I had the pleasure of seeing Cloud Atlas in theaters recently and if you haven't seen it yet, I highly recommend it.
Fair warning though, if you're looking for a passive movie-going experience, look elsewhere, because this movie requires you to be paying attention and using your brain at all times.
There are six intertwining storylines, each taking place in a different period of history with the same actors playing different roles (often with disregard to the usual barriers of gender or race). Each story relates to the others in ways that become more apparent as you go on, until it's clear that this is really one story with six different facets.
Each of the stories is tied together by shared themes and actors, but I also picked up on a commonality between certain objects. Some items (like the sailor's bright blue buttons) appear in several tales simply by standing the test of time until they are rediscovered by the next batch of characters. Others items are visual echoes of things that came before, like the broken china plates from 1930 and the shattered terra cotta pots that appear in the contemporary story line.
The basic concept of the image is this: I want to show Somni-451, in the same pose as the statue they worship after the fall, floating above a vast sea. There's the rubble of Seoul in the background, rising up out of the waves and snow falling from the sky. Upon closer inspection, the snowflakes are actually teeth. Somewhere in the piece will be my favorite quote from Somni-451: "From womb to tomb, our lives are not our own."
I briefly considered using the line "What is an ocean but a multitude of drops?", but I like imagining that this image could be found on a religious icon after the fall, so it made more sense to stick to the other quote, which becomes a post-apocalyptic proverb after Somni's death. (That's not a spoiler. People don't live to be 300 years old.)
Originally, I'd wanted to have swirls of small objects playing around the form of Somni-451. A cloud of papers that start out as the sheet music from the Cloud Atlas Sextet and slowly change into the contents of the Swannekke Nuclear Report, as well as a mass of broken porcelain shards from the composer's story line mingling with shattered pottery from the publisher's tale. Try as I might, I couldn't get it to look good on paper though, so no clouds of earthenware for Somni.
I'd been planning on framing it as if it was an oval portrait, but after a while I decided to go with an art nouveau style design instead. It looks like that'll help me solve a lot of the design problems I'd been having. And besides, I'm such a sucker for art nouveau that I'll take any excuse to work Mucha-esque elements into an illustration.
I had to abandon the swirling object clouds, but now I have four mini-windows to work with and I can place one of each into the corners without making the main image too busy. Adding a bit of art nouveau flavor also allows me to add purely graphic elements to an otherwise realistic scene. I'd been looking for a way to include the sailor's buttons into the image and now I can work them in the background, beyond the horizon.
It's starting to come together and I'm excited to see where it goes from here.
Shakespeare Shaken - Pt. 1
Friday, November 2, 2012
The hardest part about this entire project was waiting to share my work online, especially considering that several of these illustrations are some of my strongest work.
I'll be posting behind-the-scenes images all throughout the month. Process animations, photo reference, you name it. Pretty much everything I've been keeping under my hat since last January finally gets to come out. Prints of these fine illustrations are now available for sale online, both in my Etsy store and in my new RedBubble store.
Let's start with my Shakespearean bodice ripper, The Legend of The Ass Man!
The Ass Man was one of those rare and delightful anomalies where everything came together quickly and easily. This piece was an absolute joy to work on and I definitely enjoy the finished product more when the creation process is painless.
I pulled my inspiration from the very distinctive visual style of trashy romance novels. We all know the type: there's a muscular, conspicuously shirtless, Fabio-lookin' dude passionately clutching some swooning crinoline-covered beauty.
My brother Robert and sister-in-law Stacia were in visiting us when I first started working on this piece and they were gracious enough to pose for my reference shots. (You may recognize Stacia as the model I used for Magdalene)
I used cicada wings for the faeries, since I've always found them more appealing and solid looking than dragonfly wings. I also decided that faeries probably wouldn't think about clothing as something meant to conceal their bodies (They live in the woods! What's there to be shy about?), but rather as a means to adorn themselves. I clothed the center faerie in plants and the far-right one in a flimsy tunic. Originally, it was going to be made of something resembling spanish moss, but I eventually opted for gossamer fabric instead. I had also been planning on covering the far-left faerie in lichen, but I just couldn't make it look right.
The medium for this piece was mostly watercolors and colored pencil, although there was some digital work done on it before the end. What I'd do for the most part was put down a large area of color using the paints and then work in the details with colored pencils. At the very end I found that I'd picked a color combination for the center faerie that I hated.
The values were all correct, but the color reminded me of a frog and not in a good way. Rather than erase it all and start over, I scanned it in and used my (then) brand spanking new Wacom tablet to isolate that part of the image so I could alter it digitally. Worked like a charm!
The linework took about 20 hours and that's because I went into far more detail than was necessary on the flowers and leaves that adorned the trio of faeries. After transferring the piece down to watercolor paper, the final art took about a week. Designing the book's text and placing the image in context took another 8 hours, for a grand total of 60 hours start-to-finish.
Next Up:
Detective Horatio!
Detective Horatio!
Posted by Unknown at 9:12 AM
Labels: comic books, Red Stylo Media, Shakespeare Shaken
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