Fun, Friends, and Farewell drinks at the College of Art. Today has been our day of First Year Exhibition. Each First Year student was allowed to put one of his or her pieces of work over the last Term on display.
I had Daniel Cini visiting our exhibition, my flat-mate at the student apartment. He liked in particular the charcoal drawings. As he said; 'My web site has a black & white front page, because I like it so much." Check it out for yourselves at http://www.danielcini.com
=== Side note
In addition, Daniel presented me with a book on the Finding Nemo animation (Disney - Pixar production). A wonderful gift, and my first (no second) birthday (17th December) gift already!
Cover of the book The Art of Finding Nemo
We have also seen Harry Potter at the Movies, whose writer (J.K. Rowling) happens to live in.. Edinburgh! There are many Scottish phrases in the movie I've come to notice.
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, a wee bit scary~~~~
Aileen Graham brought me a 'blank' Matroshka (or Russian nested Dolls) from St. Petersburg, for me to paint on... anything.
Painted example
Some inspiration from these Doll:
The Russian Doll Unit modular storage system by designer Paul Johnson.
The Russian Doll Unit as garage door ornament. Source: http://semiskimmed.net
===
The exhibition was a successful event. I received compliments for at least two of the following works I'd presented:
Clock - Deconstruct-reconstruct
Lightbulb - Soft-sharp
Snares or Snail
In addition, here's a compilation of fellow students works, enjoy:
Incredible what all these First Year Students are able to produce, don't you agree.
===
Back to the animation bit, I've delved into the Anatomy of the Human Body.
First, the head (which I so cruel had to cut in two for it to be 'fired' in the College oven).
Head of a split personality
Fellow students Jason, my agent 'Scully', and Malcolm
Images and text courtesy http://www.polykarbon.com | Nine steps to draw a human face, here we go! |
Before we jump into drawing masterpieces one must first learn the framework on which all things are built. Above are the four shapes. We can create more shapes as needed by combining two or more of the above. Using these we can design anything from cars and buildings to people and animals. The trick is to know which shape goes where and at what size. |
Here's a really basic human torso. Deliberately copies of the above shapes were used to make this framework so we can see what is meant when I say even the most complex of forms can be broken down into these basic shapes. |
Use of basic shapes. |
Use of shading. |
Divide the oval in half both vertically and horizontally. This will create the eye and nose line. |
Divide the eye-line in equal halves on each side of the nose line. This helps us determine the location of the eyes and the corners of the mouth. |
Divide the nose-line in half below the eye-line. This will be where the bottom of the nose is. Just below the nose-line (about 1/3 below) is where we'll draw the mouth line. |
Eyes are 4 times smaller than the head is wide. That means eyes are 1 eye width apart and half an eye in from the edge of the head. The center of the eyes should be located on the lines we made in step 3. |
The inside corner of the eye is where we determine the width of the nose. .. for Anime we go a bit smaller. Females have smaller noses and mouths so use these new lines to show the width of the mouth. |
The ears are placed on the edge of the head between the eye and the nose-line. The hair-line is between the eyes and the top of the head.. unless you're me.. then it's much higher ;o) |
You will notice all kinds of different style eyes in Anime. These are the more cat-like ones. Notice the extra line above the upper eyelid. This represents a fold of skin that makes the eye look more naturalin the face. |
This is as basic as it gets. We'll study different Anime artists to find what styles of hair and shading we like the best. Happy Faces! |
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