Friday, February 27, 2009

designing magazines/film sets

In my Typography 3 class, our current assignment is to design our own magazine. It's been an interesting journey so far, considreing I've never done a project like this and there are so many details you have to think about. But it certainly has been fun to research and find truly good magazine design. Here are some things that caught my eye: This editorial spread is nice and clean and I like the way the imagery flows nicely throughout the entire piece. As a reader, it would certainly intrigue me.




In other news, my filmmaker friends from Watkins are currently in my apartment filming on friend's production 2. It's always nice to help out a friend, and having a new experience is good too. It's been so great developing friendships with people who are studying film, because honestly I have come to appreciate movies in an entirely different way. I see them differently, and I think about the story more compared to when I would turn a movie off if it was "too slow." My boyfriend is also a film student at Watkins and he has taught me a lot too. They always talk about film with so much passion and I always love to hear people when they are passionate about something.
So if you get the chance, ask a film student why they love film making so much and I promise you will be in for an interesting conversation.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

the creative life

I'm always thinking about creating. My future starts when I wake up every morning. Every day I find something creative to do with my life. - Miles Davis

“Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain an artist once we grow up.”

These words were once uttered by Pablo Picasso. The same man also said, “Art is a lie that tells the truth.” Which is a profound contradiction any way you look at it. Much like the following phrase:

“Creative people are adults that never grew up.”

Which is mostly true, depending on your idea of “grown up.” Because while there are a handful of “creative people” who behave like adults, function well in society and are productive, the people who do the most creative work are often rogues and rebels. They move against the grain, have a hard time conforming to certain norms and almost always have a penchant for all things “weird.”

In groups, the most creative people will just say whatever comes to mind. They throw ideas out into the world with reckless abandon. Many of which are, at a glance, silly, seemingly irrelevant, and to most people - wrong.

Which is the main reason why many of us born artists grow up to be something else entirely.

Think about it. When you’re born, as you begin aging, your mind starts filling up with different notions about the world around you.

For instance, at a very young age, you learn to recognize your name. Then, you learn to recognize your own image in a mirror. Then, you start to equate the sound of your name with that same image and before long you develop the concept of “I” or “me.” That’s when your ego is born. About that same time, you begin learning to discern between “right” and “wrong.” And before you can even walk, you get the sense that being “right” is better than being “wrong.” Then, you get into school and your whole life hinges on how many times you are right versus how many times you are wrong. Thus, the ego is conditioned to prefer the reward of rightness over the consequence of wrongness.

It is around this time that the natural creativity we are all born with begins to fade. Still, there are those who manage to hang on to it. They remain creative their whole lives. This is because, somehow, they’ve managed to hang on to the notion that it is okay to be wrong.

To live the creative life is to live without the fear of being wrong. Because if you’re always afraid to be wrong, you’ll never come up with anything creative.

*This was posted on redpepper's site and I really liked it and wanted to share it here.

week one at redpepper

So tomorrow will mark the end of my first week at redpepper. It's going well and I'm already doing a lot. I've been working on a website for a country music singer, uploading videos and editing songs to post on the site when it goes live Monday. I've been making notes about a college publication that needs some design help, and will be assisting the creative director in making some design guidelines for it. I've also been helping with a fun project that they are doing for the upcoming Addy show this weekend, a peer choice award and I've been buying materials and helping to put that project together, painting and gluing. You don't normally think crafts are always part of design firms, but its a fun project to do and everyone is having fun with it. I've also been fixing small issues on various projects and sitting in on meetings to get the feel for different projects and how redpepper operates. They have a really extensive client list and I'm pretty excited about doing work for some big names.

Here is the list:
Averitt
Averitt Air
Averitt Recruitment
Billy Dean Music Group
Boult Cummings Conners Berry
Brand Vaughn Lumber
Brothers Wine
CAO
Capio
Clymer Facial Plastic Surgery
E.R. Alley & Associates
Ernst Homes
Ernst Remod
Evermore
Finworth Mortgage
Georgia Trust Bank
Gwinnett Convention & Visitors Bureau
Gwinnett Habitat for Humanity
Holder Properties – aspyre at assembly station
JC Reed
John Deere Boots
M2consulting
Magnolia Pediatrics
Marena Group
MGLAW
Music City Moves
myAVguy
Nashville CARES
NationLink Wireless
Norcross, GA
Notre Dame Academy
Ordner
Silverton Bank
Southeastern Pine Awareness Network
Suwanee
Sylvias Wine
The Monkey's Treehouse
The Reliance Network
Touchstone Builders
Trevecca Nazarene University

I've really had a good time this week and have gotten the chance to learn some new things already, like editing music for one. Everyone is really nice and helpful, and I'm certainly grateful for that. It was pretty nervewracking to start last week but this week has been much smoother, and I'm keeping a positive attitude. I'm looking forward to settling in more and taking on more responsibility as time passes.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

addys!

Oh, I meant to post about the ADDY Awards.
I wanted to congratulate all the graphic design students who won an addy this year. That's an exciting thing! I'm afraid I don't have a list of the names at the moment, but I want to post them soon.
The show is the 24th of this month and I, along with the other design students will be attending to find out what pieces won awards (we aren't told until the show).
So that was really great news :)

paint made flesh

So I want to recommend to anyone reading that they should go check out Paint Made Flesh, the current exhibition at the Frist museum. The curator of the exhibit, Mark Scala, came to my art history class last semester and spoke about the show and it has gotten nothing but good reviews.
"Paint Made Flesh presents paintings created in Europe and the United States since the 1950s in which a wide range of painterly effects suggest the carnal properties and cultural significance of human flesh and skin. As a revisionist study of post-World War II art, the exhibition offers a rejoinder to the modernist orthodoxies of the mid-to-late 20th century by contending that paint’s material properties make it well suited to convey metaphors of human vulnerability. The exhibition includes works by Pablo Picasso, Francis Bacon, Lucian Freud, Willem de Kooning, Alice Neel, Leon Golub, Philip Guston, Eric Fischl, Georg Baselitz, Jenny Saville, Wangechi Mutu, John Currin, Cecily Brown, Daniel Richter, and others. "


If you're a student you can get in free on Thursdays and Fridays (I wasn't aware until recently that we were free on Fridays too!). Just bring your id.
Check out the Frist Center of the Visual Art's site here.
The show lasts until May 10.

starting up

So I am finally going to start my internship this week. I was supposed to be starting this past Monday but with a miscommunication, I found out it wasn't quite time. I must admit I was bummed Monday when I found out because I was chomping at the bit to get started. But after consulting with my supervisor he said that tomorrow would be the day.
My semester has been going well so far, much easier than the last, at least in terms of having less classes and less stress. It's been nice to wait to start my internship until later, but I am so ready to jump in. I need something to stay focused on, I need a new experience, I need a change.