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This is page 1 of the thumbnail, and this is actually the second...actually the first panel was the second attempt and the second panel was the third attempt. I wound up combining them. It was something that I had done on the final project for Visual Storytelling 1. The important thing was to make the drawings not look static, which was the problem on my first thumbnail attempt. A good way to make objects like cars look like they're moving is to use diagonals.
This was my most challenging page or pages because it was a double page spread, and it's my first one that I've ever done. The challenge was trying to break out of habits. The first habit was in the first panel where it's an establishing shot, and I have this mentality that all establishing shots need to be done from the air, but no, that's not true. You can lower it especially if it's an action sequence that needs to be more interesting. The second habit was constantly thinking about the 180 Rule that dictates that if you have Character A on the right and Character B on the left you have to keep them that way throughout the scene unless you have a reason to break it. Artist Eric Canete mentioned that one can break it to show a change such as the main character is losing in a fight, but then you break the 180 Rule when he begins winning the fight. I have yet to find a reason to break the rule. So I was having trouble with coming up with shots of them in the car because I was trying hard to keep the 180 Rule intact. Every good shot that I could think of broke the rule. Finally, I decided to seek help from a professional. I pulled out my comics looking for car scenes, and it was in Batman Year One where I found a car scene that moved the camera to the driver's side of the car. That was good enough for me. I'm still not sure about that second panel though because that's where I go bonkers with the 180 Rule. However, it just wouldn't look right if it was a 3/4 from the front view.
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Internship
Several weeks ago I had gotten an email from someone at Crazy Legs Productions, a visual effects company in Atlanta, and they told me that they were looking for an unpaid intern. They were really impressed with my resume, and they asked if I would be interested. Wow! I certainly was even though visual effects isn't really my thing, but it doesn't mean that I couldn't learn it. So last week I was called in for an interview, and it was the first interview that I've ever had. Most companies either ignore me or turn me down, and so this was a nice change of pace.
The interview went pretty well. If I get the internship I would be working two days a week for five hours probably, and I would be helping out on their latest show that they're doing for Cartoon Network's Adult Swim. They're looking for two interns, and so I have a 1 in 2 chance in getting it. Here's hoping.
Post-Impressionism
Last year the Atlanta Art History Society visited the Campbell Stone Retirement Community in Buckhead to give a lecture about our favorite artworks. Then President, Abagael Warnars and then Vice President, Lisa Tolbert were the main speakers, and I just sat in the front listening although I did speak once. Abby asked me what my favorite art period and artist was, and I said that it was Post-Impressionism and Vincent Van Gogh. Well, before Dr. Jasin turned over the club advising to Prof. Williamson (she was leaving to teach at the Savannah campus) she told us not to forget the retirement community. We didn't.
It was a month and a half of planning, but on the final day of January the Atlanta Art History Society returned to the Campbell Stone Retirement Community to give a lecture on...what else...Post-Impressionism. Since I was the President of the club now I did most of the talking, and I was more nervous about this event than I was during the internship interview the day before. However, when I actually started talking I didn't feel the normal nervous reactions that I tend to get such as my body heating up. My only guess is that the heat was burned out of me. That afternoon, the Vis. 2 class read our scripts to each other, and my nerves were burning up because my story was about bullying and suicide. I had no idea how the class was going to react let alone the professor. Then I had no idea if anybody was going to show up for the lecture. The Atlanta Art History Society has had trouble getting people to come to events unless we feed them. I already knew that Abby wouldn't be able to make it. That left Melody Ledford and our treasurer. We were supposed to meet in the Hub at 6PM, but when no one was there I began turning into the White Rabbit. Let's say that when Melody came around the corner it was such a beautiful sight although I stayed in that White Rabbit mode because Prof. Williamson wasn't there yet. Then there was a concern that Campbell Stone's cords may not fit the professor's HP laptop. Finally, to top it all off, I got lost on my way there. So by the time I began the lecture I don't think that my nerves could take it any longer and decided not to burn me up from the inside.
I began the lecture by telling them a little about myself and showed them some of my work to let them to get to know me on an artistic level. I showed them Norman and the Love Triangle, It All Started with a Mouse, and the first shot of Snape's Office. I am a sequential artist, but I didn't show them a single comic page since I wasn't sure how appropriate any of the pages that I've done would be. Ironically, Melody, who is also a sequential artist, didn't have a single comic page either. Well, my Post-Impressionism lecture focused on five artists and their artworks: Georges Seurat's A Sunday Afternoon on La Grande Jatte, Paul Cezanne's 1887 version of Mont Sainte-Victorie, Paul Gauguin's Vision After the Sermon (Jacob Wrestling the Angel), Vincent Van Gogh's Starry Night, and Henri Toulouse-Lautrec's At the Moulin Rouge. It wasn't the longest speech that I've ever written (the Neal Adams' speech holds that record), but thanks to having to stop from time to time to answer questions about the artworks we were able to get it close to an hour long.
The audience enjoyed themselves. We had brought some paper and colored pencils if anyone wanted to draw something, and three people did. It was a successful night. Melody, who spoke after the Post-Impressionism lecture, did a fantastic job standing before the audience to talk about her work, and I can't stress enough how thankful I am for the work that she and Prof. Williamson did. That night wouldn't have been as successful without either of them.
Farewell to a Professor
Prof. Chris Schweizer announced before the start of the Winter Quarter that he would be leaving SCAD at the end of the academic year to focus more on his comic work. It's understandable, but it is sad. I've never told him this, but I actually met him before I took Intro. to Sequential, and I don't think he was a professor yet either. It was February 2, 2008, SCAD Day, and I visited the Sequential Department, where he, Prof. Shawn Crystal, and one other graduate student were. He was working on a comic page, and I think that it may have been from his Crogan series. I didn't ask that many questions, the family that came in along with me did most of the questioning, but I was able to ask about whether or not I should get a laptop and if so, Mac or HP. Though once the family left, however, I let the questions fly. So when Prof. Schweizer walked in that first day of Intro. to Sequential I instantly recognized him, but I've never mentioned it. Though if he is reading this then I guess my secret is out.
He was a great and fun professor, and he was willing to look at your work from another class and give his opinion on how to make it better. He has touched a lot of us in the sequential department, and we will carry it along with us wherever we may go in our careers. He will be missed, but I wish him all the best.
Final Thoughts
The Vampire Mouse webcomic is operational at http://thevampiremouse.smackjeeves.com/ but aside from DeviantArt it is nowhere else. I couldn't make up mind what the other webcomic site should be. The webcomic is updated every Friday unless I announce a hiatus.
I haven't heard anything about the ANIJAM in a while, but my end of it is over. I turned my section of the film over early in the quarter. I'll let you know if I get cut from the film or if I am staying in.
Until next time, this is Billy Wright wishing you all of a goodnight. So long, everybody!
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