Sunday, 12 April 2015

Hippie Context


What is Hippie

Hippe: One who is aware. They believe in anti-war and try to lead a sustainable and alternative lifestyle away from capitalist society.


Hippies aimed to live under loving compassion, personal freedom and peace. They thought all mainstream lifestyle in society was too conformative and bound by the establishd power.
They rejected the social structure of society and the social values of the middle class.
Often, Hippies were environmentally friendly, vegetarian and used drugs to experience a different consciousness. Hippie Philosophy supports spiritual teachings such as the Buddha,

Places that Hippie culture influenced were UK, Europe, Canada Australia, New Zealand, Mexico and Japan.

They believe in sexual freedom, they considered as sex outside marriage the use of contraception, homosexual relationships and abortion rights as being social acceptable.


Origins of Hippie


Thursday, 26 March 2015

Subcultures & Materials



I am looking to marry a medium with the subculture of each decade that matches the time period that it was introduced. Some of these are a bit whooly at the moment (towards the end), but I intend to solidify these choices with some more research.

If I find there is enough variety going on in the 80s I might focus on these instead because the work would be stronger. Niverna and Kylie is a bit weak at the moment.

Current Line up


1960s: Seagant peppers (Beatles) & Felt tip pens/Spiral graph


1967

1970s: Sex Pistols & Collage


Wednesday, 25 March 2015

At what expense do we pay to use free social media Platforms?



This post is on the presentation I delivered at UWE last Thursday for my self directed research project as part of my MA module. It's designed to help prompt me but for anyone who might be interested the full script is below.



Introduction

I am web designer and I noticed when my clients ask me to make a website, most of them ask me to integrate social media onto their websites.  They want a social media platform to connect with their customers and to promote their brands.

I am interested in whether social media is a good or a bad thing. On one side of the argument, people say that Facebook is good for maintaining a network and social interaction. Others may argue that it is pre-dominantly geared towards selling products and used for financial marketing.
I’ve chosen Facebook as an example because they are the most powerful social network with the most amounts of users.

My question is:

At what price do we pay to use “free” social media platforms in regards to data protection and privacy. Is it ethical to encourage this practice by designing websites for clients with integrated social media links.


 Facebook advertising

Monday, 23 March 2015

Iconic covers of 1990s


The 1990s was an arena for both Pop and Alternative Rock styles to flourish, it was difficult to make a choice between the two because they are both very different from each other.


Rage against the machine 1992



Features the famous photograph of the Vietnamese Buddhist who set himself as a act of political protest. But it may problematic for my project because its not a illustration, and the use of shock graphics I believe are overused (in social campaigns like quit smoking etc)

Nirvana Nevermind 1991

Also a well recognised album cover of the 90s era.


Sunday, 22 March 2015

Felt tip pen's Artist Research


After using felt tip pens for one of my Punk pieces, I tried to look for other practitioners who similarly use this medium to increase my understanding around this medium and where my work stands contextually amongst other artists.

It was quite hard to find but I've found out that Felt tip pens (as well as coloured pencils) are namely for children. It represents a a child like innocence and naivety. Also, it's a method of teaching "boundaries" at a early age, where you have to make sure you "color within the lines".

image credits: the telegraph (online)
It was difficult to find a artist who use felt tips as most google results displayed buying results for felt tips. These are two artists I found:


Friday, 20 March 2015

Chronology of iconic 1960's covers



I believe the most notable designs were for Beatles, Pink Floyd and the peice (as discussed previously) by Andy Warhole for The Velvet Underground. 

They were both known for their involvement in the Psychedelia scene of the 1960's when Hippie culture was at its height following the social phenomenon of The Summer of love 1967. The stylistic conventions of Psychedelia design is evident in their work.

1966: Beatles Revovler by Klaus Voorman 



I think there is a imaginative, sort of fuzzyness and unknowing quality about this. The use of line is  surreal and abstract, and the combined use of illustrative and added photographic elements makes it feel a bit hap-hazard. It's like a mix of real and the imagined in one place.

1968: Pink Floyd A Saucerful of Secrets Hipgosis


Thursday, 19 March 2015

1960's Hippie stylistic conventions


I been looking at illustrations from the book "Classic Albulm Covers: The 60s" complied by Storm Thorgerson.

Here are my notes in spider diagram form:


Notably, I found a common theme running through some of these pieces were the symmetrical quality of them. They even reminded me of Hindu mosaics in a way. The depiction of some characters denotes grandeur or of a higher being. 

Wednesday, 18 March 2015

Andy Warhol Artists Research


Developing Practice


I am looking at Andy Warhol because he was a significant designer of the 1960's which is one of the music eras I am looking at.

Warhol was best known for his iconic silkscreen print of actress Mariyn Monroe (1962). This piece has become a famous in mainstream culture history and is currently held in the Tate Art Gallery in London.


Also reconised as one of the most iconic albulm cover's of 1967 was Warhol's design for The Velvet Underground + Nico. The design features a printed banana that was peel-able to reveal the pink fruit inside. The Velvet Underground was amongst many psychedelic rock bands in the 60's which was inspired by the hallucinogen LSD and Acid in the music culture scene. 




Tuesday, 17 March 2015

Process colours experiment


This is a drawing of the Queen found on a £5 note. The guy who ran the "Publication in a day" workshop at UWE liked the juxtaposition between a serious subject matter with felt tip pens. I thought I try to put this into practice for this to see how it would turn out


I tried using process colours (CMYK) to see what affect this would produce and how well it would work with the punk style. It is quite eye catching and the saturated color look art pop-y. (Kind of reminds me of Mariyln Monroe due to the yellow hair)  

I wonder what this would look like if I did a relief or screen printing of this. Try making a half tone of this.

I should try and make remake this several times because with achievement comes hard work, (you're not going to get the best picture the first time round, you need to keep refining it). Also perhaps look at child like drawing tools if you are interested in using felt tips with Punk subculture art.

Monday, 16 March 2015

Music subculture reading notes


Punk


Identifying examples of punk work and Situationalism and Expressionism as a Punk design device: "Use of urban landscape and its contents to subvert or antagonise established order" by using Boldness, heavy type etc

Planning to make some different punk designs using single printed colors half tone. (green, blue, red)


Funk

Did some further reading into Funk, trying understand the core ideas/character of the subculture.

I've identified the design conventions used are: Lively, bright colors, happy, groovy and magazines that I could look at are "WIRE" and "Straight no Chaser". Notable Funk icon would be James Brown. I need to start producing my own designs much quicker!


Monday, 9 March 2015

Punk Collage experiments


Developing Practice in Graphic Arts


I consider this to be the most famous Punk artwork for which I am going to re-invent. This is inspired by the "100 Jazz Posters" by Mytton William, printing company in Bath.

Sex Pistols single cover designed by Reid

My re-designs / experiments

The Queen is less relevant today that she was in the 1970's when she was a symbol of jingoism and patriarchy.

The dominant patriarchal figure these days are the government and the Prime Minster. Punk was about liberation and having a free speech by subverting the established order. (Who was Magarat Thatcher when the Punk sub-culture started) 


Thursday, 26 February 2015

Seminar feedback


Developing Practice


"A good start with broad research about music, genres and culture.

I need to be more focused and specific in your research. This means making decisions and choices - e.g. don't just talk about a genre - tell us what is the defining image of that genre and why.

The idea of 100 versions of an iconic album cover is good. Responding to a piece of work is a tried and tested methodology that many other creatives use, so it can work for you too. (Think of Jasper Johns flag paintings)."

I should select an iconic album cover from each decade and then start remaking them exploring materials, processes, slowly include contemporary references and re-make them for today.

Research sources


Different periods, processes and technology:

  • Punk_collage, Photo montage 
  • New typefaces
  • New printing techniques: process colours, half screens
Popular culture > Grunge music > Posters > music imagery > self publishing
  • Jazz posters by Mytton Wiliams (printing company in Bath) 100 prints a day
  • Mary wager: college artist, surrealism
  • Beatles development from roots to Acid/Hippie Psychedelic music
  • Crass: unknown Punk band, how are they marketed?
  • David Carson: Revolver, Raggn magazine
Pick an iconic cover for each decade x-x (some movements overlap each other)
  • Respond by making x-amount of covers of it
  • How does the type change over the years
  • Symbolic messages, e.g. the queen might not be relevant anymore. (patriarchal figure) New references? Telling stories about our time (socially/politically)

Monday, 23 February 2015

Music subcultures in magazines


Developing Practice


Here are my notes from reading "Design after Dark, the story of danceflor style" by Cynthia Rose.

Punk and Bolshevik Classicism 

left: ID magazine of street fashion,
right: example of Bolshevik design conventions

Bolshevism

Soviet style Symbols: hammer and sickle badges, Dr.Zhivago hats, Heroes of the people- Marx, Lennin, Russian inspired: figures such as Gagarin, Vladimir Mayakovsky.


Social and Political values: 

To show liberation, angst against social disarray of 1970's under Margaret Thatcher.


Sunday, 22 February 2015

Going back full circle


Developing Practice


When I went to Fopp, I spoke to one of the staff about vinyl music as I noticed there is a big selection of them now in store.

"Vinyl is more popular than it ever has been before back in the old days."

I'm not sure it's been at a record high but it definitely has picked up momentum and more and more people are buying and collecting them again. It is trendy again.


Other the ages, music has gotten smaller and smaller. The Vinyl's were massive, and gradually under the test of time, smaller forms have music has taken its place. There's been an emphasis on: 

portable, accessible, on the go, fast paced lifestyles, less and less physical.

Have we gone so far from the physicality of music that we have no gone full circle?
 Are people appreciating having ownership of a big item that they can feel and touch?


Saturday, 21 February 2015

Primary Research Collage


Developing Practice

I went into my local music shop to look at album covers first hand. I took photographs from a sample of each category.

My aim was to investigate whether there was a consistent stylistic conventions across albums under the same genre.






Dance


Geometry, abstraction, colorful, pattern, vivid, alive

Country

Earthy colors, brown paper, nature's roots, simplicity, line

Urban

cityscape, street feel, graffiti, gold, 

Funk

Lively, bright colors, happy, groovy

Metal

Dark, ominence, powerful, visual representations of death, angsty, male audience



Sunday, 8 February 2015

Music culture Proposal



Q. To explore music culture from a period or a particular genre, to see how that has influenced contemporary illustration. 


Illustration inspired artwork:

  • Typography
  • Print and screen based processes
  • Pattern and illustration as album cover work. 

Examples of branding project that I really enjoyed was: Sonic Machines

Saturday, 7 February 2015

Proposed Project Question


Developing Practice



Contemporary Illustration


This is defined as: 

"implies modern, current, up to date, fashionable and present day, so peering too far back into a dim and distant past may draw into the frame images that today's audience would struggle to recognise or remember" - Lawraence Zeegan Crush

Contemporary illustration reflects the "voice of people" as described as Steven Heler, it tells us about social and cultural history. Many of these images are shown through the medium of cultural magazines.

Therefore studying the context of when such iconic works was produced is relevant because it affected what it had to say and how it was received by the general public. 

Iconic works

Tuesday, 9 December 2014

Creative heroes and Villains' outcome


Final piece for Introduction to graphic Arts module.



Analysing Practice: Critical Evaluation



Critical Evaluation


Emerging aims 


My early ideas for the project were quite broad. They were themes around time, space (environments), narratives and people.  Over the course of time, I narrowed it down to pattern and repetition. I got this idea because throughout Perec’s narrative there are reoccurring things that he mentions. In particularly, the pigeons and the buses and where they are going. Later, I established that the message I wanted to communicate was a comment about the everyday and routines.  Similarly one of the themes in the book were the everyday and making the mundane extraordinary.  Although there are some things that repeat from each day,  no two moments happen exactly the same.

Research 


I did some research on conceptualising pattern. I thought it was important to understand what patterns mean psychologically and what effect it has on the viewer. Alan Fletcher in “The Art of looking sideways” describes pattern as a single element that is repeated. This is illustrated with a series of pictures of 1 shape being used tessellated to form different patterns but by using only that 1 shape.  (See page 8)

“Patterns introduce a degree of control into this chaotic world” – Alan Fletcher

In addition to this, patterns are associated with order and safety because patterns repeat the same and are therefore predictable. (It is easy to see what comes next) I feel this helps reinforce the message with what I am trying to communicate in my final outcome. The ideas of “safety and order” help reinforce that routines are a good thing because the things we do everyday is like a “safety net”, it’s non-threatening, repetitive and predictable. Similarly to how patterns repeat themselves and are all the same.

Methodology 


I started drawing out different elements based on the things Perec mentions in the first chapter. My intentions were to talk about the space with illustrations. I put them into a composition whilst paying attention to visual depth; I made the things that I thought were significant stand out, and the little details to add interest. When I filled in the piece with two colors, I noticed what stroke me were the positive and negative shapes of the bird.  I thought it was interesting blending positive and negative shapes into each other because it created a different shape altogether.

I took this further by putting silhouettes into the negative space so that there were shapes within the shapes. For example there is traffic background in the shapes of the people, there are building contours in the shape of the bird and there are shapes of trees in the shapes of a group of pigeons. After this, I focused on positive and negative shapes of birds because I felt they have a strong aesthetically pleasing shape. There is something about birds that are graceful, how they fly and how mankind was fascinated with being able to fly.

I noticed that the drawings that I did at this point was like screen printing because I’m working in flat layers of colors.

And I saw some interesting pattern designs done with layers in the book called “The Fundamentals of illustration” by Lawrence Zeegan Crush. The artist cut into layers of card that show through to create an image. Similarly, I looked into a artist called Henri Mattisee that also used a similar approach by making a collage out of colored cut shapes. What I found this technique appealing was the fact that you can see and feel the texture of the shapes where the negative shapes have been cut. You could almost feel the craftsmanship in the making of it. The handmade aspect of it made it feel special or aesthetic in a way.


I decided to incorporate this into my own work and therefore cut out the different shapes I had in my previous drawing. (shapes of cars, birds, people, buildings etc) I tried out different compositions such as spacious, arranged in subject matter or just random. The color of the paper made a difference to the mood of the piece. For example, the red stood out the most and demands a lot of attention whereas the blue is more passive and relaxing.

With feedback from my lecturer and peers, they encouraged me to explore this further by repeating the same shape over and over again and think about: What is pattern? What would happen if you changed the scale? What negative shapes does it produce?

This led me on to produce cut stencils of my own with a scalpel like the ones I saw in “The fundamentals of Illustration.” Firstly, I noticed the color choice was important. When I used the primary colors, it made the mood feel inviting, happy or friendly. In contrast when I used darker reds and greys it made it feel more immediate as if the birds were flying towards you. In terms of pattern, the birds repeated did create some nice positive and negative shapes.

I also tried to incorporate shapes within shapes; basically a bird with a pattern of birds within it. This shows a sense of “repeat, repeat, repeat”, again and again which is essentially what pattern usually does. I felt this worked well except it would be better if the scale of the birds were smaller because they look too big to be repeating.

Effectiveness of the work produced


I think my end outcome was successful but to an extent. I think the way I’m using pattern to comment on the everyday and routines works well. The repetition in the patterns represents the repetitiveness of daily routine. I think I have used color well, the warm neutral colors help communicate that routine is a positive thing.

I feel that my work relates to the brief well because I’ve tried to incorporate similar themes into my work.  The main idea that I had explored were patterns but I feel if I had more time I could have explored this further. I’ve identified patterns as something being all the same, the next step would be to break those conventions and see what happens when you break that pattern. For example, on a routine basis we might have a tea everyday, but not every cup of tea is the same. Sometimes it’s perfect, other times there is spillage, or too much milk etc.  If I started to show some variation within pattern then this could make it more visually interesting and it would be pushing the boundaries of “What is pattern?”.

However, I feel pleased that I have tried a few mediums. Such as photography, drawing, hand cut stencils and going digital (Photoshop). Each one has a different purpose and are good for different things. For example, I found the stencils were good for moving around different elements to decide on composition, scale or the effect of color. Whereas the photography was good for telling a narrative: how objects tell you about the people who inhabit the space. On the other hand drawing is not necessarily good for realism but it can interpret a feel of a place with different mark making. If I had more time, I could have took this a bit further by using the laser cutters or doing some printmaking. It really would have been something I would be interested in doing.


I had a few relevant research material such as “the art of looking sideways”, “the fundamentals of illustration”, Henri Matisse’s work etc. I could have expanded this further by looking at the history of pattern and more designers work and how they use pattern.


In a sense, it has been an interesting journey, one that is worth carrying on pursuing in my own time. The beauty of it was that I didn’t know where this was going to lead me, when I started this project I didn’t think of pattern and repetition straight away. But by experimenting with different ideas and approaches, it led me onto this idea and I began to notice what I was really interested in. There were some new skills I learnt on the way, such as using a craft knife (without injuring myself). And a different way of thinking about things such as: challenging ideas, breaking conventions to see what would happen and to do broader research in the future to gain an awareness of the context that I am working in.

Monday, 8 December 2014

Implementation: Final outcomes


I made this pattern design on Photoshop

The reason I used Orange was because I want to give a feeling of comfort and warmth because I want to communicate that routines are good thing.

However, the orange seemed to stand out too much, so I chose a less saturated color. I went for a muted orange-brown, I feel this works better because it looks more neutral.


These are the final designs, this is just 1 tile. They could repeat indefinitely. I’ve alternated the colors to make it look more interesting. The hand cut imperfection to these shapes are good in a way because it shows that not every toast is same. If I had more time, I would have carried this idea further. “Same but different”



I felt the patterns I made were good but I was thinking back to when I created the bird within a bird cutout. I thought I could incorporate this idea into these patterns. Within the toast, there are patterns of toasts. And within the cup of tea, there are more cups of tea and vice versa.

The final output would be posters standing alongside each other. They work as a series because of the coherent color scheme that unifies them together. The 3 objects suggest routine because these are objects associated with waking up and eating breakfast or tea.