Thursday, February 23, 2012

Flip Book Animation Project

Erin - Good use of color and lots of white space.. very minimalistic approach given the amount of space on each page of the book but that could be intentional.

Christopher - The story is a bit abstract (on purpose?); very clean animation

Maria - I enjoyed the green swirl of grass, good usage of color

Brian - Halloween aspect was neat, and the Radio coming to life was creative

Juan - Coolest part for me was the football morphing into an eyeball

Sabrina - I especially enjoyed the water bucket animation near the end (or was that the beginning?)

Cody - I thought it pretty inventive/smart to place your animation sketches on the edges of the pages to make it easier for flipping, I also liked how the animation was telling the story of the book it was drawn on

Kimberly - Similar to Maria's green grass swirl; abstract storyline?

Arielle - I saw lots of heart animations for the project but yours seemed to stick out .. very minimalistic

Michelle - Love the whale, good storytelling

Megan - Enjoyed the lego block movement, animation was very clean and well timed, lines lined up well from one page to another; would recommend using a pen or something fast to draw with so you don't kill yourself :)

Nakota - Another colorful one, good storytelling

Myself - I had a difficult time focusing on a concept long enough to make it an animation that worked... mine was more like a collection of quick, morphing sketches.. although I did attempt to fill the pages, making use of the dimensions at times it proved a daunting process and one I rather did not enjoy mainly due to the level of personal stress I was experiencing simultaneously.. I suppose that isn't a valid excuse but I know I could have produced better results for this project. I also tried to break out of my designer shell so to speak and draw in a style I normally wouldn't (I'm usually much too focused on realism and achieving "perfection").

Friday, February 10, 2012

Edison's The Great Train Robbery


Thomas Edison's 1903 short silent film The Great Train Robbery was one of the earliest films to utilize several various special effects and techniques birthing at the time.. such as cameras being placed on top of trains, cross cutting and double exposures. Even though the piece wasn't original to any of its effects, its assumed to be the earliest film that combined several of these techniques into a 12 minute long film.

Although hard to imagine now, its said that viewers/audiences of the time would find themselves in fear of being ran over by the train or horses because of the camera angle or perspective, as if the objects were coming straight toward them... imagine their reaction if they had 3D glasses on and personal headphones!

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Stop-Motion Interactive Graffiti


MUTO a wall-painted animation by BLU from blu on Vimeo.
If you haven't already seen examples of the stop-motion graffiti trend which seems to have spread like wild fire (especially on youboob) then you're in for a treat (that is, if you enjoy graphic representations of odd figures eating heads, disfigured body parts, insects devouring a man's head and so forth).

Artist Blu's "MUTO", a stop-motion animation of graffiti coming to life includes some very interesting aspects of interactivity in that the graffiti, or rather the art, itself becomes alive and affects (or effects? always get those two confused..) the surrounding environment by eating the papers on the wall, hanging from a hook on the wall, bricks being pushed around or out of the wall, etc. Add some relatively convincing sound effects and you've got yourself a degree of realism you normally wouldn't find in your average painting.

I can't imagine the amount of time, patience and planning this project took.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

The Birth of Jazz

Around the 1890s in New Orleans a diverse mixture of musical styles including ragtime, blues, gospel music, and "plantation songs", merged to form what we know as Jazz. Probably the key characteristic of Jazz is the improvisation involved when performing this style of music.

Jazz is still considered to be one of the most important (and truly indigenous to America) forms of music, or even art, which affected music globally. A piece of real American culture of which to be proud of.. and a great example/symbol of unity between various cultures and diversity.

Jazz was considered immoral by older generations yet started to spread quickly especially in the 1920's and 30's during the Prohibition Alcohol ban which ultimately encouraged the consumption of alcohol along with wild parties, dancing, illicit "speakeasies" and "improper"  music... a time when being bad was a good thing and consequently when one of the most influential styles of music had emerged.