Tuesday, 15 March 2016

Visual Language- Study Task 5- Form Flow Force- Like a Puppet on a String

Like a Puppet on a String

For this task we had to do 12 poses again, yet this time we needed to show more of the squash and stretch within 10-20 poses. This quite hard as it took a while for the models to think of what to do for each squash and stretch as we needed to get a lot of motion to show what was happening.  
This was one of the first designs i tried which does show the model going down, yet i think i would like to show more of the squash and stretch within the piece. This was a basic set of poses to start with but i will defiantly try to push more and show more of what the brief needs to show.
I really like this sequence of sketches. I had three pens in my hand and as the model was going from being a small ball on the flood, to being stood tall with her arms up, i was interchanging the pens to show how she was gradually growing and getting bigger and taller. This is hard to see the smaller poses but if you look in the centre, you can see how small she was at the beginning so this is showing the stretching our body's can do in different stages.
For this design the model was going from being outstretched and slightly lunging forward in an exaggerated position, to bending down and squashing down to being smaller and wider. This was a good sequence to show the flow at the beginning, down to the force of bending down and how the body contracts down.
This was the final sequence i have done where i moved to the side and looked at the model going from a crouch, all the way up to being stretched, and then back down. This was a good one for me to try and fully show how the body gets bigger and smaller in different positions, this is really what squash and stretch is all about. How the human form constantly changes depending on what position they are in.

This was a step on from the first task as i was able to show the flow of the body but in a little bit more detail, so i could show what i learned from the first task, but extend what i gained from that task into this one.

No comments:

Post a Comment