Thursday, 26 March 2009

They Are Coming

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I've been asked when the new Toastycats will be out and I say this: issue 4 will be out by the beginning of May. It will be a special issue too, the Creature Issue. If you're not familiar with Toastycats, have a look here, where you can order back issues. ( The PayPal buttons are only for UK customers, but if you live somewhere else and you have a PayPal account, just email me at: magda@magdaboreysza.com . Postage outside the UK is 50p )

Where the Wild Things Are



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Found this trailer today. Not sure what I think about it. I like the style of the film and I'm glad they didn't use CGI to make the monsters but they seem to lack the fierceness and charm of Sendaks illustrations:
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Wednesday, 18 March 2009

Sketchy


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I'm trying to fill my sketchbooks over the next couple of weeks because I will be applying to a drawing course. I fell a little rusty, so I will be doing a really intense drawing session every day for a while, to get going.
I’ve got two sketchbooks at the moment. One of them is a large Moleskine. It’s a great brand: nicely shaped, a pocket in the back for storing loose drawings and a rubber band to keep the book shut. And the paper is incredible: thick and smooth with a creamy ivory hue. Most sketchbooks have very white paper, which looks cold and abrasive. Someday, hopefully, I will find Moleskine-type paper in big loose sheets, too. The right kind of paper is very important. Fineliners and brush pens work especially well in a Moleskine, so that’s what I normally use. I do a lot of imaginative drawing in here, as opposed to observational drawing.

The second sketchbook is something I made myself, out of different kinds of paper: sugar paper, coloured paper, graph paper and tracing paper. This one is just for observational drawing. Because of the different papers (some are translucent) and because the pages vary a lot in shape and size (resulting in flaps and overlaps), it presents quite a challenge. I need to give extra thought to where I draw and how it all looks together. Here are a few sketches I made in the natural history museum in Oxford and in the Horniman Museum in London last spring (as always, you can click on the images to see them up close) :
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I’m making an effort to loosen up my drawing: to draw more, to take more risks and use a variety of materials. In the past I’ve usually strived to make finished pictures, an attitude that easily freezes you up and results in boring, flat images. But now I’m trying to let myself make mistakes in my sketchbooks. After all, they are for sketches, not finished drawings. If you see the sketchbook as a tool for investigation and exercises, then you can learn from both the good stuff and the bad.
I’ve also started to revisit old drawings and to change or add to them. With some distance to old work, it’s easier to see what works and what can be improved on. Sometimes, with stuff that’s completely rubbish, I’ll even paste a piece of paper on top and start again. Another thing I do, for some reason, is that I turn failed portraits into monsters. I’ll add snouts and fur onto faces I’m unhappy with. Like so:



Saturday, 14 March 2009

I Wrote a Hit Play!: Wes Anderson on Meeting Pauline Kael

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Isn't this a lovely poster? Wes Anderson's Rushmore is one of my all-time favourite movies. I found this piece, written by Anderson himself, on meeting the legendary film critic Pauline Kael and screening the movie for her. It's a real treat to read.

Thursday, 12 March 2009

Doll with Teeth

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Just another one of those random things.

Monday, 9 March 2009

Newcastle Murals

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I finally got photos of the murals we did at The End bar in Newcastle. It’s the first time I’ve made colour murals so it was a good learning experience. I used Posca pens, which are great. They are essentially like big markers but contain acrylic paint, which has a nice flow and doesn’t smell like alcohol. They come in several different thicknesses but unfortunately their colour range is a bit limited and not all the colours have a good flow when you hold the pen horizontally, i.e. when you work on walls. I also used some spray paint, but sprayed it into the cap and applied it with brushes. I hadn’t really planned the murals at all but I had been drawing a lot of human/animal hybrids in my sketchbook so it seemed natural to do something with that. Tasha and I started with our individual murals and ten made a collaborative mural, which you can see above. The Arm Lady in the middle is mine, while Tasha did everything around her. Some detalis:
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I really like how she grounded the weirdness of the hybrid by having her interact with things that belong in the bar, like a record deck and a keyboard. And the green things are wonderful. The face of the arm-lady, by the way, was inspired by a photograph of a young Katharine Hepburn. I often use photos of interesting faces as starting points for this kind of images. I’m also, quite obviously, very fond of medieval religious imagery and I borrow a lot from its poses and symbolism.
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Here are photos of the two smaller murals I made. Not the greatest space for them but not terrible. The Hairy Snake Lady also came straight out of my sketchbook and then I surrounded her with improvised creatures. What I usually do is I start putting in a few well-placed, large characters and then I fill in the spaces between them with smaller dudes and then the spaces between those and so on. That way I can add stuff almost infinitely but I can also stop if I run out of time, without the piece looking unfinished.


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This one is on the opposite wall.
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All in all, a nice and productive time in Newcastle. Everything was organized by the Ghetto Method Crew. Thanks to Sandy Duff, John Bullock and Dave Guy for a lovely, lovely time.





Saturday, 7 March 2009

Who I Am and What I Want

A really great animated short from Dave Shrigley.

Thursday, 5 March 2009

Notes on Puppet

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Puppet was my degree film and it’s been about 2 years since I finished it. My first instinct is to be very defensive about it. I think it’s flawed and might come across as gratuitously weird. I didn’t make it to be weird, though. I was just using a lot of ideas that had been with me for a while.

The story went through some very different permutations but the main idea was always that there is this world where puppets live, and where perhaps all lost or unused things end up. My first draft was a TV broadcast, from the puppets to us, in which they acted out a complex, ritualistic narrative based on their observations of the human world. It would have been the animated equivalent of Finnegan’s Wake so I’m glad I didn’t go through with that.

The next idea was a detail from the first one, which I isolated and elaborated on. There was a group of puppets, who would use a wire hook to fish out, as it were, objects from our world and collect them. They’d try to figure out what they were for and play with them and put them in glass jars. Then, because the puppet world is a magical place, the objects (a fork, an old sock, a severed doll’s head…) would come alive and be put together as new puppets. I simplified that idea and came up with the story of just one puppet, who has crossed over from the puppet realm and gotten lost. And there you have it.
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The film was shot on a set modeled on a specific place (an alley off Bread Street in Edinburgh) which is where the location shots were done. I tried making the set as grimy as possible (There were complaints from the janitors, who apparently didn’t realize that the rubbish was a part of the set – they just thought I was really messy). I winged it through most of the shoot; I hadn’t really planned much apart from the story and chose camera angles and lighting on the fly. This is one of the good things about stop-motion: it’s easier to ad-lib because you’re not drawing every single frame. The birthday cake at the end, for example, was not in the original story at all. It had come with one of the dolls and I thought it would be a nice touch. Only later did I realize what a crucial plot element it had become. Sometimes things just come together like that.



I was very conscious from the start that the film wouldn’t be liked by everybody and it did turn out to be quite polarizing, among fellow students and tutors alike. (Although the tutors in the animation department were into it, apparently there were some in other departments who hated it). I’m aware of the flaws in it. As a piece of work, it was obviously very a huge deal to me. My four years at art college essentially culminated in this one thing. In your first movie (as, I imagine, in a first novel or any first large artistic project) you put in ideas that have accumulated over many, many years. It’s an exorcism of sorts and in that way it runs the risk of being self-indulgent. I certainly realized even then, that I was cramming all these ideas (which some would find extremely weird) together into a pretext of a story and I can imagine people being bewildered by it all. The important thing to realize about film, is that, unlike a still image, it demands a larger investment from the viewer. You are asking for their time and attention and with that comes a responsibility: if they feel that their time has been wasted, you have lost. And people’s attention spans are very short so each second of a film has to be a convincing argument for the viewer not to turn away from the screen.

All this aside, I don't think that the movie could have been anything else than what it is. The main thing I was trying to achieve was atmosphere. I think that works ok. The second thing is the puppet itself, which is something to empathize with throughout this strange and dark experience.





Tuesday, 3 March 2009

David Foster Wallace


I was very pleased to hear that, apparently, DFW had been writing something very long (obviously) at the time of his passing and that it is going to be published. Here's a link to an interesting article in the New Yorker, about DFW's struggle with his work and depression:

Puppet

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At last, my movie Puppet has made its internet premiere:





I'm going to post a few notes about it tomorrow, hopefully. Mr Dan Gorman, who made music for Puppet, has a new, very lush, website, which you should visit.