Showing posts with label OUIL401- Visual Journal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label OUIL401- Visual Journal. Show all posts
Thursday, 5 May 2016
Wednesday, 4 May 2016
More Posteryness
So I decided to try the suggestion on my feedback sheet. I'm going to put all of the images into one bigger poster. Hopefully at a first glance it'll just look like an image of gendered toys but if then you'll be able to see that the stereotypes have been reversed. You first believe you are seeing images that you're familiar with and now accept within the poster, and then realise that they are the opposite. This will hopefully encourage people to accept these changes and embrace the idea of children playing with any toy they wish, regardless of whether it's targeted to their own sex or the opposite. I wasn't sure which background colour I preferred so I'll just show all of them:
Poster Thingys
I actually really enjoyed making these and I'm pretty happy with the outcomes. Looking at them now I feel like the tea set one could have used some work. I seem to have missed gaps which I didn't realise before and it's annoying me now. I don't have enough time to go back and alter them now so they'll have to do! Also, I feel like the footballs could have been a little smaller with more of them but oh well. I think I'm being a bit picky.
Playing On Photoshop
I scanned the images in, deleted the background using the magic wand tool and then enhanced the image by changing the levels, contrast/brightness and the colour balance. Luckily all of the images fit into each other quite nicely so it wasn't too difficult to arrange everything. I flipped some horizontally so that they fit the space better. I then tested out some different coloured backgrounds as white seemed a bit boring.
I tried a few colours that weren't great, but above are a couple options that weren't too bad. I feel as though the grey's a little dull actually. I do quite like the yellow but I felt like blue worked nicely because it made it more obvious what I was trying to communicate by changing the colours. I feel like blue and pink together, along with the images instantly tells you the project is about gendered toys. Also, the blue kind of confuses you into thinking the toys hold the obvious colour for a second before understanding that the colours are the opposite of what is expected. Possibly? I don't know, I might just be waffling now. Anyway, here's the final outcome:Better Drawings (maybe)
I like the aesthetic of the toy soldier the most. So I decided to do some more drawings in this style and I'm going to layer them digitally on Photoshop to make some funky patterns.
Hahaha that last unicorn is just awful. But I probably would have drawn it like that when I was young so it'll be okay for these posters I think. Let's get Photoshop-ing!
Phil McAndrew
I came across Illustrator Phil McAndrews work and found a page on his website where he talks about how much he enjoys his work. I found this really lovely quote from him which is relevant to my work so I thought I'd post it on here.
'The thing that really struck me, working with a classroom full of six-year-olds, was that kids draw without any reservations or inhibitions. They just have fun and are excited about putting their ideas down on paper, about making something tangible with just a marker and their imagination. And if they're young enough, it doesn't matter how primitive or messy their drawings might look. When it comes to drawing, kids are FEARLESS.'
I feel like this will help me to make my drawings seem more realistic in terms of looking like they've been drawn by a child. I like the idea of not worrying about how messy the outcome is. I feel like this is also relevant to my practice in general. Making mistakes is important in the process of learning and I need to stop worrying too much about making bad work.
'The thing that really struck me, working with a classroom full of six-year-olds, was that kids draw without any reservations or inhibitions. They just have fun and are excited about putting their ideas down on paper, about making something tangible with just a marker and their imagination. And if they're young enough, it doesn't matter how primitive or messy their drawings might look. When it comes to drawing, kids are FEARLESS.'
I feel like this will help me to make my drawings seem more realistic in terms of looking like they've been drawn by a child. I like the idea of not worrying about how messy the outcome is. I feel like this is also relevant to my practice in general. Making mistakes is important in the process of learning and I need to stop worrying too much about making bad work.
Process & More Colour Swapsies
After receiving some feedback in that crit I decided to go back to the children's style drawings of toys with opposite colours. The way in which I've been doing these drawings is by holding the pen in my non-dominant hand and gripping it in my fist as this enabled me less control over the tool. It's actually more difficult that you think! I used colouring pencil and felt tip pens in order to get the same effect as kid's drawings. I feel as though I probably have added certain details that kids wouldn't really pick up on but it was difficult to forget everything I'd learnt over the years and just draw without thinking or studying the subject too closely. I don't think these drawings are too bad but I'm going to try drawing from memory rather than from a picture as I feel this will help in producing something a little simpler and more child-like.
Critttt
Feedback:
1. Comment on the relationship between the content and practical responses so far.
1. Comment on the relationship between the content and practical responses so far.
- Interesting and different approach by getting kids to do drawings
- I like the ink drawings and the naive style
- The body of work is all linked to the idea of gender stereotypes and challenging the ideas e have of what is for boys and what is for girls.
2. Comment on the clarity with which the visual responses and theory are connected. how and why does one process inform the other?
- Theory carried through to experiment with children's drawings
- Results from Lydia's drawings informed your direction? Less stereotypical than you had expected perhaps?
- I like the idea in the second sketchbook, clearly communicating obvious stereotypes, but then looking at stereotypes cross-overs- the 'boys' toys in pink work well.
3. Comment on the visual quality of the practical responses.
- By drawing in naive, child-like style clearly communicates your idea of stereotypes being enforced from a young age.
- I like the visual quality of the boys and girls toys- I think this idea could be taken further to more resolved outcomes
- bigger prints, with the toys layered or pattern
- pink/ purple next to blue/green, but when you look closer the toys don't correspond with the stereotypical colours.
4. What issues need to be addressed ahead of submission deadline?
- Develop the ideas from the sketchbook to more resolved outcomes- bigger?
I agree that I need some more resolved outcomes. I've liked layered patterns in my sketchbook as well so I might re-draw some toys or draw some more and start to layer them in Photoshop. Thanks Pal!
Outfits
I thought what the males and females in the drawings were wearing was interesting in my experiment. I decided to pick out the key elements that make up the outfits for each person (boy, girl, man, woman) and simplify these right down into basic shapes. I also switched the colour you'd put with each genders clothing to the opposite colour as I did with the toys as I thought this was interesting. I made detachable heads, one male and one female for each outfit. The outcomes are shown below:
Interestingly, I think the male outfits in pink seem to work with both genders. For example with the first outfit shown, I feel like boys wearing pink and girls playing football is now acceptable in society, however with the next image- the girls outfit in blue- the boys face seems out of place on the body of a girl. This brings me back to the same idea mentioned in the previous post about it being acceptable for girls to play with or use things made for boys, however boys don't tend to use girls stuff. Pete mentioned an article that talked about this idea, but he can't get hold of it unfortunately. I'll see if I can find it online somewhere.
Reversing Colours & Toys
One of the most obvious stereotype is that all girls like pink and all boys like blue. I wanted to focus in on this a little more. I decided to take toys that targeted boys but draw them in pink and purple and the same with the girls toys, but with the colours blue and green, similar to what Paul Windle has done. I didn't use red purposely with these ones as I feel as though red is a gender neutral colour that is associated with both.
I quite like these outcomes. I feel like the boys toys in pink seems a little more natural than the girls toys in blue. I'm not sure why this is. It could possibly be because we do now get pink footballs and cars, as it's become acceptable for young girls to play with these toys. However, it doesn't quite work the same way for the girls toys in boys colours. There are many blue versions of girls toys which is interesting. I'm not entirely sure why this is, but I might look into it if i have time.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)