Friday, 27 November 2009
Animating examples: Techniques I would like to practice on
Artist research: Pia Borg - Animator
RCA - Pia's practice brief:
Tuesday, 24 November 2009
Monday, 23 November 2009
Friday, 20 November 2009
Influence & inspiration: World cinema
The story begins with Sho cleaning out the remaining belongings of his recently deceased aunt Matsuko. Sho gradually learns many details of his aunt's life, and it is through his investigations that the audience learns the story of Matsuko's past.
In the early 1970s, Matsuko was a popular school teacher. However, when one of her students (Ryu) committed a theft, and Matsuko took the blame for him, this had terrible consequences for her life.
The film also reveals some details of Matsuko's earlier life, including troubled childhood, when she struggled to gain the attention of her father. Matsuko's father's affection was mostly dominated by her chronically ill sister, which created an imbalanced rivalry where Matsuko's needs were less likely to be met.
Matsuko's relationships with men were generally troubled as well. She moved from relationship to relationship with men who gave her some inkling of affection, though it was often accompanied by abuse. She often found herself abandoned by the men she loved, who couldn't cope with her neediness. She continued to pursue her dreams of perfect love, even as her life spiraled down, and she found herself working as a prostitute, and even imprisoned.
When Matsuko met later in life with Ryu, whom she saved from the charges relating to his theft, she found that he held affection and admiration for her. She saw in him another chance for true love. But Ryu, by this time, was deeply entrenched in a criminal life. He decided that it would be best for him to disappear from her life, to protect her from the risks of life with a gangster. This final abandonment was disastrous for Matsuko, who never knew to what extent she impacted the lives of the men who loved her.
Tuesday, 17 November 2009
Animation piece: Drawing Motion '09
"Drawing Motion" Experimental Generation from Johnny Wilson on Vimeo.
Experimental Generation - A 30 [or so....] animation piece that continues to evolve through drawing. The visual and audio language continues to provoke an idea that unfolds impressionable emotion.