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Showing posts with label Graphic World. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Graphic World. Show all posts

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Art of Digital Painting

Digital painting is an emerging art form in which traditional painting techniques such as watercolor, oils, impasto, etc.

Are applied using digital tools by means of a computer, a digitizing tablet and stylus, and software. Traditional painting is painting with a physical medium as opposed to a more modern style like digital. Digital painting differs from other forms of digital art, particularly computer-generated art, in that it does not involve the computer rendering from a model. The artist uses painting techniques to create the digital painting directly on the computer. All digital painting programs try to mimic the use of physical media through various brushes and paint effects. Included in many programs are brushes that are digitally styled to represent the traditional style like oils, acrylics, pastels, charcoal, pen and even media such as airbrushing. There are also certain effects unique to each type of digital paint which portraying the realistic effects of say watercolor on a digital 'watercolor' painting.[1] In most digital painting programs, the user can create their own brush style using a combination of texture and shape. This ability is very important in bridging the gap between traditional and digital painting.

Digital painting thrives mostly in production art. It is most widely used in conceptual design for

film, television and video games. Digital painting software such as Corel Painter, Adobe Photoshop, ArtRage, GIMP, and openCanvas give artists a similar environment to a physical painter: a canvas, painting tools, mixing palettes, and a multitude of color options. There are various types of digital painting, including impressionism, realism, and watercolor. There are both benefits and drawbacks of digital painting. While digital painting allows the artist the ease of working in an organized, mess-free environment, some argue there will always be more control for an artist holding a physical brush in their hand. Some artists believe there is something missing from digital painting, such as the character that is unique to every physically made object. Many artist post blogs and comment on the various differences between digitally created work and traditionally created artwork....

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Graphic Art Design's

Art & Design:

But there are great graphic artists who make nuanced, evocative art. Luba Lukova's posters and illustrations have punch, and they are laced with such feeling that they often merit a second look. Her work doesn't wrestle with the classic riddles of high art. It is, as graphic art should be, strong and pithy but its messages are not always simple. The Art Institute of Boston at Lesley University has mounted two Lukova exhibits, one in its main gallery on the Beacon Street campus, the other at Lesley's University Hall in Porter Square.

Lukova grew up in Bulgaria under a totalitarian regime and came to the United States in 1991. She is deeply attuned to human rights issues. The centerpiece of the first show is a series of social justice posters, wittily suspended from four umbrella-like structures that echo the image in Lukova's health care poster of an umbrella with ribs but no covering. That's a simple indictment of US health care policy. Her "Peace" poster is richer: It shows a dove comprised of the silhouettes of soldiers, missiles, and bomb blasts. This is an artist willing to convey complexity in polarizing issues.

Her images are deceptively simple: black-and-white, blocky, pared down, often with another color as background. Illustrations she has made for The New York Times hang around the social justice installation. Since no context is provided, we must take these provocative pieces for themselves. They read like fables. In one, a giant finger depresses the nozzle of a spray can, taking out three tiny cupids.

The Cambridge exhibit includes several works Lukova made for the book "Remembering the Women: Women's Stories From Scripture for Sundays and Festivals." I've never seen such a wonderfully graphic nativity scene: Lukova depicts Mary's spread-eagle legs pointing upward, the umbilical cord intact between her and the squawling Jesus at the top of the piece. These illustrations recall printmaker Leonard Baskin's gritty depictions of biblical figures; both artists cross the divide between fine and graphic art.






































































































































































Saturday, June 26, 2010

About Graphic Design

Graphic Design Projects



Personal design projects are a great way to find creative inspiration and practice design and software techniques. Without worrying about client demands, they allow you to fully express yourself through design. For the same reason, you may also find yourself creating version after version... but nonetheless, they are often a fun activity and can result in some work for your portfolio.

If a movie was made about your life, what would the movie poster look like? If you wrote an autobiography (or someone wrote a book about you), what would the cover look like? For this exercise, create a movie poster or book cover for a film or story about your life.

Take as much time as you like, and share whatever you like, whether it be a sketch or finished product. Please include some background on your design process, thoughts behind your design decisions, and the software and techniques you used to complete the work.