Thursday, October 31, 2013

Word Play Assignment, Part I

CLIMB

My word for the Word Play Assignment is Climb. The point of this assignment is to turn this verb into vector art. The art might include type and shapes- so the word and images. Here is my word list.


climb,
mountains,
ladders,
stairs,
hills,
the corporate ladder,
strength,
endurance,
hiking,
Mt. Everest,
rock wall,
the outdoors,
clif bars,
roller coasters,
Six Flags,
Mt. Fuji,
Mt. Rainier,
mountain men,
beards,
the Alps,
climbing gear,
climbing shoes,
trees,
childhood,
branches,
green,
brown,
wood,
difficult,
suits,
success,
failure,
struggle,
constancy

I have quite a few ideas of how I could turn "climb" into vector art, but I'm not sure if they would either be too cliche, or too abstract to understand the connection. I'll have to find a balance. I'm going to make some sketches and I'll post those. But first, here are some inspiration pictures.



http://www.travelodestination.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/mountain-climbing.jpg


http://inapcache.boston.com/universal/site_graphics/blogs/bigpicture/everest60/bp30.jpg


http://b-i.forbesimg.com/alanhall/files/2013/04/Corporate-Ladder1.jpg


http://cdn6.triplepundit.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/clif-bar-logo.jpg


http://thebeachsideresident.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/climbing-trees-375x500.jpg


http://www.vanishingculturesphotography.com/img/s8/v13/p414554415-3.jpg


http://wwwdelivery.superstock.com/WI/223/1606/PreviewComp/SuperStock_1606-15898.jpg


http://eveningsends.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/scarpa-feroce-climbing-shoes.jpeg









Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Final Product of Magritte Inspired Driller


This is the final product in the Magritte inspired composition that Ye and I created. We're pleased with the outcome. Ye completed the background and sky while I completed the figures of the drillers and the shadows. Then together we decided where to place the figures and where to place the shadows. We really made all the decisions about the composition together. We decided to keep the drillers golden because the color of the Tulsa Driller is so iconic. We thought that the composition really calls "Golconda" to mind without us changing the drillers to a darker color. 

Monday, October 28, 2013

Magritte Progress 2


This is where Ye and I are at on our Magritte Inspired Composition. Ye finished the library and the sky for the background. He had to extend the left side of the building quite a bit and I think it turned out very well. I standardized the size of the drillers and started arranging them to match Magritte's Golconda. It's coming along fast.

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Magritte Composition Progress

So this is how far I got today working on our Magritte inspired composition. I live-traced 3 images of the Tulsa Driller, edited their color a bit, erased all the extraneous background and started copying and flipping them. This is nowhere near what the final comp will look like, but it's a start on the Drillers. Ye has been creating the background.

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Bear Suit II


This is my roommate in a bear suit. Illustrating friends in bear suits has become a dangerous procrastination tool. 

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Rene Magritte

Written by Sarah Beam:

For our next project, a Graphic Design Inspired Illustration, Ye Zhang and I are partners. Ye and I chose Rene Magritte as our artist inspiration.

Short Biography:

Rene Magritte was a Belgian painter, printmaker, film maker, sculptor, and photographer. He was one of the biggest influences and major players in Surrealism. He was born in 1898 and died in 1967. In 1912 Magritte's mother committed suicide which many people claim as having had a large influence over much of the darkness and mystery in some of his pieces. In his work he tries to challenge the preconceived perceptions of reality that the viewer has. Magritte's work often has everyday objects as subjects but presents them in surprising or unusual ways. His work grew in popularity in the 1960s and is still popular today.

(Image source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/9/92/Wolleh_magritte.jpg)

The piece we agreed upon is Golconda from 1953.

(http://www.wallsave.com/wallpapers/1024x768/surrealism/208230/surrealism-keywords-golconda-rene-magritte-painting-s-208230.jpg)

Description:

Golconda is a Surrealist piece with a very conservative and limited color palette and very regular and conservative line quality, however, it's unique composition is what makes it so compelling. Magritte used perspective to make the buildings look more real, but they really get pushed into the background as the viewer's focus shifts from figure to figure floating in the sky. The red pop of color is really needed to help the building stand out. The Surrealist approach of taking things out of their usual context is obvious in Golconda since the men are floating through the blue sky. Ye and I agreed that what made this piece so successful was the fact that although the subjects of the piece are very normal and everyday things the jarring composition really makes you look at the piece again to try to figure out what's going on. It makes you question ordinary things. 

Tulsa Subject:
(http://media-cdn.tripadvisor.com/media/photo-s/02/b6/a1/5b/quiktrip-exposition-center.jpg)

(http://farm2.staticflickr.com/1033/724630860_88bd400f8f_m.jpg)

Our chosen landmarks for this project are the Tulsa Driller, and McFarlin Library. We chose the Tulsa Driller because Ye said that when he came to Tulsa the Tulsa Driller was one of the first landmarks that he heard about from his friends because they thought it was so odd. Which really fits with Magritte's work. And we chose McFarlin Library because it's really iconic for the TU campus. It will work perfectly as the background building for our piece based off of Golconda. 

Maybe an Execution Path:

We will probably cut part of McFarlin Library to use as the background building, so the tall part of the building lines up to the right side of the artboard and fades off. We will take different angles and views of the Tulsa Driller and have them floating all through the air in varying sizes, fading the color of the smallest figures to make them appear as if they are farther away. In this way we can emulate the style of Magritte by putting everyday buildings and objects into a surrealist composition.

Plan of Action:

Ye will be illustrating McFarlin Library and the sky, so essentially taking care of the background. I, Sarah, will be illustrating the various Tulsa Drillers. We will make other executive choices and changes about the piece together. 


Monday, October 14, 2013

Bear Suit



Using techniques I learned from the Yeti tutorial (http://3463-beam.blogspot.com/2013/10/adorable-yeti-from-tutorial.html) I created a little guy and a girl wearing bear suits! I draw these characters sometimes and so when I was making the Yeti I realized how easy it would be to make them into vector art in Illustrator. So I did.

Sunday, October 13, 2013

Adorable Yeti from Tutorial

I chose to make this cute yeti from a tutorial on vector.tutsplus.com. Here is the link to the tutorial: http://vector.tutsplus.com/tutorials/illustration/creating-a-simple-kawaii-yeti-with-basic-shapes-in-adobe-illustrator/

I picked the Yeti because I thought it was really cute. Also, I hadn't gotten to make any characters in Illustrator yet. It was pretty fun to follow this tutorial and modify it a bit to personalize my yeti. This tutorial used a lot of shapes, clipping mask, pen tool, width tool, fill, transform, and pathfinder so I found it very instructive. It made me want to make a lot more cute little characters to be the Yeti's friends. :)



Saturday, October 12, 2013

A Portrait of J.R.R. Tolkien


As a reminder- this was the original reference image I used to create my portrait of Tolkien. The image is from http://www.nndb.com/people/511/000022445/-


- And this is the final product of my Art Nouveau inspired portrait of J.R.R. Tolkien. I'm very pleased with the outcome. I used some shapes and fills, but I used the blob brush for the majority of the portrait. I used earthy colors because of the importance of nature and organic elements in Tolkien's works. The frame of the circle has a gold ring to symbolize the One Ring in the Lord of the Rings trilogy, and it has the elvish inscription from the ring around it. I really enjoyed this project because we were given so much freedom in the direction we took and got to pick our subject. I think it turned out well. 

Here are some of my main references for this project: 

I used this image of a bullthistle as references for the design in the green background.
(http://www.ppws.vt.edu/scott/weed_id/bullthistle8-10bb.jpg)

 I used this image of the inscription as reference and used the blob brush and traced out the elvish for my piece. (http://quenya101.files.wordpress.com/2011/09/circle_inscription.jpg)
 (http://www.codex99.com/design/images/mucha/job_lg.jpg)
I referenced both of these pieces by Alphonse Mucha for style inspiration.
(http://www.artcyclopedia.com/images/Mucha.jpg)




Saturday, October 5, 2013

Background Progress

This is the Art Nouveau inspired background I created for my portrait of J.R.R. Tolkien. I'm pretty pleased with it. It might need some more reworking but I need to see what Tolkien looks like on top of it before I can edit it more. I do really like the inscription of the one ring surrounding the composition, though. 

This was an earlier attempt that I ended up trashing: 

The bright and gaudy design in the center didn't feel natural at all. I thought that Tolkien would look really strange on top of it. In addition, the gold circle doesn't read as a ring because the little triangles break it up so much. 



Thursday, October 3, 2013

Chosen Portrait Path

As I posted in my "10 Style Sketches" blog post: "My sixth idea is to create a type of Art Nouveau portrait of Tolkien. The Art Nouveau movement of the turn of the century influenced Tolkien in his youth. Art and metalworking and jewelry are extensively described in his books. Nature, beauty, and organic life are themes that flow through his works and especially characterize the elves that he created. I would model my portrait after the work of Alphonse Mucha, much like this image, titled "The Blonde" from 1897. Of course, I would make it less feminine, but I would keep the same elaborate ornamentation and patterning." This is the style idea that I have chosen to move forward with. As I begin working on my portrait today I'll start by creating a background in the Art Nouveau style so that I can create a color portrait of Tolkien on top of it. I want to begin with a round composition like "The Blonde" with a geometric border and an organic inside fill using earthy tones that really fit with Tolkien's philosophy. I will also draw inspiration from this JOB cigarettes ad by Mucha in order to illustrate the smoke from Tolkien's pipe.


 (http://www.codex99.com/design/images/mucha/job_lg.jpg)


(http://www.artcyclopedia.com/images/Mucha.jpg)

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Tolkien Word List

Today in Illustrator class we complied word lists to describe or relate to the people who we're going to be creating portraits of. This is my word list about J.R.R. Tolkien!

Author
Artist
Catholic
Creator
Father
Husband
Man
Imaginative
The Hobbit
The Lord of the Rings
Pipes
Smoke
Flowers
Elves
Dwarves
Hobbits
Wizards
Gandalf
Pastural
Devout
Organic
Arwen
Death of Parents
Sacrifice
The Silmarillion
Art Nouveau
Wisdom
Idealization
Storyteller
Script
Languages
Elvish
Art Deco
Gardens
Peace
The Great War
Frodo
Sauron
1900s
1920s
1950s
Warm
Genius
Rural vs. Industrial
Horses
Mentored by an elder Priest
Hobbit Holes
The one ring to rule them all
Fantasy
Beauty
Movies
Cartoons
Illustrations
Middle Earth