...so, some of you following this blog may be asking the question, "what is this all about...?"
...basically, this is a blog for the production of my traditionally animated thesis film that i am producing while receiving my MFA at the Academy of Art University in San Francisco... what inspired this post was something i came across earlier tonight posted on facebook - it is an article from The Top Information Post, about Genetic Engineering, located here: http://topinfopost.com/2013/07/31/darpa-to-genetically-engineer-humans-by-adding-a-47th-chromosome?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+topinfopost+%28The+Top+Information+post%29
...so basically, the idea for my thesis was probably seeded & given it's initial nurturing while i was in undergraduate school studying the studio arts & digesting a certain Critical Art Ensemble manifesto (The Flesh Machine) at the same time as i was reading the first publication of David Mitchell's Cloud Atlas - fast-forward to graduate school, where i had decided to pursue traditional animation for the first time... when it came down to the last minute & i really had to commit to the subject for my thesis film, all the other ideas just started to become irrelevant, as this really sharp image of this little designer baby, defects included, suspended by a synthetic amniotic fluid in a womb of glass & steel refused to be ignored...
...so with all that said, here are some really ruff pencil tests that i have been working on in which the synthetic DNA vial is being inserted onto the control console for the womb-tank & the initial stages of the designer fetus' development, along with the geneticist's reaction to the possibility of his life's work resulting in success - (a little disclaimer, these are first pass ruffs with a very loose sense of timing - at the moment, i am in the process of very roughly getting everything off the animatic and onto paper/exposure sheets, so a lot of this still needs critique from my mentors, charts, breakdowns, etc...) anyways, hopefully you will enjoy...
...basically, this is a blog for the production of my traditionally animated thesis film that i am producing while receiving my MFA at the Academy of Art University in San Francisco... what inspired this post was something i came across earlier tonight posted on facebook - it is an article from The Top Information Post, about Genetic Engineering, located here: http://topinfopost.com/2013/07/31/darpa-to-genetically-engineer-humans-by-adding-a-47th-chromosome?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+topinfopost+%28The+Top+Information+post%29
...so basically, the idea for my thesis was probably seeded & given it's initial nurturing while i was in undergraduate school studying the studio arts & digesting a certain Critical Art Ensemble manifesto (The Flesh Machine) at the same time as i was reading the first publication of David Mitchell's Cloud Atlas - fast-forward to graduate school, where i had decided to pursue traditional animation for the first time... when it came down to the last minute & i really had to commit to the subject for my thesis film, all the other ideas just started to become irrelevant, as this really sharp image of this little designer baby, defects included, suspended by a synthetic amniotic fluid in a womb of glass & steel refused to be ignored...
...so with all that said, here are some really ruff pencil tests that i have been working on in which the synthetic DNA vial is being inserted onto the control console for the womb-tank & the initial stages of the designer fetus' development, along with the geneticist's reaction to the possibility of his life's work resulting in success - (a little disclaimer, these are first pass ruffs with a very loose sense of timing - at the moment, i am in the process of very roughly getting everything off the animatic and onto paper/exposure sheets, so a lot of this still needs critique from my mentors, charts, breakdowns, etc...) anyways, hopefully you will enjoy...
Glad to see you're moving on from animatic to starting the animation.
ReplyDeleteI appreciate that you're LOOPING the tests on Youtube , because that makes it easier to watch it several times a row on a loop , instead of having to hit the play button to run it again.