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Iat 100 lecture 07

Iat 100 lecture 07. Sequencing activity – Q&A patterns. How the panels selecting tell the story (ask and answer questions) The variety and types of panels used. Identify the transition types. Sequencing Activity 01. 1, 2, 3 order of events Q & A pattern.

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Iat 100 lecture 07

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  1. Iat 100 lecture 07

  2. Sequencing activity – Q&A patterns • How the panels selecting tell the story (ask and answer questions) • The variety and types of panels used. • Identify the transition types.

  3. Sequencing Activity 01 • 1, 2, 3 order of events • Q & A pattern

  4. Project 2 – consider how sequence asks and answers questions • What is the climax of the narrative? • What is the general feeling or mood? • Does the mood change at some point? • What questions do you pose to the viewer? • What questions remain unanswered? Up to the view to decide? • Where does it start? • Explain the past, the setting, the mood, the character in your first image. • How is the plot developed? • What new subjects, themes, ideas are exposed as the story progresses?

  5. Goal: to clarify and intensify story for your audience

  6. Iat 100 lecture 07 • Icon Language of Art

  7. Sequential art + time space is the form of comics, and time the content: comics work by mapping time narrative + space = time

  8. icon Greek ‘eikon’ = Russian ‘ikona’= English ‘icon’ = image Or An image that used to represent a person, place, thing or idea.

  9. Remember this?

  10. Artists that explore The power of icons René Magritte, The Treachery of Images (This is Not a Pipe), 1929, oil on canvas,

  11. Artists that explore The power of icons Warhol pared his image vocabulary down to the icon itself – to brand names, celebrities, dollar signs – and removed all traces of the artist's "hand" in the production of his paintings.

  12. Artists that explore The power of icons RivaneNeuenschwander. Zé Carioca no. 4, (from show Comic Abstraction: Image-Breaking, Image-Making atThe Museum of Modern Art

  13. Icons: Images that stand in for ideas Mother of God Kazan, (patron saint of Russian housewives) 17th century, Russia Amida Nyorai, Japan, Treasure of Chusonji 12th century ‘Mosaic of Christ in the Hagia Sophia, Istanbul. ‘Mother of God of Korsun’, 19th Century, Russia

  14. Icons the vocabulary of art Language & Science pictures symbol

  15. Scott mccloud’sIconic scale

  16. Why dots – video Explainist

  17. Icons are images that represent ideas / emotions They stand in for something more then the reality they represent.

  18. zum Werk Gegenwartskunst Georg Baselitz Kopf (Detail) zum Werk Gemälde Jean Dubuffet Tapié - Grand Duc (Detail) zum Werk Gemälde Lucio Fontana Concetto Spaziale - Attese (Detail) zum Werk Gemälde Alberto Giacometti Grand nu assis zum Werk Gegenwartskunst Yves Klein Blaues Schwammrelief (Detail) zum Werk Gemälde Blinky Palermo Ohne Titel. Stoffbild zum Werk Gegenwartskunst Gerhard Richter Großer Vorhang (163/1) (Detail) zum Werk Gegenwartskunst Bernard Schultze Endymion (Detail) zum Werk Gemälde Emil Schumacher Ohne Titel (Detail) zum Werk Gemälde Emil Schumacher Salangan (Detail) zum Werk Gegenwartskunst Günther Uecker Organische Struktur (Detail) zum Werk • Highlights der Sammlung • Alte Meister • Kunst der Moderne • Gegenwartskunst • Gemälde • 14. Jahrhundert • 15. Jahrhundert • 16. Jahrhundert • 17. Jahrhundert • 18. Jahrhundert • 19. Jahrhundert • 20. Jahrhundert • vor 1945 • nach 1945 • Skulpturen und Installationen • Fotografie • Graphische Sammlung • Neuerwerbungen • Restaurierung • Projekte zur Sammlungsgeschichte • Wissenschaftliche Betreuung der Sammlung • Künstler A-Z Städel Blog „Nachricht von ruhigen Momenten“ ist unser Buchtipp im OktoberMehr Besucherinformationen Öffnungszeiten Tickets Anfahrt Di, Mi, Sa, So 10.00 –18.00 UhrDo + Fr 10.00–21.00 UhrMo geschlossen Studiensaal Graphische SammlungBibliothek - See more at: http://www.staedelmuseum.de/sm/index.php?StoryID=1049#sthash.bsedFMf4.dpuf Francis Bacon Studie Krankenschwester (Detail) The battleship potemkin (still)

  19. How iconic images work • Amplification through simplification

  20. Iconic scale = Amplification of idea through simplification / Abstraction of an image or idea

  21. Iconic scale • complex -> simple (focused) • realist -> iconic • objective -> subjective • specific -> universal

  22. Icon as part of larger sequence

  23. Use of icon: student example Link to work

  24. CLICKER QUESTION • According to McCloud how would this image be best characterized? • An apple • A picture of an apple • An icon that is a picture of an apple • An image that just isn’t that iconic

  25. CORRECT ANSWER • According to McCloud how would this image be best characterized? • An image that just isn’t that iconic

  26. What type of transition is used? Moment-to-moment Action-to-action Subject-to-subject Scene-to-scene Aspect-to-aspect Whaam! by Roy Lichtenstein, 1963.

  27. Correct answer: B Action-to-Action Whaam! by Roy Lichtenstein, 1963.

  28. Clicker question • What is the space between the panels called? • Moment-to-moment • The gutter • A transition • A cut • White space

  29. Clicker question • What is the space between the panels called? • Moment-to-moment • The gutter • A transition • A cut • White space

  30. Clicker question • Why is it important? • General time indicator • Ability to edit • Facilitates closure, link two events together and link to narrative events. • Efficient way to tell something • Is part of composition

  31. Answer • Why is it important? • General time indicator • Ability to edit • Facilitates closure, link two events together and link to narrative events. • Efficient way to tell something • Is part of composition

  32. Widescreen Test Pattern (16:9) Aspect Ratio Test (Should appear circular) 4x3 16x9

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