Friday 16 April 2010

Final Images

In the end I completed 8 images, and they were the following:
1. The warped, evil mirror smashing over the earth
4. Gerda fleeing the garden once she becomes aware of how much time has passed, and her meeting the raven on the way
5. Gerda entering a castle through the back door, on the advice of the raven who tells her that kay must be the prince who lives there
6. Gerda waking the prince, only to realise that he is not Kay
7. Gerda being captured by the little robber maiden
9. Their meeting with the Lapland Woman, who tells them to go to the Finland Woman to seek help, and gives them a message on a peice of dried fish.
11. Gerda is taken to the Snow Queens' palace by the reindeer. She is attacked by the Snow Flakes who guard the palace, but is protected by Angels who appear when she repeats the Lord's Prayer.
12. Gerda finds kay in the huge ice hall of the palace and brings him back to himself.

Again, I thought it would be better to do 8 well rather than 12 badly, but i ended up missing out most of the illustrations I had planned to complete for the first part of the story, which prevented the two main characters being introduced in visual form. It was not a compromise that i wanted to make, but it also turned out not to be the worst of the situation. I hadn't been exactly hopeful that I would have the time to make a PDF and get a book printed, especially as I would have needed to consider what text to use, the layout of text and image and the size of the book, not to mention the need for a front cover; but considering how important it is for my work to be of a professional standard, what i produced was not nearly sufficient. I didn't consider how long each image would take me, and while I feel that 2 or 3 were really quite effective, the rest were either unsuccessful in terms of layout, over-painted or lacking in depth. It was a similar situation to the difficulty I had in progressing to 3D, in that i jumped ahead to painting without fully and carefully realising most of the drawings in detail. I was too impatient.

In short, my Final Images would have been greatly improved by being better considered and further developed from beginning to end - allowing the slow process of each stage (taking the photos that i used to draw from, experimenting with layout, drawing and finally, painting) to inform the next step.

A New Direction

As I explained below, I have decided to progress in a 2D manner from now on. Instead of creating 7 3D 'sets' i have planned to make 12 A3 watercolour illustrations depicting key moments in the text. They will be as follows:
1. The warped, evil mirror smashing over the earth
2. Kay and Gerda together, before Kay is struck by the shard of glass from the mirror
3. Gerda following the river to the flower garden in the first part of her serch for kay
4. Gerda fleeing the garden once she becomes aware of how much time has passed, and her meeting the raven on the way
5. Gerda entering a castle through the back door, on the advice of the raven who tells her that kay must be the prince who lives there
6. Gerda waking the prince, only to realise that he is not Kay
7. Gerda being captured by the little robber maiden
8. Gerda, having been set free, riding the reindeer north
9. Their meeting with the Lapland Woman, who tells them to go to the Finland Woman to seek help, and gives them a message on a peice of dried fish.
10. Their meeting with the Finland woman, who tells the reindeer that Gerda already has all the power she needs to save Kay
11. Gerda is taken to the Snow Queens' palace by the reindeer. She is attacked by the Snow Flakes who guard the palace, but is protected by Angels who appear when she repeats the Lord's Prayer.
12. Gerda finds kay in the huge ice hall of the palace and brings him back to himself.

I have been inspired by the work of P.J. Lynch, an irish illustrator who works in a fairly realist way, often on a large scale in watercolour, gouache and oil. His work is highly coloured and descriptive, realising the ambition I have always held to create a world that the viewer feels that they could simply 'fall into' and inhabit for the time that they read the story. He too has illustrated 'The Snow Queen':





3D Attempts




It took me a while to realise that the reason why i was having such difficulty with my 3D work was because I hadn't fully realised the 2D images that were supposed to inform them. My attemps were under developed and the entire process was highly frustrating. There are many ways to execute work in paper 3D, as I examined below, and none of them can be done without careful planning: I needed more than a basic drawing to progress to 3D. It is with this in mind that I have decided to instead work on fully realising my planned layouts in 2D form, in A3, using watercolour. These can then be used to inform any 3D attempts, if I have the time to make them. Having already lost 5 weeks of work time due to my dissertation hand in, it was ambitious in the first place to plan to achieve so much in the time left to me. I think I felt that I needed to push the boundaries, rather than present something simple, or 'boring'. This attitude actually anded up stunting the natural progression of my work, especially since my strengths lie in drawing. It is important to try new things, but not at the expense of creating something well considered and suitable to the text. I thought it would be better to produce good 2D illustrations rather than bad 3D work. In any case, the photos above illustrate my attempts at 3D execution.