tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8697278238847227607.post5538941352239713998..comments2023-07-21T03:40:30.347-07:00Comments on Ian Garling Animation: What If? Metropolis - OGRIan Garlinghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06867965767523716377noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8697278238847227607.post-31232222267804438192015-11-05T10:57:17.906-08:002015-11-05T10:57:17.906-08:00OGR 05/11/2014
Evening Ian,
Re. Scribd - did you...OGR 05/11/2014<br /><br />Evening Ian,<br /><br />Re. Scribd - did you save your presentation as PDF before uploading to Scribd? Saving out as PDF should mean that Scribd cannot muck about with your formatting.<br /><br />Okay - so first things first; your work rate has gone up appreciably - message received! - and that's a very welcome sign that this project is going to play out differently. I do, however, have a note of caution; when it comes to Brancusi it can be very tempting to just 'upscale' his actual artworks and call them 'buildings' - when the more sophisticated approach would be to 'think like Brancusi' in terms of designing buildings from scratch. Obviously, Brancusi was inspired by non-Western art - so carved masks etc - and it might pay you to take a look at what Brancusi was looking at when he made the work he did. If you think about it, there are already existing examples of architecture that are already 'Brancusi-like' - for example:<br /><br />https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/40/Sydney_Opera_House_Sails.jpg<br />https://mediastream.jumeirah.com/webimage/heroactual//globalassets/global/hotels-and-resorts/dubai/burj-al-arab/carousel/burj-al-arab-exterior1-hero.jpg<br /><br />I think you need to look at Brancusi's work, and instead of redrawing them (as you've done in your latest thumbnails) think about 'shape extraction' - i.e. look at the shapes the preoccupy his work, and then take them forwards into 'new' Brancusi-inspired designs. You might want to work in either Photoshop, but use the shape tools + skew (under Adjustments) to create clean, sculptural shapes - or alternatively, flex your Illustrator skills; one characteristic of Brancusi's work is the perfect sweeping curves and tidiness of his shapes - this is certainly something you should emulate.<br /><br />tutorphilhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11842833126210822641noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8697278238847227607.post-1136418232110899452015-11-05T03:34:53.566-08:002015-11-05T03:34:53.566-08:00For some reason when I upload this presentation to...For some reason when I upload this presentation to scribd it changed the majority of my black text to grey. I have been trying to fix this all morning but cannot find a way around this, if anyone has any ideas I would appreciate it.Ian Garlinghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06867965767523716377noreply@blogger.com