illustration

You are currently browsing articles tagged illustration.

It’s been another great quarter at SCAD! I thought this quarter was going to be easy, but I think it was the hardest one yet. Never in my life have I operated so consistently on so little sleep. That’s okay, though. I look to rappers for sentient life advice, and have taken Nas’ philosophy on sleep to heart. Anyways, here are some of the highlights from Spring 2013 quarter!

 

I nearly died whilst matte painting.

I had fun with illustration for my knolling and Prometheus boards.

My first ever demo reel!!!

And portfolio site!

Snowstorm Nemo found me in New York

I went, I designed, I triumphed at the Battle of the Boards.

And I almost made a logo thingie.

 

Spring quarter starts in a mere 10 days -__- Bring it on?

I hope to be tackling a bit of animation over the break. Follow me on Vimeo and Twitter!

Tags: , , , , ,

At long last, I got to flex some illustrative muscles in Design for Motion class. Even though for each project I kept telling myself keep it simple Caresse, do not go HAM on the photocompositing and obsessive compulsive detail painting, I would never listen. I still ended up pulling all nighters and delivering unfinished process books and less than the required amount of frames.

Well, I still pulled an all-nighter on this one. But it wasn’t my fault. Instead of Saturday, I got back late last Monday from the Style Frames New York conference (more on that later) and had only Tuesday/Tuesday night to whip this thing together. While compositing is something I still labor slowly over, luckily I can draw relatively fast. With my tablet, I can draw even faster. Speaking of which…

<< This is my tablet pen tip right now. I bought this thing less than a month ago, and as you can see the once proud nib has been reduced to an ever-dwindling wedge.  I asked some of my MOME peers about nib replacements and their tablet habits, and they were nonplussed. “Replace nib? Who does that?” “You might be working too much…” (After doing some research, I now see that the nib I have is a “flex nib,” which is made out of a more pliable plastic than the standard nib.).

The brief for this project was to create a series of boards inspired by the Greek Titan Prometheus. If you thought Prometheus was just the last Alien movie, you suck. If you thought Prometheus was just a character from Kablam!, marry me.

We were instructed to convey the story of Prometheus with either a Modernist or “Naive” design aesthetic. Please visit my web site for a breakdown of the process for this assignment. Here are my final boards:

.

.......

.

 

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

.

Are there many other things out there as satisfying as filling up a sketchbook? I don’t think so. It takes a dedicated artmaking habit to complete one. I remember when I first started seriously keeping a sketchbook, during the pre-college program at Ringling in 2007, where one of the RA’s suggested I look at the sketchbooks of James Jean. Since then, I have always tried to model my own art journals after his. I don’t think there’s any shame in that – he is amazing and his personal sketches continue to be my favorites among his work – more so than his commercial illustration or recent fine art.

Art journaling has become even more important to me now that I’m studying motion graphics. I work so much on the computer these days, that it’s refreshing and reassuring to return to my pens and microns and paints. Working with my hands, drawing what’s interesting to ME, collaging, pasting, tearing away, erasing, covering up, uncovering – it’s an intrinsically personal process. I used to write more in my sketchbooks; personal thoughts and entries, but that became troublesome when the time came to share my work with others. Now most of the writings are notes, names of artists to look up later, fleeting insights, etc. I look forward to continuing onto the next book – always the Moleskine Landscape Watercolor – and visually ideating in terms of motion and design in addition to the figures and portraiture. Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: , , , , , ,