Original Line Art |
Flats |
In January of 2012 I was in the Visual Storytelling 1 class when classmate, Brian Traynor (another name to remember, everybody) mentioned that there was an artist on deviantART who was looking for a colorist to color his X-Men pages. The artist wanted people to color one or more pages and send them to him via link, and then he would choose who would be the colorist. It was intriguing, and since I had just had Digital Coloring and Lettering the previous quarter I decided to do it. It was doubtful that I would be chosen, but it would be good practice all the same. Brian posted the deviantART link on the Temple of Cartoon Mojo Facebook page, and I downloaded all four pages.
I was feeling very ambitious at the time because I was thinking about coloring all four pages. Anybody can color one page, but if you go OVER the requirement you're more likely to be noticed. Unfortunately, I got so swamped with the Environments class and working on my final project in Vis. 1 that I never got around to coloring the pages. So the four pages just sat in my computer taking up space...until this week.
I have not colored a comic page since redoing the two Dusty Star pages that I had this huge urge to color a page. I remembered that I still had these pages that I thought I would finally color them. I can't send them to the artist, Jorge Molina Manzanero (also known as ZurdoM), but it would be good practice.
I chose to work on page 4 of X-Men #16 since it is kind of a slow page while the others are more action packed, and right now I have just finished doing the flats. So while I was doing this I learned something that I didn't know. It has been a while since I've picked up a Fantastic Four comic, and so the image in my head in regards to their costumes was that they are dressed in blue, a cool color. I figured that with Dr. Doom, the Fantastic Four, and Cyclops I have a bunch of cool colored costumes to deal with making it difficult to get them to pop. DC colorists do it well with Batman, but I haven't figured it out yet. However, it turns out that the Fantastic Four changed their costumes after the Human Torch died. Now they've gone white, and I am not too crazy about them, but at least it makes them easier to get them to pop off of the page. So that just leaves Doom and Cyclops as my popping challenge.
When I was taking Digital Coloring last year I had handcuffed myself, figuratively speaking, to reality. That I had thought that the background colors need to be based off of reality. Sure that thought worked well in my final project in that class where I used local color for the first two pages, but then the third page, the most powerful, I abandoned it. However, that's not going to cut it if I continue leaning towards wanting to become a colorist. Fortunately, I have been slowly breaking free from those handcuffs. This page has been very invigorating to work on because I have no idea what planet this takes place on. Is it Earth? Or somewhere else? Since I have no idea I can do anything I want to create focus. This is probably the perfect way to get rid of thinking about local color.
If you're interested in seeing more of Jorge Molina Manzanero's work, here's the link to his deviantART page: http://zurdom.deviantart.com/
Art History Day
Art History Day in the Hub |
So Tuesday, October 30, 2012 was Art History Day at SCAD Atlanta presented by the Atlanta Art History Society. The idea for this day came when I failed to get the club invited to the Embark Embrace and Discover event at SCAD Atlanta, which is basically a major/club fair. It is the perfect place to recruit new members especially Freshmen. So we needed another way to let the student body know that we exist, and not just exist, but show them that art history can be fun. I was willing to just set up in the Hub with an art history trivia challenge while also serving students a slice of a giant cookie, but Abagael Warnars, the AAHS Vice President, had a much better idea. All clubs are allowed to request funds for a catered event. Abby thought that we should do that and serve Thai food based on the Conceptual artwork of Rirkrit Tiravanijia, where eating the food and socializing with others was part of the art. It was perfect! It would accomplish the two things that I wanted most of all: new members and making art history fun.
It was an up and down process, but we were finally able to get the event put together, and it was a HUGE success. We served the following foods and refreshment:
Classic Thai Mango Sticky Rice Dessert |
Green Curry |
Chicken Pad Thai |
Thai Heavenly Pineapple Fried Rice |
Thai Style Iced Coffee |
Everybody certainly seemed like they enjoyed themselves. Best of all, we added ten new people to the email list. Of course, I would be amiss if I didn't mention this, but I owe A LOT of the success in the day to Abagael Warnars and Melody Ledford. They did a FANTASTIC job!!!! Abby was stationed at the AAHS table signing people up and handling the art history trivia challenge and Melody helped me serve the food. So if either of them are reading this, I would just like to say, "Thank you! I couldn't have done it without either of you!"
High Museum Field Trip
After the success Art History Day, the Atlanta Art History Society went on a field trip to the High Museum of Art in Atlanta for their Fast Forward: Modern Moments 1913<<2013 exhibit on Saturday, November 3rd. The exhibit is in collaboration with the Museum of Modern Art in New York, and it features 130 works of art, and it is split into key moments in time (1913, 1929, 1950, 1961, 1988, and 2013). This field trip was supposed to happen last month, but no one showed up, and so I had to reschedule it. It was still a small group, a group of two, but it was something. Unfortunately, I really can't say that I had fun. Last year's field trip was FUN. There was a Pollock painting there, and I couldn't help but smile in remembering what Lisa Tolbert had said last year about Pollock's paintings. The drips were from all of the murders he had committed. And that would inspire us to write a fictional story about the artists we saw, and I was planning on surprising everybody with that same task this time around to be done over the break, but didn't have enough participates.
Although I can't say that I had fun it WAS still nice to see some of the artworks and artists who I had studied in the 20th Century Art class. Umberto Boccioni's Continuity of Form and Space was there, and it's a strange sculpture because it doesn't look like much, but it is very eye catching. The exhibit featured a piece from Kenneth Noland that looked like a target, but every time I looked at it I began getting dizzy. Jasper John had a sculpture there featuring a topless woman hugging the Pink Panther. You've got love it when an artist outside of sequential and animation uses a cartoon character in their artwork. Other notable artists that were featured were Mark Rothko, Salvador Dali, Georgia O'Keefe, Roy Lichtenstein, Yves Klein, Henri Matisse, and Pablo Picasso.
It is definitely worth a visit if you love art and you're in the Atlanta area.
Final Thoughts
I am hoping that I'll have something to show of the maquette next time. Last week's maquette workshop had to be canceled, and so I don't know when it will be rescheduled. It could be this Wednesday or it could in the Winter Quarter. I can tell you that the armature is firmly bolted in the base now.
Well, I better get back to coloring. Until next time this is Billy Wright wishing you all a good night! So long, everybody!
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