Tuesday, December 4, 2018

P4 conceptual illustrations


Project Brief 

Description
3 conceptual illustrations
Any topics

Client
The New Yorker magazine 


Message
1. President trump says dumb things and is oblivious to the outside world
2. Real Christmas trees are a better option than artificial
3. climate change is hurting the environment, polar bears are disappearing

Audience 
Men and women ages 25-40
Readers of the New Yorker 


Purpose
To highlight and illustrate the article topics  


specifications
3 pages 9 x 11
Full color or black and white 

schedule and budget
Start nov. 27
Finals due dec. 11














FINAL ILLUSTRATIONS













Monday, December 3, 2018

Tuesday, November 27, 2018

Tuesday, November 6, 2018

Tuesday, October 23, 2018

Project 3 - Illustrated Narrative

Project Brief 

Description
An illustrated comic strip to tell the story of the boy who cried wolf. Set on a far off planet. 


Client
A sci-fi fiction magazine featuring short comics about aliens, space and adventures. 


Message
Don’t take advantage of peoples trust, or when you really need them they wont believe you or ever trust you again. 

Audience 
sci-fi fans, ages 15-30, comic book fans 


Purpose
To show the classic lesson teaching aesop fable, in a new format brought to future times. 


specifications
2 pages 17 x 12
5-6 panels per page
full color or black and white 

schedule and budget
Start Oct 23
Brief due Oct 23
Outline Tue 30

Final DUE Tuesday Nov 20th

Original Aesop Fable

A boy called Peter lived with his parents in a village on the hillside. His parents, like most of the other people in the village, were sheep farmers. Everybody in the village took turns to look after the sheep, and when Peter was 10 years old, he was considered old enough to take his turn at shepherding.
But Peter was too easily bored, and he found it very tiresome being on the hillside with only sheep for company. So he’d find ways to amuse himself, running up rocks, climbing trees, chasing sheep, but nothing really kept him amused for very long. Then he hit upon a brilliant idea. He climbed to the top of the tallest tree, and started shouting towards the village: “Wolf! Wolf! Wooolf! Woohoolf!”
One of the villagers heard him, and got all the other men together, and armed with axes, hoes and forks, they ran out of the village to chase away the wolf and save their herd. Of course when they got there, they merely found Peter perched high up in his tree, laughing, and the sheep grazing peacefully. They were very annoyed with him. That night Peter got a spanking from his mother and was sent to bed without any supper.
For a while life went on again as normal, and people forgot about the incident. Peter managed to behave himself whenever it was his turn to mind the sheep. Until one day, he got really bored again. He picked up some sticks, and running through where the sheep were grazing, he started hitting the sticks together, and shouting: “Wolf! Wolf! Wooolf! Woohoolf! Woohoohoooolf!”
Sure enough, somebody in the village heard and before long the men all come running up the hill armed with their sticks and axes and hoes and shovels, ready to chase away the big bad wolf, and save their sheep and the poor shepherd boy. Imagine their consternation when they arrived in the field to see their herd grazing peacefully, and Peter sitting on a big rock, laughing uncontrollably.
That night Peter got a good telling off, an even better spanking from his mother, and was again sent to bed without any supper. For a few days people in the village went around moaning about Peter and his tricks, but before long things settled down again, and life resumed its normal uneventful course, and Peter had to do his turn at shepherding again every now and then. He decided he should behave himself, he really didn’t want to upset everybody all the time, and he especially didn’t want another one of his mother’s spankings!
Then, one afternoon when Peter was in the fields with the sheep, he noticed some of them were getting nervous, they started bleating and running hither and thither. Peter didn’t know what was the cause of this strange behaviour, sheep were running all over and making an ever louder racket. He got worried and decided to climb a tree so he could see what was going on. He balanced on a sturdy branch and looked around, what he saw almost made him fall out of the tree. There was a great big hairy wolf, chasing the sheep, biting at their legs, snapping at their tails. For a few seconds Peter was speechless. Then he started shouting: “Woolf! Woolof! Woohoohooloof!”
In the village an old man heard the shouting. “Oh no, not that Peter again”, he said, shaking his head. “What’s going on?” enquired another villager. “It’s that Peter again, he just can’t help himself”.
“That boy needs to be the centre of attention all the time”, said another. “Wait till his mother gets a hold of him”, added yet another. Nobody believed that this time there really was a wolf, and nobody got their hoe out, or their axe, or their shovel. All the sticks were left in the sheds and nobody rushed up the hillside. It wasn’t until very much later that afternoon, that the boy sent to take over the shepherding from Peter found dead sheep’s bodies strewn all over the hillside, and Peter still up there in his tree, whimpering, that the villagers found out there really had been a wolf this time.

At last Peter learnt his lesson, that if you always tell lies, people will eventually stop believing you; and then when you’re telling the truth for a change, when you really need them to believe you, they won’t.

Characters 
Pete, villagers, "wolf", "sheep"


Setting
Distant Planet X15-mentos



Sheep field outside of town
City of twilor
















Reading 4


Tuesday, September 25, 2018

Project 2 - portrait

Project Brief 

Description
Contextual, or conceptual portrait. illustration of ODB to accompany an article about his lasting legacy

Client
Complex magazine

Message
ODB was a driving, eccentric, wild and prominent figure in new york hip-hop and Wu-Tang Clan, and his legacy lives on

Audience 
Readers of complex magazine, fans of ODB, fans of the Wu-Tang Clan , Males ages 16-23, Older hop fans males ages 28-40, urban males, people involved in hip hop culture.

Purpose
accompany article and show a representation of ODBb


specifications
9x11 magazine paper
color or black and white, or combination

schedule and budget
Start, Sept. 25
Thumbnail concepts - sept 27
Rough draft 
Tight draft 
Final, Oct, 23
budget - $2000

IMAGE BOARD





Concept sketches

Tracings 














Background image board 


Final concepts w/ by ideas





Tight rough drafts 



FINAL ILLUSTRATIONS