Sunday, February 28, 2010

a preview of what's to come

This weekend, my New York trip was canceled due to the weather - no taping of the Maury Show and no MoMA (which meant no Tim Burton exhibit *tear*). Amber and I have been working to reschedule the trip before the exhibit is over, but it ends before the end of the semester so I'm keeping my fingers crossed. Luckily, the heavier snow skipped right over Lancaster City and all we had was just a windy weekend.

I mentioned in my previous post, graduation is RIGHT around the corner. I have about 34 school days left until the end of the semester and I am happy to announce that I'm on top of my workload (with a lot of thanks to the canceled trip this weekend). At my school, seniors are required to work on a thesis that will be presented at the senior art show. This consists of four professional gallery pieces that we may also include in our portfolios. For my thesis, I chose greeting cards since I love working type and text into my art. I also chose this because it is essentially what I want to do after I leave PCAD. The students who chose the path of greeting cards had to work on 16 pieces of art rather than four so that everybody would be faced with an even amount of work (this works in my favor because I'll have more options to put in my portfolio in the end - hopefully I'll use all of them too ;]). With sixteen different cards under my belt, I split them up into different genres: four birthday, four Christmas, four other holiday cards (includes Easter, Valentine's Day, Halloween and St. Patrick's Day) and four special event cards (includes anniversary, wedding, baby and graduation). This week, our first thesis piece is due (in my case, my first four cards). I only have three done so far, but I was so excited to show them off that I couldn't wait to post this. Here they are:




I chose to work in Corel and also used my tablet again - I think it's pretty safe to say that those are my weapons of choice. Another nifty tool that I discovered this weekend is Color Scheme Designer 3. I'm not exactly sure what it's used for, but it definitely helped me resolve color comps and other color related issues I came across. It's an application that helps you find color palettes, complementary colors, triad colors, etc. - you just move the slider around the color wheel. I guess you could just figure that stuff out on your own but anything to make work a little easier ;]. Anyway, the group crit for these pieces is on Thursday. I'll post how it goes (AND I'll post my last card of the bunch) shortly after that.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

my first official blog as an illustrator!

Seeing as my graduation is quickly approaching, it was suggested to me that I build a "web presence" as an illustrator. I'm used to blogging about silly things which only hold relevance to myself - like what I did for the day, how big the booger I just picked was or how much I partied the previous weekend. Although I can't exactly promise a certain level of professionalism, I can promise to try and keep this strictly focused on my artwork and the artwork of others that interests me. Wow, I am really starting to sound like a pretentious douche writing about myself like this, lets just move on to the specs for the piece I want to post...

So for my Illustration Concepts class, my instructor Charlie Beyl has based this semester's projects on a fictitious (maybe not so fictitious? I haven't checked... nor do I feel like it so we're just going to go with it being a fake bookstore until proven otherwise) bookstore called Crossroads. This "bookstore" specializes in books, music, coffee, movies and more (or so their logo states). Our second project required us to create an illustration featuring two iconic/well known figures sitting at a table, enjoying coffee with each other and engaging in conversation. This was meant to give customers the idea of how diverse the store is. We got to choose from a list consisting of pairs such as: Brad Pitt and Edgar Allen Poe, Steven Spielberg and William Shakespeare, Kurt Cobain and Truman Capote. The idea was that these people had similar names in which alliteration could be played with in the ad. Naturally, I chose Lady Gaga who was paired with a man named Allen Ginsberg (my ad? "Where Gaga meets Ginsberg"). Having no idea who Allen Ginsberg is (or was - he died in 1997, bummer :[ ), I had to do my research. Wikipedia is looked down upon in schools because it's not reliable - people can add anything they want whether it be a true fact or not - but honestly, I've learned a lot from that website and it kind of bums me out how some people abuse it by uploading fake information (see Encyclopedia Dramatica). Anyway, I checked out his entry in wikipedia and he seemed extremely interesting so I wanted to capture his likeness as well as I could. Google image search is pretty much my best friend (Google in general, actually) and it helped me a lot in figuring out Allen Ginsberg and Lady Gaga's notable characteristics. After flipping through a few pages I found two images that I thought were both fitting and recognizable. The two images that inspired my sketch:



This project came with a rough sketch of what the "client" wanted - two figures sitting at a table in a coffee shop. I don't have a picture of the example but here is what I made from the client's instructions:


Ahh good old mac books and their built in isight... There were a few problems with my sketch - the client wanted the two more engaged; Lady Gaga wasn't looking at Allen at all. One suggestion was to tilt their heads towards each other and maybe find a way for the two to make eye contact (pretty hard with her huge old person sunglasses). There also needed to be some sort of coffee shop/book store background even though text was going to be placed at the top and bottom of the illustration. The solution? BOOKSHELVES! Two weeks later we come to the end result:


I created it in Corel painter using a Wacom tablet and am fairly happy with the finished product. The final isn't due until next week and there are STILL a few more adjustments that need to be made (welcome to the real world of illustration, Nicole!). I was told by one of my classmates that they would like to see more of her eyes. Charlie also suggested that there be some shadows/highlights to create depth. Next class we will be critiquing our pieces as a group and hopefully placing the bookstore's text and logo at the top and bottom of the page. I'll post the FINAL final finished product whenever I get it back.

I really don't know how to close these, I just wanted to show the process of my latest piece. I'll try to keep this updated as often as I can. I have a lot of work stuffed under my belt over the next few weeks so I can't guarantee they will be this long and (overly) detailed. Until then...