Friday, November 30, 2012

Cheetah Running Slo-Mo


(Video link) A cheetah running full speed covers about 22 feet during each stride. Notice how the head stays steady as the rest of the body moves around its cycle.


(Video link) This video shows how the photographers got the shots. They built a long dolly track at the Cincinnati Zoo, with a slow motion camera following the cheetah. The trainers worked with the animal to be sure she didn't get distracted.
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More at National Geographic

Beard and Moustache Championships


Devon Holcolme from Jacksonville, Florida is a part of Beard Team, USA. He participated in the National Beard and Moustache Championships in the Freestyle Moustache category.

Holcolme says, "You'll see everyone here likes attention. You kind of have to be silly to walk around with this."
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Via BYT
Previously on GJ: Best Artist's Facial Hair

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Grotto-eque

The word "grotesque" is related to the Italian word "grotta," a crypt or cave ornamented with fanciful forms. 



It's the same Latin root where we get "grotto." The derivation traces back to the accidental discovery in the late 15th century of elaborately decorated underground rooms from the ancient Roman times. According to Wikipedia:  

The "caves" were in fact rooms and corridors of the Domus Aurea, the unfinished palace complex started by Nero after the Great Fire of Rome in AD 64, which had become overgrown and buried, until they were broken into again, mostly from above. Spreading from Italian to the other European languages, the term was long used largely interchangeably with arabesque and moresque for types of decorative patterns using curving foliage elements.

Throughout the Baroque, Mannerist, and Victorian times, people built artificial grottoes (or "grotte") to stimulate the imagination.
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Wikipedia on "grotesque"

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

CGI Innovations at Siggraph


(Link to VideoSiggraph Asia starts today. This video gives a preview of some of the digital imaging thaumaturgy on display there.
Via BoingBoing

Qualities of Light

We painters can learn a lot from photographers, who need to be keenly aware of the properties of light.


(Video link) In this video, Karl Taylor explains hard light, soft light, magic hour light, and reflected light.
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My book, Color and Light, also covers these points. You can get a copy signed by me, or from Amazon.

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Extreme Facial Expressions

Franz Xaver Messerschmidt (1736 – 1783) was a German-Austrian sculptor known for his "character heads" – busts with extreme facial expressions.

He started out as an academically trained sculptor doing normal portrait commissions. 
But then the work dried up, he lost his teaching position, and he suffered a mental malady that they called "confusion in the head."

He also suffered a stressful abdominal problem. When he pinched a rib to distract himself from the pain, he noticed that he winced in interesting ways. 

He developed an interest in necromancy and the arcane, which further inspired his character heads. 

Wikipedia on Franz Xaver Messerschmidt 
Thanks, Frank!

Monday, November 26, 2012

Subterranean Prospector

Here are some pen and marker sketches for the cover of James Blaylock's 1984 science fiction novel "Digging Leviathan." Blaylock was one of the originators of the "steampunk" movement.


The fish-shaped digging machine was made from spare parts found around the house: a garbage can, a roller skate, a brace and bit, a bicycle, some shovels, and an old umbrella. The character was inspired by the "subterranean prospector" device that he read about in E. R. Burroughs' novel "At the Earth's Core."

While still in the idea generating stage, I find it helps to draw something over and over again, because each time new ideas emerge. The final cover was a combination of the best of these sketches.
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Previously: Digging Leviathan, showing an unused color sketch.
Wikipedia on "The Digging Leviathan"

Sunday, November 25, 2012

Bargue Study of a Seated Man

This little study of a seated man by Charles Bargue (1826/7-1883) has some interesting tonal decisions. 


The values are carefully grouped and controlled. In the left side of the jacket, for instance, he didn't overdefine the modeling on the light side, allowing all those light tones to group together into a larger shape.

The darks are also grouped, so that the face in shadow joins at the chin with the dark shirt-front, and the knuckles link up with the blue cloth and the legs into a bigger unit.

The study is also a great example of the "windmill principle," a tonal scheme where the figure/ground relationship includes all four basic possibilities:
1. Light against dark (knee at far right and bottom of jacket)
2. Dark against light (head)
3. Dark against dark (area around hands)
4. Light against light (shoulder and back)

All this is worth mentioning because I find the automatic tendency is to break up everything into smaller and smaller shapes and to define every edge equally. In my experience, grouping shapes and downplaying certain edges takes conscious effort.
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Charles Bargue on Wikipedia
Bargue is known to atelier students for his excellent course for academic drawing that he developed with Jean-Léon Gérôme.

Saturday, November 24, 2012

Daumier's Cartoons on Art

Honoré Daumier (1808-1879) did a lot of cartoons satirizing art and artists. The humor is remarkably enduring, because some things don't change. 


"They refused this....ignoramuses!"

"Come on... don't be such a bourgeois.... at least have a look at this Courbet!"

 Influential Critic's Promenade

"This year, Venuses....again."

The Amateurs (visitors to an artist's studio)

"Well, if you look very closely, you might end up finding some quality. The color seems to be good."


Friday, November 23, 2012

Retro Calculator


Schoty and his Ankylosaurus pal Soroban help merchants with their arithmetic using a giant abacus mounted on Soroban’s back. Schoty can reach out with his wooden stick to move the red beads back and forth within the wooden frame. The abacus here resembles the Chinese version, though other kinds of abacuses occur elsewhere in the world. In fact the names “Schoty” and “Soroban” are the Russian and Japanese words for “abacus.” 
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From Dinotopia: Journey to Chandara (2007), which you can get signed by me or from Amazon
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Thursday, November 22, 2012

Cooking Eggs, Spanish Style

According to a New York Times article, chef José Andrés used a cooking technique that he found confirmed in the painting "Woman Cooking Eggs" by the 17th century master Diego Velázquez.


"He tipped a heated pan of olive oil and swirled the white as it coalesced around a gleaming yellow yolk. 'It is Velázquez, it could not be more Spanish, and it is simple, said Mr. Andrés."

Thanks, Larry Roibal

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Freewheeling imagination


Kim Jung Gi puts in another solid performance, this time with a Pentel brush pen, drawing bikers, babes, pigs, tigers, and a Monkey King on a big blank sheet of paper with no lay-in. The time lapse film has no sound, and I wish the camera operator had been a little smoother with the moves.
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Previously: Kim Jung Gi

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

DreamWorks' Animation Resources


DreamWorks Animation has a comprehensive in-house training program which provides a lot of resources for their artists. They provide every incoming artist with a list of the books and resources that they have found most helpful for mastering the art of animation.

DreamWorks has generously allowed me to share this recommended list with you. The links take you to more information about each of the books. If the resources are not books, I've added a note about where the links will take you.

Acting and Improv
Acting for Animators by Ed Hooks
The Second City – Almanac of Improvisation by Anne Libera
A Dictionary of Theatre Anthropology: The Secret Art of the Performer by Eugenio Barba
• Matthew Bain on Movement. Bain is a final layout artist at PDI/Dreamworks Animation and freelance music visualization artist/composer.) (Linked in) (Music visualization on YouTube)

Color and Painting

Computer Graphics and Visual FX

Introduction to Computer Graphics by James D. Foley, et al
• Fundamentals of Computer Graphics by Peter Shirley
• Mathematics for Computer Graphics by John Vince
• CG101:A Computer Graphics Industry Reference (2nd Edition) by Terrence Masson

Figure and Gesture Drawing

Filmmaking Books

Layout & Composition Books


Animation Websites



Educational Sites
Animation Educator's Forum
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Feel free to bookmark this post and share the list with others on your blog, Twitter, or Facebook
Thanks, Angela!