Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Schedule

Schedules make me feel so constricted, but I'll try to follow it.

Oct 27.
5% Final Grade
3 Deliverables w/ variations
Start Storyboarding scenes

Oct 29th
Finish Storyboarding, pick color schemes, fonts etc.
Feedback on story

Nov 3rd
Start drawing actual scenes
Flesh out deliverables

Nov 5th
Continue drawing

Nov 10th
10% Final Grade
Continue drawing
Start coloring and scanning

Nov 12th
Continue Coloring and scanning

Nov 17th
Work on deliverables

Nov 19th
More deliverables work
get book together for first printing

Nov 24th
15% Final Grade
Printed out first draft of book
mock up deliverables

Nov 26th
No Class

Dec 1st
Printed corrections

Dec 3rd
Printed penultimate

Dec 8th
Finished!

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Cultural Probe

The first thing that caught my interest is the idea of research through design. I'm torn between the scientific way of researching, which is boring, but proven to be effective, and the design approach, which sounds way more fun and interesting. My outlook on life is to have fun, but I really value being efficient and effective as well, so if design-as-research turns out to be an effective (both in data gathering and in cost) I would be the first to advocate it.



I've always been interested in the idea of trying to understand technology better by repositioning how it fits into our lives, giving it different functions and expanding it's uses. Who says a computer mouse can only be used as a pointing device for the computer? Maybe it can be used as a pendulum in a clock. The best people to do this are the people who aren't already accustomed to the object, like children or the elderly. They also bring up a good point that children and the elderly shouldn't be treated the same, as they sometimes are, alienating them from the rest of culture (South Park did a great episode addressing this problem). Not only did the researchers/designers use the elderly, but to reinforce their different (or at least old fashioned) way of seeing things they added elements to make them take a second look at culture and everyday life.

The results they got were mixed, but they did come up with a good understanding of the type of community the elderly live in and how it can be improved to include them more. So in their conclusion they say that they were able to communicate with the elderly. To me, that sounds like it was a success, maybe I'm just being skeptical, but it seems like somethings missing. I know they said they didn't plan on analyzing any of the data or compiling it, but it just seems so weird to not have any quantitative data and relying on the qualitative. I guess sometimes I just like to see numbers.

Friday, October 16, 2009

Term Long Rethunk

I decided that working with music would be too subjective of an experience and wasn't going anywhere. So I went back to square one and tried to figure out something that I would enjoy doing and the audience would enjoy experiencing. After much thought I came to the idea of a picture book. It would be fun to write, illustrate, and, of course, read.

First thing I did was break it down by content, setting and style, and humor.


Content
After choosing a picture book I almost immediately went to the classic children's book by Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland. What interests me most about the story is how Wonderland just gets stranger and stranger by the minute and, as they say, goes down the rabbit hole. I want to create a story that is ridiculous and yet relevant at the same time. Obviously it won't be as long and in depth as Alice in Wonderland, but a few sentences on each page and a few scenes.



Setting and Style
I wanted something that would allow room for the imagination to wander, something sort of magical or romanticized, but wasn't too cliche. So the first things that were out was Medieval (Knights, Wizards, Magic etc.) and Modern, I needed something in the middle. I played around with the Pirate idea for a while, but that's too much like other projects I've done in the past. I settled on the French Baroque period with Louis XIV and the powerful, eccentric aristocracy. This also already had a great style that I am already interested in and have always wanted to attempt to replicate.



Humor
My inspiration for the humor and some of the content is the Monkey Island games. In the game you play a wannabe pirate, Guybrush Threepwood, who has this misadventures around the caribbean. It's a really fun game and has provided me with a lot of laughs over the years. Incorporating those sort of puns and satire along with some of Lewis Carroll's word play would be a fun project for me.



Deliverables
One thing I would like to create is packaging for some of the objects in the story as if they were real. Cards detailing characters. Different merchandise.


Story

The basic story is a tragedy. Outline as follows:
  • The first page we see the main character, he seems to be a completely normal, almost stereotypical, member of mid-late 17th century French aristocracy, drinking tea and being merry.
  • As we see him leave the scene, reality hints that it is breaking apart.
  • We turn the page and he gets to the next scene, which is noticably, to us, strange. However, he continues on as normal, creating an uneasiness in the audience, who are not sure if this is normal or not.
  • He meets a character, who is quite strange in our eyes, but the character doesn't react like we expect.
  • As our hero leaves, the character warns him about something.
  • Another scene that's fairly innocent, but gives us another hint that this world isn't exactly as we've perceved.
  • Another scene that brings up the intensity of the story, putting the character in danger or showing him starting to lose his cool.
  • Finally, the climax, where he is in real danger.
  • It ends before the audience has planned, and does so tragically.
Audience & Participation
These are my weak points. I could read the story to an audience in sort of a children's story telling/tea party event.

Friday, October 9, 2009

Term-Long Ideas

I want to focus on something I really enjoy and has been really inspiring me lately (more than usual anyway), music.


My first idea has to do with last.fm. This site tracks your played music with a program called audioscrobbler. I have built up a large statistic of what I listen to over the five years I've been on the site and it would be really fun and interesting to map it out. I think I could bring in some other elements to this project to make it more ambitious because this sounds like a fun idea and, other than sifting through 5 years of data, easy.


My second idea is mapping influences. The problem with this idea is that it has been done a million times so I have to put a different twist on it. I was thinking of looking at my music and see which bands have influenced me to start listening to another band.



Another idea, which sounds really interesting but isn't very fleshed out, is breaking down songs and looking at the different layers of sounds and instruments used in them.

Something dealing with how the music industry is shifting from record labels to online and self promotion. My inspiration was reading an article in the vanguard about how the music industry is being effected by downloading and bands being able to promote music without a label. Another inspiration is sellaband.com/ which allows artists to get money directly from fans to help produce their music. The fans also get a special prize depending on how much they donate.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Fluxus

The Fluxus movement started with experimental composer John Cage. He composed music using I Ching and pioneered noise, influencing Sonic Youth and Stereolab. Later in life he produced prints.


VII from Mushroom Book

Fluxus is similar to Dada in that it was about anti-commercialism and anti-art, meaning that it wants to blur the lines of what is considered art and what isn't. It favored simplicity over complexity and had a 'do it yourself' approach.

Much of the art associated with the movement is performance events or happenings. George Maciunas, who was influenced by John Cage, organized the first Fluxus event in 1961.

There are four key factors to the Fluxus philosophy:

1. Fluxus is an attitude. It is not a movement or a style.
2. Fluxus is intermedia. Fluxus creators like to see what happens when different media intersect. They use found and everyday objects, sounds, images and gexts to create new combinations of objects, sounds, images and texts
3. Fluxus works are simple. The art is small, the texts are short, and the performances are brief.
4. Fluxus is fun. Humour has always been an important element in Fluxus.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Harrell Fletcher by Allan McCollum

I really enjoyed this article and thought Harrell Fletcher has some really great ideas. The project Some People From Around Here was interesting, it's about making regular people feel like a celebrity. It would be surprising and fun to see a big portrait of a friend of yours or someone you know randomly by the freeway, you'd have to ask them what's going on and how they got their face to be there.

His Reports project is similar. Giving regular people a spotlight, showing them how they want to be shown and letting the world know what they think and do.

The article talks about how he did a project in school on random people he meets. I found that interesting because I have such a different outlook on life. I don't particularly like trying to find out what makes a person interesting and listening to their stories. Whereas this project and also the dinner date around the world project we saw in class deals with talking with and trying to understand the different people of the world.

I like how he doesn't really distinguish between artists and regular people. He has these projects like Learning to Love You More that everyone can participate in, whether they're an artist or not, and it's not about skill or aesthetics but more about ideas and peoples perceptions.