Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Monday, September 7, 2009

Weekly Blog Entry 3 8/31-9/7

This is a storyboard for the second scene of the film I would like to make. This board represents the scene that directly proceeds the last storyboard. After the main characters (my grandfathers) father leaves to America, the rest of the family stays behind, going on with there lives. Before the father could raise the money to send for the family, there town is raided and the family separated. This is when the real story begins, and my grandfathers fight for his life commences.

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Weekly Blog Entry 2 8/31-9/6

In a similar way as the last post this image involves interpretation rather than just intake. Immediately upon seeing this image I couldn't tell what it was supposed to be, it took me about two seconds to put the shapes together and gain a general understanding of the sculpture. But even after about five minutes looking at it, I can not exactly say what the artist was thinking when he created this piece. This is the beauty behind abstract art, past just the face value of its shapes, it is open to individual understanding and interpretation.

Weekly Blog Entry 1 8/31-9/6

This is an abstract sculpture that may have more form than our latest assignment calls for, however this image still captures my eye. In art I love when the image is implied but isn't necessarily shown leaving interpretation and the meaning completely up to the observer. If this sculpture was just of a normal person it wouldn't be nearly as intriguing, you could look at for half a second and fully understand it. By removing the torso it is not an immediately recognizable shape, and therefor necessitates for more time to absorb the image, and with this extended time frame a much deeper understanding comes about.