Thursday, October 21, 2010

Oh Silver Tongue

(Warning: disturbing context)

We've been watching and listening to Jim Jones in one of my anthropology classes, and it's been getting to me more than I anticipated.  I knew how to react to the Waco tragedy, but the People's Temple tragedy in Guyana is harder to understand, harder to conceptualize, and harder to rationalize.  More than 900 people died in one day, most of them committed suicide, some of them didn't.  And the Jim Jones character, a man who started out as a Saint and ended up as a Devil, became villainized in American culture.

I started this sketch while listening to the hour in which those 900 people died as recorded on Jone's loudspeaker; listening to Jones preach, listening to dissenters, listening to the majority of his congregation concur, and listening to people line children up to drink poisoned cool aide. 


Please don't interpret this too far.  It's just a reaction.  I do not mean to imply that the members of People's Temple who died were brainwashed or swindled of their autonomy.  Nor do I mean to absolve Jim Jones of guit.  I'm simply fascinated (and horrified) by the power of words and fear and things that come in pairs.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Ecstatic Joy and Simple Sketches

You may have noticed that I haven't posted in a little while.  You have deduced this correctly, you smart reader!  The reason being that I managed to spill a quarter of a bottle of beer across my laptop while attempting to swat a gnat.  Very dramatic, very tragic.  The computer looked to be a relic of the past, refusing to turn on and making frightening flashy lights at me.  But, amazingly, after letting the poor thing dry out for a couple of days (in more ways than one) it... is fine.
o__o
 That was not something I had been expecting.
And needless to say I am completely ecstatic!


So I share with you, dear viewer, a random doodle that is not particularly ecstatic and is actually rather staid and just a little boring.  It does, however, reflect my new found love for suspenders.  ;)
(Done, as usual, with a beloved blue bic pen and over zealous scribbling.)



Friday, October 15, 2010

Dynamic Scenes, Church Doors, and Knives

In addition to yesterday's post of character designs, CarnivorousGiraffe and I worked on dynamic scenes!  Monumentally more interesting and much more fun to do, dynamic scenes are characterized by character interaction and stuff happening! And in addition to always being italicized, dynamic scenes must always end with an exclamation point!


[There was a picture here. Now there is not. Rest assured, it was removed for very important plot reasons]


I can't tell you what's happening in these (that would be a serious spoiler!) but I can say that this crazy project of ours is getting more and more interesting and exciting every day.  :)

A question for the lovely audience:
I know how I like to read things, but I don't know about the rest of the world. :)
Given the choice, how do you prefer to read your online comics?
  a) Page updates (once every week etc.)
  b) Chapter updates (considerably less often)
  c) Other

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Sketches and Couches and Hotels, Oh My!

I spent this weekend (and part of this week) holed up with CarnivorousGiraffe working on Mad Jack character designs and dynamic scenes.  (It is a new grammatical rule that dynamic scenes must always be italicized.)  This post will show the first.  Thanks to her generosity and a number of lucky casino factors, we even got to chill for a night in a fancy hotel (for free!)  I also drew on the ridiculously comfortable couches provided in the mess hall of her university.  I am quite envious of a large uni's couch power.

I had planned to have this post up on Tuesday (camera would not recognize computer). And then on Wednesday (computer would not recognize scanner). But then finally the fates aligned and I was able to digitize my sketchbook!

Anyhow - on with the art!
(Warning: nudity)
I present to you, oh gracious reader, a collection of doodles and character designs, inspired by Sara's brilliant compilation at her blog, the SketchGarden.  

Some of you may remember a couple of doodles I've done for the Mad Jack comic in previous posts.  There have been a few character design changes, but mostly I've been working on making sure I know how the characters react, how they move, and just practicing drawing them.  (Fun fact: Jack has at least 8 knives on her person (or people in her vicinity) at all times.) 

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Stuck In the Mud, Verbatim Lines

Being a college student has it's perks. Today marks the first day of our fall break, a week long reprieve from class. I say class rather than college because it is also the period that many professors decide is perfect for big projects. To make things even more interesting, I'm taking the GRE's tomorrow. ( O_O )

But all that aside, I plan to spend a great part of this break working on Mad Jack plans and panels with my good friend CarnivorousGiraffe, who is the fabulous writer of this crazy creation of ours. Expect oodles of sketches, environments, and more in the coming week!

But until break technically starts I'm still going to classes. And going to classes means occasionally doodling in them. This doodle started out yesterday during an extremely depressing film on the Jonestown tragedy we watched in my Contemporary Millenarian Movements class. (...It doesn't get much more depressing than that.)


This time I actually tracked down my scanner and inked directly over my original sketch in photoshop instead of redrawing from scratch. It was faster, but I actually prefer the redrawing process over the "verbatim" method of traditional ink tracing, as it allows me a chance to catch mistakes and actually improve the drawing.


Case in point: her shoulder. I don't even know what's going on there, just that there's something seriously not right. :) Thank goodness it's just a doodle!

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Art Process: Under the Wire (Photoshop & Textures)


One of the things I hope to do with this blog is explain my process. In other words, how I get from idea, to, hey, that actually looks like something. What better place to start than the project I'm working on right now?

I started out with a grand and complicated comic idea. The protagonist, an ambiguous, amorphous, androgynous character living alone on the top of a hill finds a rope that leads upwards forever. Should she/he take it and climb it? Or not? The character is lost in the midst of indecision and stays there, thinking about the potential horrors of each option until she/he dies.

The idea was a bit too... soupy... for me in the long run, and I hardly have time to be entertaining the idea of another comic, even a little one. So, it turned into a single frame, which then turned into an ongoing photoshop exercise, tentatively titled Under the Wire.

(The imagery here is probably based off my current obsession with Myst V...*coughs*)

  • First I started with a sketch that I did on some scrap paper:
  • Then... (because my sanity is apparently in question) I redrew the whole thing in Photoshop... (Note: redrawing the entire thing is not faster than going to the trouble of finding your scanner) Redrawing things from scratch may take longer, but it's also a really great way to make sure your tablet drawing skills are up to snuff. :)


  • I had my lines, a basic idea of what this was going to be... and then I did something I don't normally do: play! :)

I have no idea how this is going to turn out. It's not finished and it probably won't be for a while. There is no "plan" here. I can say one thing for certain, though: I'm having a blast incorporating textures and weird visual elements that don't normally show up in my drawings or paintings. I actually like running around in Photoshop like a headless chicken. It's very cathartic. :)

Next up:
A quick and dirty tutorial.
Is there anything you would like to see explained? Let me know in a comment!