Saturday, 30 September 2017

Study task 2 - Editorial Illustrators

Robert Frank Hunter:


  • I've admired his work for a while since I saw a few of his books that were published by Nobrow, as I really liked his blocky, colourful screen-printed style. I was looking at illustrators for the NY times and his really stuck out to me. Although he's only done a few that I could find, I really enjoy the digital but still organic looking effect they have with the tapered lines and the crayon(?) textures. The colour palette is limited in both images I've found but that doesn't make the illustrations any less powerful and emotive. 

Jun Cen:

  • His illustrations seem really intriguing and relevant to my practise and this project in particular because a lot of them look like they've been screen printed. His work uses clever perspective, colour and utilises all of the limited space he's given to create effective and immediately compelling illustrations. Even in the brighter, more vibrant ones theres a really sensitive quality to them, I really enjoy the feeling that they give you a little look into a quiet aspect of someone or somethings private life. 

Monday, 17 July 2017

Lady Authors

Been researching through the list of authors on the list today and decided because of the way my work from last year was shaping up I definitely want to choose a female author. The original list I started with was:


  • Susan Sontag
  • Ursua Leguin
  • Donna Tartt
  • Margaret Atwood
  • Angela Carter
  • Rachel Carson

All of these authors were from around the time frame of literature that I find myself most drawn to, but upon closer research I realised that Susan Sontag wrote about political activism, Ursula Leguin wrote about Sci-fi and fantasy and Rachel Carson wrote about marine biology. Although I find these all interesting in their own right I felt they weren't in keeping with my emerging interests. 

From here I researches the three remaining authors and just wrote down what I found out about them that stood out to me:

Donna Tartt:


Pros:
- her books are really well known and have been read by lots of people so I should be able to finish them?
- like the idea that she discusses social status and aesthetic, not something I'd usually discuss myself
- very descriptive and seems to be a lot of visuals to work with

Cons:
- her books are neo-romantic in style and famously very dense and descriptive
- doesn't discuss female issues or have really any female main characters in her books
- The Goldfinch is 700 freaking pages long

Margaret Atwood:


Pros:
- she does discuss feminism, most of her protagonists being females under patriarchal rule
- her books are slightly shorter 
- she also wrote some poems inspired by myths and fairy tales

Cons:
- Handmaids tale has been adapted to TV recently and I worry this might make her work a little bit over saturated at the moment for me to make anything original


Angela Carter:


Pros:
- Her background is SO interesting, she was born during the war in Eastbourne and moved to Tokyo for two years in her 30's. Travelled a lot, didn't get along with her mum who was very straight laced and was fluent in French and German
- she was fiercely feminist
- a lot of her books talk about sexuality, women, escapist fairy tales and gender
- not only has she written novels, but also books of poems and short stories

Cons: 
- NOPE

So definitley going to be researching more into Angela Carter as so far shes been of the most interest to me, although I'll see how it goes. Currently I've got the most excited and inspired whilst researching her though.

Thursday, 13 July 2017

Book Research Begins

Today I started my initial research into which author I'll be studying for the summer brief, "about the author". In the Persons Of Note brief I found I encountered problems while researching Dr Nakamatsu. I didn't personally identify or agree or was even particularly interested by his life and work, and all of his experiences were very far from anything I've experienced or try to explore in my work. So because this summer brief is similarly very research focused I realised I'd need to identify the author off the list who I most closely resonates with me. I also need to consider the work of the author because due to my dyslexia I find it quite challenging to read certain types of very dense books as I just don't take them in all that well.

Author Criteria:(if possible, should fit a few of these)

  • Female
  • More recent work, this is both due to the fact that I find less contemporary, denser books much harder to read and I worry I wouldn't be able to read them in time. Also because I have no memory for historical facts and figures and focusing on more recent history makes things easier for my brain to handle
  • Discuss gender, sexuality, feminism, nostalgia? 
  • Maybe have not only written novels but short stories or poems as again, I will hopefully feel less daunted by these



Tuesday, 28 March 2017

Evaluation

This module has most definitely had its ups and downs but I can safely say that its been my favourite of the year. The beginning saw us getting stuck into character design which was something that I thought I was already well practised at, but the fact we were given a random song we had to relate the character to made it that much more challenging. I was given a song called ‘Please’ by Blanck Mass which was really not something I’d ordinarily listen too, but I still really enjoyed just taking time to sit and listen to the little parts and pick it apart to try and find a character in there. I ended up making my character a space yeti called Richardo who I have become way too attached too over the last few months, one of the hightlights of this project was the amount of time we were allowed just to get to think our characters personality through and get to know them. I feel like this really helped me when it came to animating the way he would move. Before this module GIFs were an alien and terrifying concept to me, which I’d seen but had no clue how they even worked, but I went in a little bit too determined to learn something new as I feel like I’ve been lazy and stuck my head in the sand before when its come to learning new digital things. Now I can see what a valuable skill this is too have and I 100% think that I’ll be making more GIFs in the future as they really helped make my character that extra bit more three dimensional. They can still be a little bit frustrating because I think they need more accuracy and attention to detail than just drawing but now I know the process its a lot less scary. I also started to feel like a lot more of my personality was coming out in my character designs and especially in Ricardo. 

The sticker brief of the project was my favourite, even if it was daunting at first. The brainstorming and roughing part of this brief was some of the best times I think I’ve had on this course so far as it really made me realise how many things I care about and how I can use illustration as a platform to talk about those things and make them visual so that they can be understood by more people. I ended up going with a few ideas centred around catcalls, body positivity and not being a dick, all of which I talk very passionately about. Making the final sticker on Adobe Illustrator is something I’ve never done before but thought I’d really struggle with as I often find it hard to see the logic in digital processes, however learning how to use Ai in this module has literally changed my practise for good. I don't know why I feel so differently about Ai than I do about photoshop, maybe its using vectors or the freedom you can have with it? Either way I find it so satisfying and simple to use and I think I’m using it well enough now that you still get a sense of my hand of the maker through it, it still looks like something that was made by me. We also had to stick to a two colour palette for the stickers which is something that at first I used to really struggle with but now I can see that it helps to give the work more of a focus and look a bit more professional. I made my stickers black and purple and ended up going with the body positivity theme, it was during this brief that I realised I could see myself making things like this for real in the future.


The final brief was defiantly the hardest and I don't just think it was because it was nearing the end of term. I did mine on Yoshiro Nakamatsu, a Japanese inventor and all round crazy person, who I’ve really come to love. But at first I found the research element to the project really hard, even though I’m someone who has always thought I’m quite good at doing extensive research. I think the reason I disliked this brief so much at first was that it felt eerily similar to visual narratives which was really challenging and was mostly self led, and compared to the first two briefs of this project which has been quite restrictive and had a clear direction it all felt really daunting. Its not that I don't like choosing how I lead the project, I really like deciding which parts I’ll choose to focus on and which media and colours to use, its just that in a project like this one where we only had three weeks to research, develop and make, it felt like we had to make a lot of decisions in not a lot of time, and in that situation I’m always scared I’ll focus on something rubbish then only realise when its too late to change it. Luckily we had a lot of crits and feedback sessions which I found immensely helpful, I think when I spend too much time with a project my head becomes a bit cloudy and I struggle to see if what I’m making is any good. I started by playing around with gouache and whilst I was really enjoying the process it felt pretty tedious having used more digital methods for the last few projects. I struggled to come to terms with this change in myself during crits and on my blog, as a lot of people seemed to really like the use of wet media, I just wasn't enjoying making things with it. So I decided to start translating some of the sketches I’d worked up into Ai, this took a while at first and the first few looked horrendous, but after a few goes I found my feet, and felt I was able to put my own spin on the process and make it look my own. I did really enjoy portraying Nakamats in this way
even if I found it hard at first, I think what I’ve learnt from this is that in a similar way to narratives, I need to focus on smaller areas of information during research, and to make what I enjoy creating, because overall thats what I’ll be motivated enough to continue with and learn the most from. 

Overall this has been the module where I have begun to feel most like a real illustrator and there are so many reasons for this such as the sheer amount of hours I worked on the things I was creating, I was working from 9 to 6 every day and feeling really great about it because I could rest easy knowing that I’d put all the effort I could into it, but also it was easy because I was enjoying it. Theres also the fact that I got to put a lot more of myself into the briefs, which I have come to learn from this and the other briefs isn’t a bad thing. Its driven me to be more passionate and involved in the process, as well as more in touch with myself and how my practise makes me feel. Its also led to me finding out how to use some valuable processes which I know I’ll use again, without this brief I might not have found out how to use Ai, and although I know I cant rely on it for everything, I think it has greatly helped me in simplifying my practise where I used to needlessly over-complicate things. I’m leaving this module behind, feeling both sad and relieved that its over, but excited to put more of myself into my practise and get stuck into the next project as much as I have into this one.

Note To Self: TIMETABLE EVERYTHING






Was writing my evaluation and I realised that even though I slipped up a few times like with being a bit tight for time in the last week of this brief, this was the first module I'd properly timetabled and I think you can really tell. Its payed off as I've finished now and feel so much more relaxed about it because I can see that I have everything done, why don't I do this more often? (cause I'm lazy)

Saturday, 25 March 2017

IMPROVEMENTS

After finishing the A2 print I realised there was a few improvements I could make to the postcards so they looked more like they were actually part of a series. 




All I really did was add a few more of the wiggly pool lines to the postcards, I think its made then look a bit more dynamic and hopefully makes them look a bit more related to the A2 postcards and stamps. I also changed the image on the right so that it didn't look like Nakamats was under the sea as I realised that it didn't really make sense and I also preferred the 'V' shape of the other images.