Illustration ART 322A - Illustration 1

Instructor: Erik Mark Sandberg

Office hours: M 5-7pm W 5-6pm Office: ADC 507

Classroom: ADC 505 M/W 2-4:45

Email: /

Catalog Description

Basic principles and practices of publication and advertising illustration. Projects emphasize conceptual problem-solving, composition, and the development of personal style. Projects are designed for inclusion in a professional portfolio. 6 hours lab.

Course Description

Image making is used in many markets including: publishing, advertising, entertainment industry, corporations, merchandising and electronic media. Images are used for many products including: books, magazines, greeting cards, calendars, clothing, house wares, posters, annual reports, CDs, packaging, limited edition prints, etc. Professional illustrators have technical expertise, personal style, problem-solving ability and conceptual creativity. This course is an introduction to illustration as an art form and profession. This is a lab class that meets for six hours a week.

The Goals of the Art Departmentare establishing and developing for students an inclusive and balanced program in visual art, which encompass four areas of study: Art Education, Art History, Studio Art, and Visual Communications.

Art Department Program Goals Addressed In This Course

Basic Skills: Developing a foundation of art knowledge, theories, skills, craftsmanship and technologies, where ideas and concepts are communicated in writing, speaking and art making.

Art Knowledge: Broadening art and design knowledge through contemporary examples and to develop an understanding of art within theoretical, cultural, and historical contexts.

Critical Thinking: Analyzing, interpreting, and questioning traditional methodologies and pre-conceived notions of art and art making through the process of generating and solving problems.

Interdisciplinary Connections: Exploring and engaging in interdisciplinary forms of art making.

Global Perspectives: Promoting an appreciation and tolerance of diverse perspectives dealing with art, culture, teaching and learning.

Collaboration: Encouraging both individual and collaborative art experiences among students, faculty, and community.

Professional Preparation: Developing career paths for various art professions and an understanding of the demands and expectations of those areas.

Student Learning Outcomes

-To discover and apply various two-dimensional art media and techniques.

-To enable you to utilize and control the Elements and Principles of two-dimensional design.

-Students will acquire conceptual knowledge of art, accurately define and utilize the formal vocabulary of the visual arts (Elements and Principles of design) to analyze works of art.

-Explore and utilize methods for visual problem-solving, acquire and demonstrate conceptual knowledge of a diversity of 2-D forms, purposes, media, and functions of art as they respond to, analyze, interpret and critique their own and others’ artworks.

-Students will acquire and demonstrate conceptual knowledge of 2-Dart in cultural context, including the visual nature of contemporary culture, fine art and design, world arts, the history and diversity of art in societies past and present.

-Students will be introduced to connections and relationships between visual and other arts, and those between visual art and other discipline areas.

Course Objectives

Encourage conceptual thinking and ability to communicate to specific audiences. Develop students personal voice, creativity, and artistic vision. Promote strong skills in design, research, and new media techniques for execution. Study image making in terms of professional issues, markets, exhibitions, and various commercial practices. Familiarize student with contemporary illustration, Fine Art, and Printmaking.

Course Methods

Instruction will be achieved through slide presentations, media demonstrations, lectures, individual and group critiques. All students are required to participate in group critiques.

Attendance Policy

Attendance is required. The following will be applied in determining the final grade in the course. Two absences are allowed without penalty. If a family or work emergency occurs, that will count as an absence. If you are sick, that counts as an absence. If your car breaks down and you miss class, that counts as one absence. If you decide the beach is more important than class, that counts as one absence. There is no such thing as an excused absence. If you have used up your two absences, and you get sick and miss a third day, your final letter grade for the course gets dropped by one-third, and so on for each additional absence. If illness requires more than four absences, a medical withdrawal from the course is recommended. Late arrivals and early departures of 20 minutes or more are considered absences Roll will be taken at the beginning of every class. Three tardies count as 1 absence.

Texting or talking on the phone in class will be considered an absence.

Missed Critiques will result in an automatic grade reduction for that project.

Missed Class Policy

Lectures and demonstrations will not be repeated. Get the names and email of other students in the class to contact them for missed information.

Name______email______

Name______email______

Grading Project Rubric: will be given on a standard 100 point scale.

You will be graded on the following:

Image Making: Use of images & understanding of image implementation in work.

Ideation & Iteration: Evaluation of process and artists work from start to finish.

Visual Literacy & Critical Analysis: How you relate to your work, how you understand your development formally & critically & place this in a larger theoretical / social / educational context.

Media Exploration: Not like craft, artist’s use of & experimental materials & making methodologies.

Craft: How does the work look physically & in documentation.

A grading rubric sheet with will be given out after each project is completed. Your final grade will be based on the numerical average of the 4 project grading sheets.

Grading is in accordance with university policy: A, A-, B+, B, B-, C+, C, C-, D+, D, D-, and F

A= outstanding, B= good, C= average, D= unsatisfactory, F= failure

AssignmentsGRADE EARNED

Assignment I - Fortune Cookie______25%

Assignment II - ______25%

Assignment III- Book or CD Covers______25%

Experimental Sketch Book (graded in 2 parts)______25%

Supplies

The supplies you need will depend upon the techniques you decide to use for your assignments. This can be completely open from everything from found material ex.(old books, road signs, oil paint, oil bars, watercolor, gouache, resin, inks, mylar, canvas, synskin, plaster, silk-screen, etching, block printing, Polaroid’s, digital prints, markers, graphite, acrylic paint, cloth, hair, food coloring, plastic, wood, foam, wax, auto paint, bark, fur, fabric, felt, clay, wire, over sized Xerox, cardboard, rope, twine, house paint, spray paint, glitter, video, video projection etc. or any combination of these. Medium is open for all projects.

Please consult with me about the appropriate materials for execution of final art.

How to Present Your Work

All work presented for a grade should be clean and camera ready. This means it should be free of fingerprints, dirt, tape, and anything else you would not want reproduced. Treat your final work like you are a paper conservator for a museum with respect and utmost care. Cover your work with glycine, tissue, ph neutral paper, or tracing paper if needed. Carry fragile works in a hard folder, or 2 sheets of foam core two prevent damage.

Please use a large envelope or ring binder to house all preparatory drawings, process sketches, reference, and inspirational material.

Preliminary Work

All students are required to use professional preparatory working methods in the development of their illustrations, unless otherwise directed under project outline. Written work, concept lists, and all other reference material.

Thumbnails – small drawings to work out some basic conceptual ideas and compositional elements, these loose drawings are for you to get started forming the design of the visual image. These drawings are for you to get started and not for sketch critique.

Comps – 1 drawing per 8 ½” X 11” inch paper with border reference drawn to give format indication. Comp drawings should be clear enough for an art director… all elements, conceptual and visual must resolved and communicate clearly in the sketch. - 4 required for each assignment you will be hanging these on the wall for sketch critiques. You may write notes on the outside of the sketch to clarify some color or material ideas.

Tight line drawing – final size and materials worked out with all resolved details and execution plans, based on your continued research and original comp refinement.

Color study - (if needed)– can be done digitally, or with acrylic, oil, mixed media, colored pencil, etc over light copy of your sketch. This step is a good idea when working out a multiple colored image.

Final Art – Completed final piece camera ready and for final critique. Final art can be a digital print or file.

Assignments

1)

EXPERIMENTAL SKETCHBOOK - This will be an semester long project and will be formally presented near the end of the semester and reviewed by your peers.

2)

Fortune Cookie

Medium: open

Format: Open, Must have minimum of 2 works in the series

Subject: Depends on chance

Medium: open

Format/Size: open

Subject: Illustrate the fortune you randomly picked. Your solution can be dimensional, drawing based, digital based, photographic based, figurative, non-figurative, or any combination of these.

Your given fortune will be what you have to illustrate. Most fortunes are laced in metaphors and witty one liners. This makes great copy to do and an evocative conceptually based illustration. Please avoid all cliché’s and obvious visual solutions when illustrating your fortune.

Objective: This assignment develops conceptual problem solving skills and the use of visual images to communicate ideas and develop your personal voice.

Brainstorm 2 to 4 pages of random words and ideas that come to mind. This will help you gather the appropriate visual elements to form the appropriate concept for the image or images.

What’s due?:

- A list of 10 printed concept sentences along with your fortune typed at the top. “A Man standing with a dog.” is not a concept sentence.

- Choose 3 different conceptual directions from your list to due 6 comps from keeping in mind that this project requires 2 works in series. The comps should be clear enough for an art director.

Please avoid all cliché’s and obvious visual solutions for your images. Work on visually commenting on how the subjects can be related to the “now”, your personal experiences, ideas, and contemporary image making. The images can be fun, serious, satirical with a social message, narrative based, representational, or abstract etc. Art is a language nothing more, most importantly say something interesting and new. It sometimes helps to stick to metaphors and references you understand.

Books to look at:

Vitamin D, Drawing Now Between the lines of Contemporary Art, American Illustration.

3)

BOOK COVER (front and back) or CD Cover Art (front and back, and inside)

Medium: ANY

Format: 1 cover illustration and 1 back cover piece of art for book, or 1 piece of art for cover and backside art for CD, square format, additional images for inside welcome to complete the package.

Subject: I will hand out 5 choices of books and CD titles to choose from prior to assignment.

Procedure for Cover Art

Create 2 pieces of art for an existing book or CD package. For class purposes, we are going to give you 5 choices of each to choose from. Within the copy and music choices there will be a broad range of demographics to think about, please choice one that will complete your portfolio tone. The best covers tend to be metaphorical, visually interesting, clever, and sophisticated. Please avoid all cliché images and metaphors for this assignment, UNLESS it is intentional.

What’s Due? Three cover comps, 3 back cover comps, one piece of finished cover art, one piece of finished back cover art.

4)

FINAL PROJECT

Project 4 will be a collaborative small group project. Project description and creative brief will be given out later in the semester.

Mon, Aug 24Class Introduction. Slide Show Lecture, Recycle book project given

Wed, Aug 26Slide Show Lecture/ Project 1 given / concept development list exercise.

Mon, Aug 31COMPS DUE FOR Fortune Cookie Project - GROUP CLASS CRITIQUE

Wed Sept 2Material and technique demos for possible use in sketchbooks and projects.

Mon, Sept 7No Class Labor Day.

Wed, Sept 91 on 1 meeting to look over revised project 1 comps.

Mon, Sept 14In class work on first assignment.

Wed, Sept 16In class work on first assignment.

Mon, Sept 21In class work on first assignment

Wed, Sept 23Fortune Cookie Project Due - GROUP CLASS CRITIQUE.

Mon, Sept 28Book Cover/CD project given SLIDE LECTURE

Wed, Sept 30Material and technique demos, work on Book Cover/CD comps.

Mon, Oct 5COMPS DUE FOR Book Cover/CD Project - GROUP CLASS CRITIQUE.

Wed, Oct 7 In class work on project & experimental sketchbook

Mon, Oct 12In class work on project & experimental sketchbook

Wed, Oct 14In class work on project & experimental sketchbook

Mon, Oct 19In class work on project & experimental sketchbook

Wed, Oct 21Mid Way Alternative Sketchbook Graded Review

Mon, Oct 26Book Cover/CD PROJECT DUE - GROUP CLASS CRITIQUE

Wed, Oct 28Slide Lecture - final project given.

Mon, Nov 2FILM SCREENING

Wed, Nov 4In class work on comps foe final project & alternative sketchbooks

Mon, Nov 9COMPS DUE FOR FINAL PROJECT CLASS CRITIQUE

Wed, Nov 11No class due to holiday

Mon, Nov 16Illustration Market lecture and technique demo

Wed, Nov 18In class work on final project & experimental sketchbook

Mon, Nov 23In class work on final project & experimental sketchbook Wed, Nov 25 In class work on final project & experimental sketchbook

Mon, Nov 30EXPERIMENTAL SKETCHBOOK DUE - PEER GRADING SESSION

Wed, Dec 2In class work on final project.

Mon, Dec 7FINAL PROJECT DUE - GROUP CLASS CRITIQUE

Finals Week TBA

All revisions for change of grade are due in the drop box by end of finals week.

Handing in work:

We will be using a drop box account for handing in all projects and comps. During final in class critiques you will be hanging original works. Please photograph or scan them to be handed in on drop box (72 dpi jpeg files.) I will be reviewing these files when filling out the grading sheets.

322B > find the folder labeled with your name.

Dropbox.com

Username:

Password: accd1488!