Archive

Archive for the ‘character design’ Category

WUT cover art

April 27th, 2007

This is a piece I’ve been working on for the last few days, on and off. It is part of the WUT anthology book planned for this year. I had started out with a space opera project, which wasn’t feeling exactly right. I have a new story written which is much smaller in scope, and tighter and faster paced.

character design, comic books, WUT

havok, some design tweaks

April 22nd, 2007

zombie!

April 12th, 2007

WHIPKRAFT album cover

February 19th, 2007


This is a new album by Whipkraft, kind of a goth/industrial band from the bay area. I supplied the art for their album cover.

Here is an alternate version, higher res. It’s actually still an unfinished piece from a couple of years ago.

character design, publications

ImagineFX workshop pdf

February 18th, 2007

Hello

I recently found out that a tutorial I wrote for ImagineFX magazine is available on their site in pdf format. It is a simple character concept design using Art Rage as a sketching/rendering tool. You can see the article here. If you find the article useful or informative, send them an email and let them know you want to see more! If you thought it sucked, tell me why you think so.

character design, publications

space opera: Cygnus Lake, part 2

January 22nd, 2007

This is a full shot of the character concept from a few posts ago. I think actually it will be an interesting story point if this character is part machine and part human. We’ll see how that plays out. I’m on the third draft of the script, and some characters have disappeared, a few have been melded into one, and now I’m juggling scenes on index cards. This “writing” stuff is hard. Non fiction stuff I have no problem with, but telling an interesting story? Shoo.



character design, comic books, space opera

space opera: Masato Almeida

January 19th, 2007

space opera: Cygnus Lake

January 11th, 2007

Character sketch of one of the leads. Originally she was written as a cyborg, but reading over the script I don’t know that it really adds anything to the story.

character design, comic books, space opera

remixed piece

January 9th, 2007

Pardon the forthcoming mental diarrhea.

One of the things I’ve always tried to do with concept design work is to provide as clear a read as possible. To me, this has meant eliminating extra (unnecessary) information, clarifying the intent of the design as much as possible, with the idea that the main purpose is to guide someone else in creating a 3D asset. In that kind of mind set, the concept art is not the end, but simply one step along the way to the end. It’s a documentation of the desired end product, but it is not the product itself.

Illustration is a different kind of thing. As the one holding the pencil (or brush, stylus, whatever your deal is), that thing you’re creating is the end product. That being the case, a clear, efficient read isn’t necessarily always a requirement. Meaning, you’re no longer writing a visual instruction manual for someone else to build something.

Good art seems to be about being different things to different people – depending on what’s going on inside your head, what you get emotionally from a piece of art will be different from what the person next to you gets out of it. I’ve always tried to maximize the “signal to noise” ratio in my concept art. See that stuff about “clear read” above. In illustration, it may be that “noise” can be made into “signal.” By having many layers, textures, noise – there are more opportunities for meaning to arise from the art. Not necessarily “meaning” in terms of what the artist intended, but that might come from the act of a viewer looking at a piece of art and responding emotionally to patterns, lines or forms in ways that only that particular person can.

In the past I’ve made the comparison between concept artists and actors. Some concept artists approach their work similarly to good character actors. They are able to suppress their own voice in order to play a role that best supports the project they are working on, and you are never really conscious of CONCEPT ART. Same way that really good visual effects are not obvious, or how a lot of times it’s difficult to remember the names of those good character actors. These concept artists are able to design appropriately for any time period, genre, mood, etc. Other concept artists are more like blockbuster movie stars. They do a certain thing really well, are well known for it and are hired to do that thing on someone’s project. As in movies, there’s definitely a market for those guys too.

As a concept artist, I’ve always strived for the character actor route, which means I’ve always attempted to eliminate any individual mannerisms or idiosyncracies in my art as much as possible, in pursuit of that “clear read,” and to serve the project. Of course, as much as you try you’ll never completely eliminate those personal artistic twitches. As an illustrator, I want to figure out exactly what those things are, and bring them back and refine them in my illustration work.

So all that verbiage was meant to set up this image, which is a remix of a digitally painted sketch from several months ago. My formative years as an artist (starting from say age two to about age 28) were spent with pencil and paper, and I think that a good portion of my artistic “voice” comes from that pencil, paper and linework equation.

character design, sketches, space opera

space opera: Todd Almeida & Nathan Masato

December 7th, 2006

Two of the main heroes in the story.


character design, sketches, space opera