-By Jon Foster
I am going to add on to Dan’s post. Early in my career, I was under the impression that I should be able to sit down and create a beautiful piece of art from start to finish with no preparation…I thought all great artists did it that way. The reality was that it was extremely frustrating to produce pieces of work that continually were below my own expectations for myself. I thought, if I can see the image in my head why can’t I just translate it to the canvas? My first inclination was that I just did not have the skills, the appropriate level of craft to make my visions come to life.
While this was partly true on the craft side, the truth was that I did not realize the blood, sweat and tears that my favorite artists were putting into their work. My expertise and imagination---or lack of these---were not the reason my images were falling flat. It was the fact that I was shortchanging them from the beginning by taking short cuts. I didn’t realize that the vision an artist has is simply a starting point, a place of inspiration, but it is not the whole story or the complete truth. Any color combination can work in your mind’s eye, any composition might seem perfect, but when they are committed to paper these ideas seem to lose their majesty and sometimes fall short in the execution. This is not to say I was wrong, I was just partly right. Ever have a dream where you solved the world’s problems by creating, say, the first working cold fusion reactor only to wake up and find that what you thought was ingenious in a dream would seem ridiculous in the light of day? “Ummmmm, maybe a thousand hamsters running simultaneously on miniature treadmills actually can’t jump start cold fusion…” you think to yourself while drinking your morning coffee. There might not be much to save from that dream, except, perhaps, the image of an army of hamsters which might have some play left in it in another context. The point is that these dreams, real dreams and daydreams are initial ideas, starting points. Get some paper and quickly write, draw, or scratch them down. Now turn them metaphorically on their sides, upside down---mix several together, shake it and let the pieces fall where they may. What does it look like now? Can you let go of your original idea for something new, something possibly better? Does it still look the same? Make word lists for your idea; often times the abstract of the word can help us see an image in a different and unique way. For example, when you picture a car in your mind it might be the image that you just keep seeing in your minds eye, and you associate the car in your head with this image to the extent that it is hard to see other cars---or what a “car” can represent; but if you write down the word “car”, and then adjectives that might apply, such as old, big, retro, rusty, aggressive, friendly, sad, etc. you jump start your imaginative processes again. Now, take all this and quickly make visual notes to with thumbnails. A thumbnail is a small sketch 1 to 3 inches high or wide for the most part, but that is not what is important. What IS important is getting your ideas down quickly and without over-thinking, thus the small size. It’s harder to get caught up in detail. I confess I have seem some beautiful thumbnails by students and the more info you can get in them in terms of shape and value, the better, but often my first attempts are just scratchy marks that only I can understand. Now, do MORE, add in ideas to one from thumbnails you like and get rid of the ones that you don’t like (but don’t throw those ideas out---they could work for projects in the future). Back to the pencil and paper and this time, refine a bit, put some love into it---not necessarily to finish, but just to bring it to a little sharper focus. Hopefully you will have three or four thumbnails you really dig and one that just does not float your boat. At this point I usually send my sketches (worked up thumbnails) to the art director, and… well, this can be for a later post.
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RC - Thursday, November 4, 2010
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