Sunday, 30 September 2012
Silver Arts Award - Unit 2 project plan
My
project is aimed at my friends on Deviant Art who are all involved in
illustration and are aged between 13-16 years old. This project is
my back up plan as the original project idea was not practical and
required funding.
I
am going to make an eleven step online tutorial on how to draw human
heads, focussing on the eyes, nose and mouth. I am producing this on
my own and will be responsible for designing and publishing the
tutorial.
I
will need access to a computer and tablet. To ensure that the
computer does not lose my tutorial I will save a back-up copy onto a
pen drive. I will not require help in producing the tutorial.
I
will send out a questionnaire to those who have taken part in the
tutorial and will collect feedback from it. I need to find out who is
happy to take part in the tutorial, publish the tutorial to Deviant
Art, send the link to the participants, and compile and send them a
questionnaire. Finally, I need to publish the tutorial and feedback
to my blog.
Wednesday, 26 September 2012
Monday, 24 September 2012
Progress
When
I started the Arts Award my artistic style was very basic. It
consisted of simple colouring and thick black lines. It was very
Anime and Manga based as this was the style that I was most
comfortable with. I did not go into detail and only used very basic
shading. I did not like to shade in detail as this was a new
technique for me. I used a program called GIMP to draw. GIMP is a
good program to start digital drawing with but it is not very good
for going into detail.
I
then moved on to using Photoshop for my drawings a few weeks into the
Arts Award. I started to go into more detail, adding in textures to
my artwork. I also began to experiment with different brushes and
stamps. I even designed my own virtual brushes and played around
with opacity and texture. I then made a brush that, when I tested it
out, reminded me of the bold brush strokes that you see when you look
at an oil painting. After experimenting a little more I found that I
could produce a drawing that looked like an oil painting. I also
found out how to remove the thick lines that I had been using. This
is my main style now but I do keep going back to my older style too.
I
have recently started to draw eyes in different styles. I think that
drawing eyes is a great way of showing emotion without words. When I
draw eyes I like to go back into the Anime and Manga style I used
when I started the Arts Award but I find ways to incorporate my new
style as well. Doing this has made me more aware of how much my
style has changed. My art style had gone from childish and messy to
rather neat and far more mature.
Before -
Before -
Now -
I
have recently been inspired by a few people since I started the Arts
Award. Here are two of the artists who I know that have inspired me.
http://mdragonheartlove.deviantart.com/
- Someone whose colour choice in her art has inspired me to use
more vibrant and shocking colours in what would usually be plain.
http://afrosamurai091.deviantart.com/
- A friend who has supported me with my art and given me much
inspiration from role plays that we have done.
I
have also attempted some cartoon-style artwork based on Roy
Lichtenstein's paintings.
Wednesday, 19 September 2012
Illustration Agencies
To be
an illustrator you need to have the skills that just come with
practice but no matter how many skills you have you still need ways
to get your work seen. This is where illustration agencies come in.
There are many illustration agencies that can assist you in getting
your work out there.
Illustration
agencies provide a large amount of illustrators with commissions and
publicity. Without illustration agencies many illustrators would not
be able to get themselves out in the public eye for all to see. For
example, writers who want illustrations for their books can just go
onto an agency's website and scroll through the artists until they
find someone whose art style fits with what they want. Then all they
have to do is contact that artist through the agency.
Finding an illustration agency that
will suit your needs and provide you with the type of work you want
may be hard but there are many agencies that an artist can choose
from. A few illustration agencies are Eastwing Illustration, Eye Candy Illustration, Beehive Illustration and Plum Pudding Illustration. These are four very different illustration
agencies that all stand out for specialising in different genres of
illustration. For example, Beehive Illustration specialise in
illustrations for children's publications and Eastwing Illustration
specialise in fashion and decorative design.
If
you are planning to create a career out of your skills as an
illustrator the best way to get yourself out there is through an
illustration agency that will represent you and your work for a
commission.
Tuesday, 31 July 2012
An interview with Tasha Whittle
Tasha Whittle sitting at her desk working with some of her favourite illustrations beside her.
I have recently interviewed local illustrator / artist, Tasha
Whittle, for my arts award. I had been looking forward to this interview since we set the date. Tasha's studio is a creative and inspiring large space in Islington Mill, Salford. She shares the studio with a few other local designers and photographers. After meeting her and seeing her work space I would love to work in a studio like hers one day. Read on to find out more about Tasha and her work.
What first inspired you to do
illustration?
I think, like a lot
of other people, I started drawing from an early age. I did a lot of
travelling when I was a child and drawing was my entertainment on
journeys. I would draw on anything I could get my hands on. I didn't
know what direction to go in until I did the foundation course.
What space/area do you work best in?
Live drawing –
that's the best. Loud music, a big wall, slight pressure, a massive
space. With loud music I am concentrated.
For illustration projects a proposal for a commission requires preliminary
sketches, ideas, mood boards. So the client can see what I have in
mind. If I get the commission I do spider diagrams to grow ideas. A mood board is a selection of images I use for inspiration, like
photos, scanned images.
What medium do you prefer to use and
why?
Paint and brush.
It's because I started when I was young using acrylics. Now I like
emulsion – you can get so many awesome colours. With pen it's
laborious getting it right but with paint you can just slap it on.
Photography as well. I like the mix of photography and drawing. I
use the same camera I had as a child. I also document other people's
work and lives via photography.
Do you like to work alone or with
people and why?
A bit of both. At
the moment I'm enjoying working alone with independence and my own
thoughts. I love collaborating and talking with others about our
ideas and what we're going to do. I do prefer collaborating.
What music inspires you?
Everything and
anything. Pop music and the charts uninspire me and trans-world
stuff. If I'm focussing I listen to electronic music. I like the
journey and the rhythm.
How do your emotions influence your
art?
My emotions are
quite strong but subtly strong. Since university I've become aware
of who I am. My emotions are bound to end up in my work.
What was the first piece of work you
were commissioned to do?
A 7” record for
a DIY band called The Mock Heroic. I designed the cover and the
inside too. Before that I'd put on some bands and did gigs and
flyers but it wasn't commissioned work.
Which illustrators (modern and
contemporary) influence you and why/how?
Too many. When I
was a child it was Quentin Blake, and there's a nursery rhyme book
given to me by my auntie when I was five, each page a pianted story
of another world. The Animals of Farthing Wood, Ren and Stimpy too.
I'm not inspired by illustrators, more inspired by painters and
street artists out there. I see them as illustrators. They say
something with their work. There's Hammo who's Manchester based and
obsessed with robots and rubble. Then there's Studio Gibley who
created Princess Mononoku and Spirited Away. Guy McKinley inspires me
the most. There is also Maurice Sendak, Dr. Seuss, David Bailey, Tove Jansson, Bjork, and many many many more!
What is your favourite illustration
by another illustrator?
Most recently I've
been looking at Show Chicken (Nick Sheeney) and his stuff is other
worldly, a great definition in lines.
Which one of your own
illustrations/murals is your favourite and why?
The three girls'
heads and the hair because I didn't think about it, just did it. It
has composition within the colours.
Do you have any time to draw for fun
or is it all commission based art that you produce?
I still draw for
fun. Commissions become fun rather than work. I do doodle.
Do you ever have artist's block and
if so how do you cope with it?
I talk to my
friends if I get stuck, the others here in the studio. I work through
ideas with another person, look at books for inspiration, go for
walks, get some 'me' time. I need some space when I'm blocked, not
be here in the studio all the time but to stop and step away.
Do you have any habits when you
draw? If so, what? ( eg, biting lip, sticking out tongue, etc)
I talk or hum to
myself. Irrational wording and random words too, and the brain
filters other problems out when I'm working.
What route did you take to become an
illustrator?
I did the Art and
Design Foundation Course in Norwich, then a degree in Illustration
and Animation at Manchester Metropolitan University (MMU). I met
Johnny Dub of Sketch City – a live event. It started there. I got
commissions through Sketch City while I was still at art college. I
did more mural painting.
How can someone like me get into the
professional illustration business? (what qualifications, courses,
groups do I need).
You don't need a
qualification. I know an amazing artist with just an NVQ in Art and
Design. More important than qualifications is to have confidence in
your work, and a style. My style is still developing. A good vision
as an artist and to really want to do it and be able to enjoy it.
Observe the world and create your style.
You
can see some of Tasha's work via her website at
http://www.thecolouringbox.co.uk
Monday, 4 June 2012
We Face Forward - The First Day
On Saturday I went to the first day of the We Face Forward exhibition. This is an exhibition representing the art of West Africa and included work by artists from countries such as Nigeria, Sierra Leone, The Gambia, Mali, Burkina Faso, Cote D'Ivoire and Ghana. Many of the artists were present and available to talk to, although the majority of them only spoke French or Spanish. Some were very well known in their own countries.
The first gallery we went into was amazing. It had alot of wooden beams with wooden faces and figures attached randomly onto them as you can see below. The mood in that room was inviting and intriguing because it was the first part of the exibition and also because it had many different styles of sculpture, some more traditional than others. I could have spent a long time in that room just taking in the wooden statues. All the sculptures were made out of different media and all had a very different texture.
Another part of the exhibition included a huge knitted wall hanging. Not much was known about the artist of this piece but it was thought that it was made in the 1940s in a village in Nigeria. It was made out of old bags, wool and clothing. The knitting needles used in this piece must have been huge and very hard to hold. This wall hanging will have taken a very long time to make. Unfortunately the public were not allowed to touch the wall hanging. This large piece made me feel very small when I stood next to it. The colours used varied in tone. Some colours were plain and boring but some were bold and exciting. There was no set design or pattern in the wall hanging making it very abstract.
Another room contained some water colour bodies on a very long strip of paper which took up the whole of the wall. It is rather hard to explain what these bodies were like so I will let the pictures speak for themselves. This part of the exibition made me feel rather glum. I am not too sure what made me feel that way. It could have been the media used or the subject matter or even the colours. I found it very unattractive and rather disturbing.
The first gallery we went into was amazing. It had alot of wooden beams with wooden faces and figures attached randomly onto them as you can see below. The mood in that room was inviting and intriguing because it was the first part of the exibition and also because it had many different styles of sculpture, some more traditional than others. I could have spent a long time in that room just taking in the wooden statues. All the sculptures were made out of different media and all had a very different texture.
Another room contained some water colour bodies on a very long strip of paper which took up the whole of the wall. It is rather hard to explain what these bodies were like so I will let the pictures speak for themselves. This part of the exibition made me feel rather glum. I am not too sure what made me feel that way. It could have been the media used or the subject matter or even the colours. I found it very unattractive and rather disturbing.
Another exhibit was a makeshift market stall. This was made up of what you would expect to find in a common stall. It included old water bottles, transistor radios, badges and other thrown away items which could be found at a typical West African market, and was supposed to represent the difference between the disposable attitude of the affluent western world compared to the poverty and aspiration of developing countries where these items are only affordable as used items.
I highly recommend that you go to the Whitworth Art Gallery while We Face Forward is on so that you can see the exhibition. Do not forget to check out the other venues too.
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