Tuesday 9 December 2008

Motion Graphics

Just a little video made entirely with motion graphics that I put together to practice a couple of techniques on After Effects. I'm thinking of using this on the new website I'm designing.

I was mostly interested in the camera movement for this piece. I've been thinking a lot about how modern cinema is ages ahead of what the deal was in the 80s. I think the reason is that, today directors don't only think in terms of scene blocking and composition, but also of movement. Next time you watch a movie, try to see how many scenes have a camera constantly moving.


Friday 23 May 2008

Video Profile 3


Another entry in the Køge Handellskole video profile series. Annette Finnsdottir, visual artist with work presented at the Copenhagen Museum of Modern Art. I was impressed at the interactivity of her work, particularly her mixed media approach with a very strong Web 2.0 influence. We've all seen films shot on Second Life, but I don't think there are many artists out there who get the interactivity that Second Life and the Web 2.0 in general offers and its implications to art. Cutting edge stuff, indeed.

As always, I directed, scored, edited, lit, filmed and did sound production on the piece. Enjoy

Logos



Hi. I have been working on a logo for my new website. Made in photoshop with some metal textures for the tentacles. I think it gets my style across well.

Saturday 10 May 2008

Heavenly Spheres 2




Hey.

I've mentioned my love for space-based illustrations on an earlier post. So, surprise-surprise, here is another piece. Most of the Photoshop techniques I used are similar to the last piece, but I used some new ones regarding the planets' texture, which involved extensive use of the liquify, smudge, burn, and dodge tools, as well as liberal doses of hue layers to create the colors.

I'll start doing some more traditional modern graphic design pieces, starting tomorrow. While I enjoy my more personal work, popular graphic design is moving towards a specific direction and I definitely don't want my work to feel outdated or lacking freshness. So, check this space out.

Thursday 8 May 2008

Say hello to my little friend!



Hello world.

So, I've been playing around with the actions function on Photoshop. It's got its uses, but the best thing about it by far is that it gives you the ability to create abstract art using fractals. A fractal is basically a complicated shape that is created by the repetition of a really simple shape and with some slight distortion at every iteration. A perfect example of how fractals work in nature is the humble snowflake and literally every crystal in existence (like diamonds).

There is some really interesting theory behind fractals and how life evolved, in that multicellular creatures are basically colonies of of like cells that started cooperating. Without getting into details, I thought it might be cool to replicate this process using Photoshop and try to see what creatures I could come up with.

Say hello to Ben, a biomechanical worm, courtesy of Photoshop, created by repetition and manipulation of a steam iron.

Wednesday 7 May 2008

Video Profile 2

Hello world. This is one of the videos in the series I shot for Køge Handelsskole. As you might remember from an earlier post, its purpose was to showcase the students and teachers of the particular institution. I tried some grungy editing on this, not too OTT, just enough to make it a bit more snappy and take it away from the typical talking-heads style of documentary.

My subject was Sanne Snejbjerg, history teacher and probably the sweetest person I dealt with during the project. As always, part of my filming technique was to take the camera somewhere out of sight and distract the subject with some chit-chat. What I am interested in is the personality of whoever it is I'm filming. Make them laugh, make them think, make them wonder, that's how you let the person inside shine.

As always, I did the directing, editing, scoring, sound and hauling around of equipment on this one.

Enjoy.

Wednesday 30 April 2008

Eye candy

Hey world.

New assignment. Make a poster for testcamp, a scheme for young graphic designers. Simple enough.

With this image, I'm feeling like I'm finding my own personal style. It's a style I like to call Visual Free-Form, or, in layman's terms, make the viewer find something new in the image the 20th time they look at it. It's something one of my favorite artists, Hieronymus Bosch, did back in the Middle ages. The concept is simple; visually represent the activities that testcamp and its parent company Nørgård Mikkelsen are known for, i.e. radiospots, tv ads, posters, logos, graphic design and alternative advertising.

Now, I'm not going to start adding speakers, tv sets and the like. That's just too simplistic and obvious. Consumers can always understand when they are being patronized and they act accordingly. It's one of my pet peeves that advertisers don't respect their target group's intelligence. The connections are a little obscure and I want to leave it up to you to find which is which. That's part of the charm of this style, trying to figure out its internal logic. Ok, here is a hint, graphic design is represented by the spray tags.

One element that I wanted to add from the beginning was the stencil-like font and the spraying behind the testcamp logo. That's a carry-over from the current theme that testcamp is running. It creates a sense of continuity and evolution.

One element I DIDN'T want was stupid quotes and snappy one-liners, like "THE FUTURE OF ADVERTISING" or "THINK YOU GOT WHAT IT TAKES?!!!!1111oneeleven!!!!". If an image doesn't sell its product to you with a glance (and that's all posters and ads get by consumers, psychologists say), then you better rethink your concept. In addition, walls of text, while informative, will never work. It's called graphic design for a reason, it's the communication of messages with images. If you need to explain yourself to your target group, then you're using text as a crutch, i.e. your images are not adequate. Marlboro doesn't need to explain why the cool guy in the cowboy hat is smoking or the pleasures of smoking.

With this, I leave you to the poster I designed. Have fun.

Monday 28 April 2008

Put the gun down

Like I've mentioned, I consider doing mock advertisements for imaginary products a good exercise. It flexes my creative muscle and allows me to explore new options and techniques, especially for photoshop where there are more than one way of doing things.

This ad is for a hypothetical computer help service. The concept is someone holding a gun to the computer in frustration. I know I've felt this way before and I know you have to. In fact, I remember reading an article on Times Magazine, according to which the most used target in shooting ranges is personal computers. So, the concept behind this is that you don't have to resort to putting a 9mm through your Mac Book because it crashed on you (not yet anyway). Just check out the website.

I think it's interesting that I've decided to use a lot of noise and grain on this image. I don't really know where that idea came from, but it makes the image more interesting. Considering there is a gun in there and the composition suggests a story, I think I was subconsciously going after the Lethal Weapon style posters of the early 90s (i.e., really gritty, lots of intentional grain).

So, there you go :)

Aim for the head

I recently entered a competition for a tshirt design celebrating the 2008 Copenhagen Zombie Pub Crawl. Have I mentioned that I love zombies? Oh yes, I do.

This is one of my designs for the competition. The first thing that came into my head when I was doing brainstorming was George Romero, Ben Templesmith and the 70s in this order. George Romero for the obvious reasons, he is the grandaddy of the modern zombie genre. Ben Templesmith because he is my favourite horror graphic novel artist and because his style is so different than anything else out there, it looks like a cross between oil painting and stenciling (check out his website). The 70s because the zombie genre has been affected by this decade in terms of its politics and themes.

So, I decided that my design should have four elements; a) have an evocative image that tells a story of a world gone horribly wrong, b) be atmospheric, c) have a modernised 70s feel, d)refer to the event in some way.

Based on that I chose to give the Little Mermaid (a landmark of Copenhagen) a zombie face, then turn it into a stencil, and throw in a big splash of red color. Simple.

Note that the design looks a bit like the posters for the 30 Days of Night movie, which is based on the graphic novel of the same name, drawn by Ben Templesmith.

Wednesday 23 April 2008

Video profile

Yo!

I just finished (as in, directed, cut, and scored) a series of video profiles of teachers and students of Køge Handelsskole (college) in Denmark for use on their new website. It's one of the projects I enjoyed the most, because of the interaction between me and my subjects.

I approached this in a very rough way, inspired by Hillman Curtis' digital video work (go here for his website) and Wim Wenders' work in "Buena Vista Social Club" (, in that I steered away from a talking heads-only kind of mini documentary. What I was most interested in was the individual person's personality and that, to my experience, does not come out of asking formal questions to someone. It comes out of taking them out for a drink and talking to them until your throat bleeds and your vocal cords rip. Alas, I did not have the time to ruin my talking capacity, so I resorted instead to asking some basic questions, then asking something completely unrelated to the interview, but something I knew they were passionate about. I took the camera somewhere at the back of the room and let it roll while me and my subjects talked, argued, joked around, etc. I even let them direct a segment of the interview (hint, it's the part with the posters).

I can't post everything here, it's in excess of 20min, but I'm posting my favourite one. Thomas Christensen's video profile. Thomas is many things, a graphic artist, digital video producer and director, film buff and a great photographer amongst others. He's teaching visualization at Køge. Please ignore the fact he's talking in Danish (unless you speak Danish yourself) and enjoy the imagery.


Sunday 20 April 2008

Girly stuff

The nature of the job of a graphic artist often means he or she has to do illustrations they normally wouldn't do. Not because they wouldn't like to, simply because it wouldn't be their cup of tea. But it's necessary to be able to adapt to a number of styles based on the client and the target group.

This is an exercise in making something really pop-y with a teenage girl target group in mind. It's also an excuse to try some new photoshop techniques I've been reading. The concept is a cd cover for a pop artist and I think it looks really nice. I imaged the artist sounding like a cross between Avril Lavigne and Fergie and let my personal style change in response to what images and sounds I could see and hear in my head.

I've used a lot of custom brushes, as well as pictures for the instruments and the speakers. The model originally wore a dress, but I drew a pair of pants just below the waistline, I thought it fitted in better with the style I had in mind. The model herself had some manipulation done in terms of levels, color correction and lighting.

Monday 14 April 2008

Heavenly Spheres

I reaaaaaaaally like drawing planets and space. In Photoshop, with stencils, I love it. Must have been all those Sunday afternoon Star Wars reruns.

So, here is a new Photoshop image, called "Worlds At War". I like the juxtaposition of the calm horses below with the carnage on the planet above. It still is a work in progress, but I like the composition, so the main elements are there.

The Dark Side



Hi all.

I've been working with some horror themed pieces lately. "Working" is not the right term, because I'm enjoying myself hugely, but you get the point.

Here is a female Nosferatu vampire, titled "Nosfarata" appropriately enough, made on photoshop with photomanipulation and using good old brushes. Enjoy

Sunday 6 April 2008

New Thrylos-fans.net banner

New banner for Thrylos-Fans.net.


Click for a bigger view. You can also head to thrylos-fans.net to see the banner in action.

Monday 24 March 2008

More posters

Here is a poster I did for a presentation in India. Not much to say about it, lots of the decisions were dictated by the established style of Køge Handelsskole. What I am proud of though is the image on the top of the poster. It's the second of a series of posters I did for the presentation, the theme being "Projecting one's imagination onto clouds". Everyone has watched clouds pass by and imagined things, animal, faces etc etc on them. So, I made the connection between this activity and the advertised programs, the concept being that a person can shape the world based on that person's imagination, just as a person can see whatever it is they want on clouds by projecting their imagination on them.

Køge international brochure



Here are some select pages I designed for Køge Handelsskole's international brochure. The green circular thing is a futuristic menu that I thought fitted well with the school's philosophy of making the future, as opposed to waiting for it to happen.
I wanted a computer menu theme to fit in with the online nature of the degree on showcase here (multimedia). The thinking behind the specific design was breaking away from the current style of rectangular computer menus towards something that looks more like a media player, with different operations (like "OK", "Continue", and the text) presented in a different circle. I'm a huge fan of asymmetrical design and I tried to get this approach through to the design of the different "branches".
Check out also the green page above with the letters for background. I like using script and fonts to visually get a message across, so I had fun with that one.

Tuesday 4 March 2008

Lapse Photography Mk.II

Hi again.

I'm experimenting with lapse photography for a project at work and, now having access to some better equipment, I shot some pretty neat looking cloud formations outside my flat. Check them out, tell me what you think.

One of them is at the start of a snowfall, you can see the sky turning into a certain apocalyptic shade of black half-way through. The other is of the school across my flat, notice the kids playing football at the bottom.

Everything was shot with a Nikon DX set at 3sec exposure, 30 f-stops, with a home-made neutral density filter in front of the lens.





Wednesday 6 February 2008

3D work

I've recently gotten into simple 3D programs, like FrameForge and Poser. I'm using those as a jumping point to more complex programs like Maya that give more freedom. Here are some images I created for the storyboards of a proposed UNKLE video.

Stencils and spray paintings

Stencils and spraying have been demonized by public authorities everywhere, simply because they are the favourite tools of vandals everywhere. However, I see them merely as tools alongside brushes, graphic pens, Photoshop and cameras. Can anyone argue that Bansky is NOT a graphic artist? Nope. The only problem for me is that I can't use them when the weather is bad, as I need to be outside so that fumes don't kill me.

Here are a few examples of my experimenting with stencils and spray cans.

Posters

I do a lot of posters for people, mostly for short films. I personally enjoy it a lot and it's probably one of my favourite things to do on Photoshop. Figuring out the composition, the structure and how the colours and shapes will get the message across in a single glance are the exciting things about graphic art.

Here are some of my posters.

Tuesday 5 February 2008

Painting in Photoshop

Just a little experiment to make a Photoshop image that looks like it was hand-painted. I really enjoyed this one.

Pop art

Pop art has been around for donkey's years, even if the definition of "Pop" itself has changed. When I think of pop art, I think of Warhol and Lichenstein (I'm sure I've killed the spelling), neon colours, etc, but that was pop in the 70's. Isn't there time for Pop Art to be redefined for what Pop stands for today, or will it remain a symbol of another era?

Here are a couple of images I created on Photoshop. One of them is of Eliza Cuthbert being Marilyn Monroe-like, the other one of an orchid, both of them Pop Art style.


Logos

I've made some of the graphics in www.thrylos-fans.net, one of the biggest sports portals in Greece. I'm a moderator there and I know the guys who created it, very dedicated, very hardworking people. Here is some of the stuff I made for the portal.

Lapse photography

I decided to try my hand at lapse photography. I used a consumer digital camera, which, with hindsight, was the reason I am not satisfied by the end result. Consumer cameras don't give the user enough control to do anything other than point and click. I suppose that's the point, but there is such a thing as a middle ground. Regardless, not being able to control the shutter speed made the video a bit staccato-like.


The solution to hair loss

One of my favourite things to do in Photoshop is to draw hair. It's hard, long and repetitive, but there's something about drawing every single strand of hair with a certain look in mind.

My model is Bolton Wanderers player Stelios Giannakopoulos.


Original



Tentacles

Here is a project I've been working on for some time. I'm a huge fans of Lovecraft, so I have a
tendency to do tentacles on Photoshop. Lots of them. Here are some minimalistic examples.


Intro

Greetings. This is the portfolio for Vangelis Mylonas' work and general rumblings page. I'm a short film director, graphic artist, sometime painter, and musician, so expect a lot of my stuff here. Feedback is always welcome!