Friday, February 15, 2008

Paper pictures, bits of string

We're planning a collaborative project that will rely mainly on hand-generated production. Our collective view was that we favoured the idea of building and constructing, on any scale, for this brief, and this theme should underpin the designs we came up with at the outset.

PAPER CITY
The original concept was to construct a purely paper city, a scale model of either a known or an invented metropolis; we would film its construction and then destroy it somehow, to the soundtrack of members of the public talking about their concern for the future of the city. The model is exemplified by this installation produced for the cover of an album by 'The Non', the progress of which is tracked here.





TRICK
We then thought of creating everyday objects out of plain white paper, life-size, then placing them in the urban arena and filming them. They would look out of place due to their colour, yet appropriately scaled and suited to their location. This was inspired by the work of Peter Callesen, a strange genius with too much free time who can make anything out of paper. Regard.




CUT OUT
The third and so far strongest idea lends itself most successfully to the moving image brief. After seeing the album artwork for 'Destination Anywhere' by Wheel, we had the idea of creating sets and characters in the 3D cut-and-paste style adopted by Viveletuning.





We could animate cut-out characters literally moving through the layers of the city. We could record sounds from around London appropriate to the sets in the animation, play with lighting for different moods and basic effects like panning shots, stop-motion etc. We could use AfterEffects to extend the boundaries of the city and assist with the animation techniques, but the emphasis would be on physically moving the components ourselves.

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Doom Puppet

The dangers of letting A Big Idea take hold of you became apparent this weekend.

I set my little heart on designing and staging a puppet show based on urban living with custom-built marionettes telling the tales of the city. I researched puppets. I researched ventriloquism. I accidentally applied for a job at the Jim Henson Creature Shop in America. I made outrageously high bids on eBay to obtain a puppet (£15.72) and a vetriloquist's dummy (£34.22).

Thanks to the combined efforts of '3dwerkstatt', 'phillipmorton' and 'leeroyking' I have lost out on not only a 1960s Magic Toy Shop Socco puppet but also a fabulously hideous Mr Parlanchin dummy (with detachable moustache) which sold for a piss-taking £45.00.

So it's back to the (still somewhat blank) drawing board...

Monday, January 28, 2008

First/Last Magazine

The brief: To illustrate across a double-page spread the first and last lines of a randomly-selected book. The images could be drawn, constructed, photographed, written...anything goes, as long as it was black and white and represented the text somehow.

My 'first and last' were taken from Trout Fishing in America by Richard Brautigan, a book I have never read. We weren't encouraged to research the books we chose if we knew nothing about them, the idea being that we created an original untainted response.

(Click on the image below to enlarge)



Visit the First Last Magazine blog for updates and more information.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Diary for a Madman (a.k.a. The Final Insult)

After days of excruciating RSI, wasted paper, and Fox's Golden Crunch biscuits, the diary's finished...but I messed it up with gold letraset that seemed like such a good idea at the time. Bugger. Otherwise, I'm pretty happy with the outcome.

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Blog of a madwoman

After 72 hours of almost continuous laying out, printing, screwing up, re-printing and trimming the pages of my Diary for a Madman, every page is done and awaiting binding.

I have printed all the pages on ivory, slightly glossy paper that matches those of my own 2007 diary and have made every effort to make the transition from 'normal' diary structure to disjointed and illogical/nonsensical as gradual as possible.

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Who nose?

Found this in the BBC News online archives... Apparently some joker decided it'd be amusing to steal the commemorative statue of The Nose from its public place in St Petersburg back in 2002. But it's ok, because they found it again a year later. Panic over.

The reason I am coulrophobic

It shouldn't be allowed.