Alexis Deacon's Blog, page 17

April 15, 2013

Jitterbug freestyle

When I was working on Jitterbug Jam I became really interested in the different relationships inside the monster family.  I made a lot of drawings exploring how they interacted with one another physically, trying to work out what happened when I put them together in various combinations.  It was a fun thing to try and it really helped me to get to know the characters...











 
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Published on April 15, 2013 11:46

wall scrawl

The other day I did a drawing workshop with children at my local bookshop, Review.  We made HUGE drawings on big sheets of paper covering the whole of their wall downstairs.  It was great fun... though we did the drawings in charcoal so we all came out looking like Victorian chimney sweeps by the end.



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Published on April 15, 2013 00:37

April 14, 2013

Hal 9000





At the moment I have this staring down at me from the top of my desk.  It is for a film being made about the V&A Memory Palace exhibition.  Whenever I am working it takes two pictures a minute... the idea is that when they are played back we should have a cool stop-motion sequence of some of the images being made.  It is kind of freaking me out though.  I keep expecting it to talk to me in a reassuring voice:  That's a very nice rendering, Dave. I think you've improved a great deal. Can you hold it a bit closer? That's Dr. Hunter, isn't it?
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Published on April 14, 2013 09:34

April 12, 2013

...and a few more

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Published on April 12, 2013 03:35

April 11, 2013

a few more pages

Here are some more bear and elephant drawings from the While You Are Sleeping preparatory sketchbooks.  On the same pages are some drawings of pirates that made a huge difference to my work at that time.  Anyone who draws a lot will be familiar with the feeling you get when you make an image that seems like it is a step closer to where you want to be.  These drawings were just like that for me.  For the first time I felt like I was drawing the whole figure as a unit instead of a collection of parts...  Now I needed to work out how to draw them actually doing something instead of just standing around making nice shapes!




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Published on April 11, 2013 15:43

26 beasts

When I was making While You Are Sleeping I made a couple of sketchbooks that I am really proud of to this day.  True, I was slightly crackers when I was making them but sometimes that can help creativity along a bit...  I will try and post pages from them now and again. 

Here is a sequence of twenty six each of bears, elephants and small, stuffed dogs, all characters that I needed to design for the book.





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Published on April 11, 2013 01:00

April 10, 2013

Beegu's parents - hula hoop fail


I recently went to a rehearsal for a possible children's theatre version of Beegu.  We talked about some scenes that were in the early versions of the story but didn't make it to the end.  One of those scenes features Beegu's parents trying to figure out the hula hoop she has been given...





 ... and Beegu losing it watching them





I hope that the show happens!
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Published on April 10, 2013 05:56

April 9, 2013

what I learned so far

Here's a summary of what I've learned so far from my perspective book...

The horizon is a plane level with the eye line of the viewer/painter/drawer/witness/whatever
(knew that one already! ha!)

The principal vanishing point is a point on the horizon directly opposite the viewer (I'll call them that from now on).  A line from the viewer's eyes to the principal vanishing point would be perpendicular to the horizon.
(I knew that one too... I think ^-^)

All lines parallel to the one between the viewer and the principal vanishing point will meet at that point.  Any other parallel lines on the plane of the horizon, whichever way they point, so long as they are parallel to each other will meet at the same vanishing point on the horizon line.  This point will be where they would otherwise cross that line.

All planes parallel to the horizon will meet at the horizon if allowed to continue... think of a set of shelves.
 (I knew that one, definitely!)

Any parallel lines not on the plane of the horizon will meet at a point directly above or below where they would have met the horizon had they been on that plane (confused yet?).  This is easier than it sounds - I tried it out.  Just draw a line at right angles to the horizon line then draw a a diagonal line that crosses it - either above or below - if you draw other lines that meet at that point they will appear to all be parallel and all be on the same plane.

Here are some drawings I made on the train trying to get my head around these things:




This is going to be really useful!  Why didn't I learn it when I was fifteen! Arrgh!

 
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Published on April 09, 2013 13:20

drawing geek

When I was small I would always look forward to being better at drawing in the future.  I knew that if I kept at it, my developing brain would magically understand things that had been total mysteries to me not six months earlier.  It was a great feeling.  I used to go back and draw improved versions of pictures next to their originals in my old sketchbooks.  As a little more time went by I would look back at these improved drawings, realise they were rubbish after all and draw a new improved one beside the other two... Then one day my brain stopped growing.  I would look back at old sketchbooks and think, damn, that looks just the same as the stuff I'm drawing now!  Finally I stopped waiting for things to improve on their own.  I realised I was actually going to have to make a conscious effort to learn new stuff if I wanted to.

As time has gone by I have tried to learn about all sorts of things that have previously baffled me.  It is always a really exciting thing to do.  There are few better feelings than the one you get when you understand something for the first time.  Last year I tried to learn about colour.  It turned out to be a HUGE and vastly complicated subject (who knew?) but I was able to learn a great many things that have helped me immensely since.  I moved the frontier a little bit and next time I go back and try and learn more, I can start from a little bit further in.  For example, I would really like to know how  and when to paint those amazing luminous colours you get when light shines through something translucent like a leaf or a cloud or an ear...  I've tried guessing and it always looks very wrong!

Anyway... I was going to be taking a long train journey the other day and I was looking for something to read.  I saw a book called Perspective for Artists.  My first thought was, I know about perspective already.  My second thought was, I tried to read that once - it was impossible.  Clearly I didn't know about perspective after all.  Like so many things in my professional life I just kidded myself I knew it because it's sort of embarrassing to admit you don't!

Three pages in on the train and I was learning new stuff.  It turns out that my entire knowledge of the theory of perspective could be expressed in two pages of text.  Hmm.  No wonder I don't draw many buildings!
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Published on April 09, 2013 12:51

Jim

And here is a Jim's Lion preview pic...  I'm really looking forward to getting back to work on this story!


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Published on April 09, 2013 12:12

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