated, murky, dark, shady, arcane, enigmatic, bleak, cheerless, sullen, morose, ominous, dreary, unpromising, disappointed, discouraged, disheartened, embittered, angry, thwarted, simmering, INFURIATED...

Came across this interesting chapter below with reference to using colours to convey emotions etc.

Colour and Emotion in Art – Edvard Munch and Vincent van Gogh


The expression of emotions, and emotional responses, can be a central concern of artists and designers. Their aim may be to express their own emotions, to induce a particular emotional response in others, or both. Another possibility is that emotion itself might be the subject matter of a painting. Edvard Munch and Vincent van Gogh are well known for the emotional intensity of their work.

Munch described the experience which inspired his most famous painting The Scream: ‘I was walking along a road one evening… The sun went down – the clouds were stained red, as if with blood. I felt as though the whole of nature was screaming… I painted that picture, painting the clouds like real blood. The colours screamed.’. In a later painting he drew heavily on the compositional elements in The Scream to express Anxiety. An observation about Munch by his friend, the poet Sigbjorn Obstfelder, is quoted by John Gage; ‘He feels colours and he reveals his feelings through colours; he does not see them in isolation. He does not just see yellow, red and blue and violet; he sees sorrow and screaming and melancholy and decay.’

Van Gogh wrote passionately about his ideas. He regarded colour as one of the keys: ‘instead of trying to reproduce exactly what I have before my eyes, I use colour more arbitrarily, in order to express myself forcibly.’ (p.6). In letters to his brother he describes his intentions for his painting The Night Café: ‘I have tried to express the terrible passions of humanity by means of red and green’ (p.28). And then: ‘In my picture of the Night Café, I have tried to express the idea that the café is a place where one can ruin oneself, go mad or commit a crime.’ (p.31). In a letter to fellow painter émile Bernard, written from the asylum in St Rémy, van Gogh links a particular colour combination specifically to a particular emotional state: ‘this combination of red ochre, of green gloomed over by gray, the black streaks surrounding the contours, produces something of the sensation of anguish, called ‘noir-rouge’ (black-red), from which certain of my companions in misfortune frequently suffer.’

Osvaldo da Pos and Paul Green-Armytage*
Dipartimento di Psicologia Generale, Università di Padova, Via Venezia, 10-35131 Padova, Italy
*Department of Design, Curtin University of Technology, GPO Box U1987, Perth, WA 6845, Australia

continued...

Saturday, 9 October 2010

Using Black & White continued....

Fig. 1
Fig. 2





















Finally managed to sort out the white on black images and here they are...
Amazing what a difference they make from the white pics and I''m starting to see the shapes and potential
for the next stage of the exercise.
Next step is to do the cut-outs - think I will work on Fig.1 as the shapes look stronger.
tbc.
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Here is the finished version of  'Building', after several hours of cutting and pasting, I'm quite pleased with the 'graphic' feel of it. I know that you would'nt really have such strong shadows in the image but I like the contrast between the dark black solids and the web like structure.











 Also thought I would try the inverted version as I really like the idea of whiting out the blocks and the
finished look. It needs working on in Photoshop, but as a whole I think it really works as the white blocks give the feeling of light bursting out of the building. For some reason the image seems to have changed size during the journey onto the blog?


Its interesting the way the added white shapes give a solidity to the building and a certain depth to the building.

Below are some images by different artists that I would describe as graphic, and have used just
black and white to great effect.



Riverside grafitti by Banksy - imaginative and powerful..

A couple of posters by an artist called Rigo, both 'building' based!
 
Another by Banksy - always original.



Thursday, 7 October 2010

Exercise - Using black and White

Object of the exercise was to create a line illustration around the word 'Building' so I began by playing around with the word and others associated with it such as the obvious ones like construction, brickwork, housing, architecture etc, and then on to other meanings and associations such as lego, meccano, society, slums, ghetto, housing, grids, spiders web, career, prospects. I then googled as many images on the words above to give ideas on suitable images.

One of the avenue's of thought I went down was the idea of a spider building a web and using the patterns within the web to spell out the word, but lost interest or enthusiasm for this path and then decided to go back to the more obvious route, probably because I liked the shapes and options that a more typical construction image offered.

I then worked on a couple of images of construction sites that seem to offer a strong feeling of composition. I liked the one below mainly because of the shapes within the building which had a 'web-like' quality. (spider-talk again) but I could see that it had great potential when reversed to white on black.



Both contained several cranes which, because of the way they are built,  and drawn would hopefully lend themselves to a strong graphic image. The next image also had some really strong shapes that would look good in the negative.

I then scanned the images, and using Illustrator, Photoshop and fairy dust managed to invert them, creating a white on black reverse pic which gave a really interesting and different view on the image drawn.

t.b.c. as soon as I work out how to compress the other files....

Saturday, 2 October 2010

Local Art Exhibition


Buddha II


I decided to enter four of my paintings into the local village art exhibition at the last minute this week as I'd just had a couple framed and the invite had just arrived the week before. I'd always visited the exhibition in the past, and had good intentions to enter something, but somehow always seemed to never find the time or some other excuse, so this time I grabbed the bull by the horns and just did it.
 


Old Friends
 

I felt a bit self-conscious as I walked into the hall on the Friday night carrying a huge oil painting of a mans arse, and wondered if I'd chosen the right sort of subject for a village exhibition, but they seemed a nice crowd and looked like they didnt mind my two buddha's, a pair of boots and David's backside. (Michaelangelo's David by the way)..







Buddha I
 


 When I returned the next morning to the exhibition I was pleased to see my paintings hung in a really nice position right near the entrance. There were over a hundred exhibits from 43 artists covering such mediums as watercolour, oil, batik, pottery and photography, with a wide and eclectic choice of subjects. Anyway, I enjoyed showing my work and had some positive comments, so maybe I won't wait so long to enter the next one.



Back of David

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OCA BLOGGER OF THE WEEK!

Great news! I received an emaiil from Gareth at OCA informing me that this blog had been chosen as
Blog of the Week and after only one day I've doubled my followers to a mighty six and passed the thousand hit mark, just shows the power of OCA...
Blow that trumpet.....

Blog of the Week: Rob’s Learning Blog


September 29, 2010

By Gareth

Blog of the week this month is Rob’s Learning Blog. It is one of the first illustration learning logs I have seen – the course was only introduced this year, but has has exceeded expectations in terms of enrolments. I was struck not just by the quality of the drawing but also by the effort is putting into the research for his course. Enjoy.


3 Responses to “ Blog of the Week: Rob’s Learning Blog ”

Eileen on October 1, 2010 at 7:21 pm

It’s a great blog – well worth checking out.

mp governale on October 1, 2010 at 9:00 pm

‘has exceeded expectations in terms of enrolments’, I was hesitating between 2 courses. Marion from About.com Painting suggested that I looked at Rob’s learning blog – and that made my decision easier. I’ve been on the Illustration course with OCA since September. Thanks Rob or is it Bert?.

Rachel on October 2, 2010 at 8:58 am

What an inspiring blog, as a fellow blogger I am now following Robs Learning Blog and look forward to seeing more of his work, well done!!! Rachel x