In a previous post I mentioned how I was able to have my portfolio reviewed by the illustrator Natalie Wood. Recently when I was in London I got the chance to meet the Day Job Collective. A band of Illustrators who make a cohesive team, juggling projects and contacting clients as a group, which in essence allows steady jobs and productivity, basically they got a better chance of keeping the illustrator life as a day job through their collective (which isn't just specifically illustration but as a whole they have a multitude of skills). They have their own tumblr page and it's beautiful!
The Opinions I gathered from them was very similar to what agents mentioned but because they know what its like to be on the creative end they were very much interested in the development process. I learned from them that practical and traditional printmaking is still valued but also that it is very standard to use digital procedures to clean up and tweak the work. Their advice to me was to just keep being computer savvy, understand printing and file formats. And be considerate of colour modes and file compression. They also told me that a good website is just as good and all that is needed instead of using a PDF portfolio (although the PDF is there since not everyone has a net connection).
Tuesday, 22 April 2014
Portfolio Meeting: Opinions in retrospect
Because of the bad luck of not finding any potential clients to speak to within the past month. It got me thinking about any time where there was a potential client I spoke to in the past. So this post is a retrospective of the time I visited the Futureworks in Manchester,, at that time I was interested in a career in video game design (and still am considering what being an illustrator can get you involved in). I spoke to the people at SmashMouth Games, which in itself is a studio that acts as neighbour to their videogame design course at Futureworks, a practice most studios could do with.
My portfolio was very different from the one I had now (it had still life pieces which I wouldn't be caught dead with having in my portfolio now). The opinions I took from that meeting, especially from speaking to a man named Zuby Ahmed, was that for a career in video game design clients want to see characters in many different angles and poses because of the fact that they need to be animated and may involve being in full 3D, what's more better for them is to see characters interacting with others and their own environment. Another thing to note is on environment, the fact is that games as an interactive experiences need concept art that creates a specific mood and sense of place. This is something that I want to involve in my final major project.
My portfolio was very different from the one I had now (it had still life pieces which I wouldn't be caught dead with having in my portfolio now). The opinions I took from that meeting, especially from speaking to a man named Zuby Ahmed, was that for a career in video game design clients want to see characters in many different angles and poses because of the fact that they need to be animated and may involve being in full 3D, what's more better for them is to see characters interacting with others and their own environment. Another thing to note is on environment, the fact is that games as an interactive experiences need concept art that creates a specific mood and sense of place. This is something that I want to involve in my final major project.
Tackling Folk Tales (My Final Major Project)
Red riding hood was chosen since it was already has a
familiar story that would save me from having to work on an original plot and
instead give entire focus on just the imagery. Also the familiarity adds to the
experience. Anticipation is there and it’s as if a gauntlet has been set. The real challenge that people expect to be
delivered is to witness my own personal vision and take on the characters. You
see my designs and they are supposed to be distinctive enough to make you
wonder how they would look like in the next page. If Red looks cute now will
she look cute when she is eaten by the wolf? And will the wolf eat her? How
does the wolf eat her? These questions are all about verisimilitude. There will
be logic to my take on the story.
Bettelheim’s psychological analysis of the folktale showed
me an interpretation where Red subconsciously wants the wolf to kill off her
Grandmother. It gives my Red a dark motive to why she reveals the Grandmother’s
location to the wolf. It’s a crucial moment in the story since how she behaves
towards it directly gives consequence to the plot. The moral comes from how Red
reacts to the wolf.
Catherine Orenstein explores the permutations of Red within
pop culture and much more. Reading her
book helped me contextualise the folktale itself. It gave me an awareness of
who tackled telling this story. I need that sort of road map because you can’t
expect to play with characters that have been in better told stories and yet
not even know about them.
In the early days of the project I went to visit a nature
reserve, this was done for basic primary research but it was also effective in
understanding the mind of the characters as they travel through a forest
setting. Specific feelings and keywords were listed. This helps me develop a
mood and sense of place for my illustrations.
Portfolio Meetings: The Opinion of Agents
During the past months I’ve been trying to get my portfolio
reviewed and it proved far more difficult then I imagined. I discovered the
hard way that agencies don’t like to meet you face to face unless they know
enough about you in interest of hiring you. I also discovered that undeniably the capitol
was the best place for business contacts and job opportunities, that’s not to
say there isn’t elsewhere but it is difficult. A successful illustrator may
have to get use to travelling to unknown cities for clients if they want a
secure and steady income, having said that this is an industry that deserves a “whatever
works” mentality.
My first portfolio review was by Fig Taylor, a genuine
authority since she is an illustration agent and a. Her opinion was that my digital
painting style seemed to be my strongest work which is very time consuming for
me to do. Such work from me is rare and would deserve a client and subject that
I would have to be in love with. Her advice was “to take out work that others
can do better”, which is another way of saying be true to yourself; the main
problem with my portfolio was that it was having an identity crisis and I think
the reason behind this is that in my past projects I was obsessed with what the
client would want that I actually forgot about my own taste, and that really confuses
clients.
My second review was by the guys at Illustration Ltd. and they
were very kind and gracious. Again they took a liking to my digital work but
they did however explain that in today’s age it is important to use a
combination of traditional and digital for best results. The main advice was
that I should always have work within context, clients love to see work in its
final phase, be it a printed or screen captured so it’s not just the original
concept and sketch that people will see. It shows a level of professionalism
but an exception to this rule is not to have photographed work framed and on
display. A footnote of the exhibition is more than enough for your portfolio. Alice Ball gave me encouraging advice in
respect to what Fig Taylor said. A portfolio can still have a variety of styles
and experimentation, the key towards it being any good is to have a high and
consistent ratio of one particular style.
Hopes and Fears (Part 3) Printing a book and the Convention Scene
I would love to publish fiction some day, especially comics.
I see a lot of people who probably wanted to go into film making go into other
forms of media, making a comic, graphic novel, Picture book is just one way for
getting an idea towards a broad audience; one of many. I see this most in terms
of independent publishing. There is a whole indie scene that devotes themselves
towards web comics and indie publishing, making a web comic is considered a
cheap way of gaining recognition since it avoid making a print run and thus
having that being sold. It can be seen as a stepping stone towards
self-publishing.
I went to the Huddersfield Manga con so to get in contact with some indie comic artist. The environment was very much dedicated towards a generation of kids into the Japanese moe culture. There were some artists there who were fans of such a culture and relatively new to setting up a stall but experienced with the convention scene. It’s a niche market in all honesty, because there are so many great Japanese and American artists it makes me wonder if the moe aesthetic is having a negative effect on the comic world. To me the aesthetic was good for teenagers because you could evoke sensitive and dark narratives whilst drawing things in a very cute manner, big bug eyed characters are made to appeal to your sympathy. The problem is when that visual language becomes an entire genre. My main complaint and fear that I’m on about is that when I go to a manga convention I expect comics but instead I found it to be saturated with artists and illustrators who do not even make comics but instead create prints that were in a “manga” style. Is this really saying something important as good art does or is this really just cutesy commodity fetishism? I think in spite of such a case there are still some amazingly talented people found in these places who get the opportunity to meet fans face to face.
I went to the Huddersfield Manga con so to get in contact with some indie comic artist. The environment was very much dedicated towards a generation of kids into the Japanese moe culture. There were some artists there who were fans of such a culture and relatively new to setting up a stall but experienced with the convention scene. It’s a niche market in all honesty, because there are so many great Japanese and American artists it makes me wonder if the moe aesthetic is having a negative effect on the comic world. To me the aesthetic was good for teenagers because you could evoke sensitive and dark narratives whilst drawing things in a very cute manner, big bug eyed characters are made to appeal to your sympathy. The problem is when that visual language becomes an entire genre. My main complaint and fear that I’m on about is that when I go to a manga convention I expect comics but instead I found it to be saturated with artists and illustrators who do not even make comics but instead create prints that were in a “manga” style. Is this really saying something important as good art does or is this really just cutesy commodity fetishism? I think in spite of such a case there are still some amazingly talented people found in these places who get the opportunity to meet fans face to face.
So I digress; the truth is there were some comic
artists at the convention. Lou Ho, better known as Naniiebim gave me some
insight into printing her comic books, the Mephistos series. Since she uses a
lot of services from the internet she told me that the international sizes of
a5 and a4 are the cheapest, so anything straying from those international
measurements would take more effort to set up.
There are also two types of printing that are known as digital and
lithographic. With a print run below 500 books Lou recommends just digital
printing. There are plenty of articles on the net that describe the differences
(such as this one in this link: https://www.print4london.com/digital-vs-litho-print-production)
some good printers involve the guys at Printbar, which Naniiebim (Lou) really
recommends along with Inky Little Fingers and Caric Press. A fellow classmate
has gone to Lithaprint for her children’s book, which is a bit closer to home
for me but I’m going to have to talk to her later in order to review that
printers. I found out from Lou that she herself would have never been able to
make comics if it were not for the internet, she completely believes that her
independence in this industry is down to the freedom of communication that the
internet grants us.
Monday, 21 April 2014
Huzzah! A Website is Birthed!
I was finally able to create a website for myself, solely dedicated to my illustration work. So far it's a bit of a Frankenstein's monster of illustrator's sites that I kind of like. I used Wix due to my inexperience of using HTML and coding. So this is really the beta prototype of my site. Apparently Wix demand you subscribe to their premium service in order to have no advertisements on your custom made site, on top of this your private DNS needs to be 60 days active before you can use a pointing or transferring procedure (If you bought your domain name from another service then this would be relevant to you). Some day the whole website will end up looking far more streamlined, cleaner and cohesive for users but for now, it's a start.
You can view my website here.
You can view my website here.
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