SUBMIT YOUR WORK: Midterm Project

MIDTERM PROJECT : INKED ILLUSTRATION

Overall Project Description:

For your Midterm Project you will be COMPLETING either Assignment 1 or Assignment 2 Ink, using a full range of value.  Consider this a finalized art piece, ready to hang in a gallery or submit to a client for publication.

Final work will be judged on the uniqueness, clarity and cleverness of overall the concept, utilization of composition, skillful use of media, and of course overall technique.

You will be graded on both your Work Process Presentation, and on Final Art.

 

GRADING BREAKDOWN:            

50 % project grade Submit a PDF PROCESS BOOK guiding us through the project from inception to conclusion.

  • Carefully SCAN your process work. This should include : Your Source Material,  Brainstorm, Thumbnails, Concept Sketches, Value Roughs, Related Sketchbook Work, and Final Art.
  • Carefully Label all of your work so that your thought process is CLEAR. Be sure all of it is presented well: facing the right way, no shadows in the picture, good contrast, etc.

50 % project grade Submit a publication ready 300 DPI JPEG of Final ART

 

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DUE OCTOBER 24th

SUMBIT YOUR WORK

 

 

 

 

Field Trip: Society of Illustrators

I choose this picture illustrated by Brian Elig. The thing that caught my eye in this Illustration was the amount of detail that the artist put in. The tall grasses and the animals were just so amazingly drawn that I just couldn’t believe it. The time and effort the artist put into this work just amazes me. I love how the animals look they don’t look like any ordinary animals. They almost look like monsters and the fact that the artist chose to draw them this way is probably do to the fact that this woman is trapped on an island with a bunch of wild beast. The women probably sees the animals as beast that she must fight off. I on the other hand would definitively see these animals like beast because they are so big. I love how the artist chose to draw from the women’s point of view.

I also found out that this illustrator created a whole story on this women and how she woke up on this mysterious looking island and how she started to learn how to survive on this island all by herself.

Society of Illustrators

Nicole Harripersad

COMD 2313

Prof Sara Wooley

October 17th, 2017

 

Society of Illustrators

 

Last week on October 10th, 2017 I went on a class field trip to the Society of Illustrators. When it comes to certain museums I don’t partake in a lot of interest in the pieces. But, this museum was a lot different than the Museum of natural history. I enjoyed this trip very much because of the artwork was shown, the different styles that were presented, and what tools, pens, paints, and other mixed media used.  One certain piece that I really enjoyed personally was a harry potter illustration because it looks like the poster I would buy from a store.

The main piece I enjoyed from the Society of Illustrators was a drawing that was Illustrated by Charles Dana Gibson titled “At the Recital”, which was apart of the “Fashion and Satire” gallery. The illustration was a story about a couple, blessed with gorgeous beauty and handsomeness, who has generated mixed emotions to the people in a recital/ party by showing their love and affections towards the public. Showing this towards of attention in public has created a distraction for the guests at the recital. I guess in my point of view, relationships were supposed to keep more in private between lovers than showing it outside in public where it makes people feel distracted, jealous, or in disgust.

 

Now I would like to take my time and discuss more on the artist who created this lovely piece. Charles Dana Gibson. Gibson was born into a wealthy family from Roxbury, New England, then a suburb of Boston. He was very interested in art as a boy while watching his father cut silhouettes for art. This then has sparked Charles to start cutting out silhouettes himself at the age of 8 years old, by the time Gibson was twelve, he was selling his silhouettes at various art exhibitions. When he was 14 years old, and with the help through family connections, Charles was chosen to be an apprentice to a sculptor known as Augustus Saint-Gaudens. After a year in Saint-Gaudens studio, he decided that sculpting was not his main interest and he went to use pen and ink. His parents, recognizing his artistic talent, enrolled Charles in the Art Students League. In 1885, due to an unplanned family financial hardship, he left the school at 18 years old to start his own career. Gibson’s best piece during his years was when he started drawing ‘The Gibson Girl’ and later featured her in his first full independent portfolio in 1894. She became known as an ideal image of the youthful American femininity: athletic, smart, stylish, and desirable, and she sold magazines. In fact, whole fashion lines were started when Gibson placed a ribbon on her forehead or a certain style dress on her tall fit figure. And then around 1917, after Gibson and other various artists formed the Society of Illustrators.

Charles, later on, retired at the age of 65, and he continued with art and decided to start oil painting and attempt into portraits. The American Academy of Arts has exhibited his paintings. The people of the world had long assumed that pen and ink were just only his main tools, but later on, the public has started to forget him, his technique, and The Gibson Girl that sold millions. In 1944 in the fall, Charles Dana Gibson suffered a heart attack. Then President Franklin D. Roosevelt requested Gibson to be flown on a Navy seaplane to New York to get immediate, where he died a few weeks later.

I really appreciated Charles Dana Gibson’s work because he knew the classic Pen and Ink would always be the way to sell his work and to be shown all around the world. His works were classical and inspirational, and it makes me want to continue with using pen and ink myself.

Field Trip: Society of Illustrator

One of Orson B Lowell picture stood out to me was the Drunken man speaking to table because of how he catches the view attention of how drunk this person was. He represented the spiral on a man’s leg and table to show how drunk he was, and how it looked from his eyes. When I first saw this picture without looking at the description, I was like, what’s going on the here and why his leg looked like it was broken or rubber. But it’s interesting how he Incorporated the spirals to the man leg table to represent the drunkenness the man was.

Society of Illustrators

In the trip of Society of Illustrators, I love about GREG MANCHESS’s work: Above the Timberline.  First of all, the frozen environment was really caught my eyes.  The color and the animals look really “real”.  When you come to a close up look, the color might be a little confuses you; however, I love the way how he use the color as contrast with shadowing and lighting to show the whole subject.

Gregory Manchess was An award-wining painter, and he is an experienced illustrator for almost 40 years on advertising campaigns, magazines, and book covers.  For this book, it’s a novel about a son of a framed polar explorer looking for his missing father in a snow and frozen world.  The whole process was around 16 drafts, hundreds of loose thumbnail sketches and infinity time of researching, writing and daydreaming; for 6 years. It’s more than 120 full-page illustrations, but all go together as one single story. Manchess said, “I was simply interested in a guy and his polar bear companions. I was searching for a visual moment that gave the viewer just enough information to wonder about his character.  A moment to give a viewer something to reflect on.  Maybe a little agitation amongst the bears would give them some character, too. I hadn’t realized that I was building an adventure that eventually went beyond the original painting.”

One thing he mentioned about is really touch my heart, “To find my story, I would sketch each day to figure out what he was doing.  I found his story through the pictures.  It was an endlessly enjoyable process.  It never got burdensome.”  I think that’s why he keep looking for all the researches, doing all those 16 drafts, just to make sure he can get the realistic looking and a “true” story. At the day we met, he encouraged me to keep drawing , I think it’s  a good push for me.

Society of Illustrators

DREW STRUZAN

I enjoyed the trip to the Society of Illustrators and seeing all the different styles and mediums used. An image that I was glad to see up close was Drew Struzan’s Harry Potter illustration.

Drew Struzan is primarily known for being the illustrator of many iconic movie posters such as: Indiana Jones, Back to the Future, Goonies and many more others.I had recently watched a documentary about him and appreciated the opportunity to see his work up close and to view the texture and highlights he incorporates up close.

.Drew went to Art school in California and initially got a  job after college designing record covers, his covers caught the attention of numerous studio executives and he began getting commissioned to do movie posters.

I had recently watched a documentary about him and appreciated the opportunity to see his work up close and to view the texture and highlights he incorporates up close. Struzan’s process involves first making a   pencil drawing before painting with either acyclic or oil, he sometimes also uses an airbrush to layer over the pencil to give it a more translucent feel. Struzan then finishes details and highlights with colored pencil. I really like Drew’s compositions, no matter which movie poster you look at there is always so much going on.    I found it interesting that movie posters have a formula where a   certain percentage of the poster is alotted to actors based on their part in the movie, so not only did he have to make a visually appealing piece he also had to incorporate that formula into his composition. have become so

Drew’s illustrations have become so synonymous with the movies he has illustrated for that when people recall those movies,  his depictions,   not the movie are the first images that comes to mind for many people.