Saturday, March 29, 2014

Expression Yourself

Normal Penguin

The expression of the normal penguin is very plain and ordinary. 
In his case he looks a bit like a crack head, but this is a normal expression for this penguin. 

Ghostly Penguin

This penguin has lost his soul. 
Either he has just been scared or has passed into the realm of the living dead. 
This is shown by the lack of pupils and tongue.

 Sad Penguin

The penguin has been brought to tears by some unfortunate circumstance.
You can tell he is sad be the droopiness of his eyes and the lower positioning
 of his pupils along with the fact that he is frowning.

Devious Penguin

The penguin has just come up with a devious plan!
You can tell by the triangular shape of his pupils contrasting with the 
reversed triangle shape of his eyes. He is also pursing his beak together 
as if he is holding in his devious plan.

Confused Penguin

His smarter penguin comrades just said a very technical phrase that 
confused the penguin. His eyes narrowed as if he is blocking the others from 
seeing that he has no idea what they are saying. It is obvious he is clueless however, by 
the fact that his beak is barely parted and he is speechless. 


Goofy Penguin

The penguin has suddenly gotten in a quirky mood. He is showing this through the crossing of his eyes and the weird way in which he is construing his beak. 

 Super Excited Penguin

The penguin has just seen a giant bowl of fish and is ecstatic with excitement. 
This can be seen by his wide eyes and raised brow.
 His pursed beak curved up at the ends magnifies his excitement.

Knocked Out Penguin

The penguin was just in a serious fight with a seal. 
While flying out of the water to escape the hungry beast, he hit an ice block and was knocked out. 
You can see this by his boggled eyes and tongue hanging out of his beak.

Stoned Penguin

The penguin is clearly in a trance.
His pupils are very large and not focused on anything. 
He is too consumed by what is occurring in his mind to even open his beak. 

Scared Penguin

Something very frightening is approaching the penguin. 
His mouth is quivering and his eyes are ominously looking 
in the direction of the frightening mystery creature.

Words + Image


My Never- Blue October

I used my visuals to explore the concept of missing someone
 and the moments you shared with that person. 


Thursday, March 13, 2014

Opening 3 Reflections

How Art Made the World – Once Upon a Time


I think it is interesting how the first story was originally words and was changed into pictures because very few could understand the writing of that age. It is interesting to think of pictures as a universal language.  It is a language of the masses, not simply the elite or well educated.

I see Ashurbanipal’s story as one that was largely propaganda to make him look like and elite ruler. Something that I believe backs this assumption up is the fact that there was no emotion connected to the brutality. As the film discusses, there is no reason to care and therefore it isn’t easily relatable to. It simply serves more as a history lesson depicting how great the king was rather than something those viewing the reliefs could really relate to and engage in.

It is interesting how clear depictions of emotions and the uniqueness of each character’s emotions can make a piece more believable and engaging.  Trajan’s story is very similar to Ashurbanipal’s in that it tells a story of his accomplishments and paints him as the hero. The difference however comes in the characterization of the figures. Just by adding emotion to the figures, the viewers are then pulled into the story and actually care about it.

Both could be considered propaganda, but know doubt, Trajan’s is certainly more convincing.

The Visual Magic of Comics


I’ve never thought of comics in the way Scott McCloud explained them. Comics always seemed very straightforward and honestly somewhat boring to me. But taking into account what McCloud mentioned, comics really do offer a lot more visually than I originally realized, especially with new forms of technology.

I think the comparison of comics to the ancient forms of story telling that were discussed in “How Art Made the World,” was a very understandable one. Although I had never discovered the commonalities before, they are so apparent upon reflection. That being realized, comics have a powerful ability to entrance people with an assortment of senses outside of sight.

To go further than traditional comics, the newer forms of comics have been made into television shows and I think this can be directly compared to the aboriginal’s form of storytelling. Although the shows more greatly represent film, I wonder if there are any that are simply pictures like traditional comics, but have sound and music and dialogue to go with them, very much like the still images of the aboriginals that, when combined with sound, became a vivid flowing story.

The Man Behind the ‘Incredibles’


I think it is interesting how the creators of ‘The Indredibles’ started with a voice for the costume designer character and had the artists draw the character based off that voice. I think it shows an interesting correlation between sound and image. Going back to the ancient visual stories, they didn’t have sound with them, the exception being the aboriginal’s, so I wonder if they had a certain dialogue streaming through their imagination while they were drawing, painting or sculpting their characters.

I would argue that in Ashurbanipal’s story they didn’t, as most of the characters were very similar to each other and had very little emotion. With Trajan’s story however, I imagine the artist acting as each character when he was creating them and really delving inside the properties and emotions of each of these characters. Without sound or dialogue however, I think the height of which these characters are developed really falls off during the transfer from creator to viewer and loses the impact it was meant to have.