Tag: National Gallery of Scotland

Can you guess?

At the beginning of ‘Unspoken’ each first year Illustration student was randomly assigned a painting from the Impressionist room at the National Gallery of Scotland. During a visit they were asked study it carefully and later do more research into the story behind their painting and how it relates to the artist who created it.

Based on this research, students developed a wordless sequential narrative in 4 panels, to be submitted as a high-quality digital prints at the end of the project. It was important to be imaginative with the storytelling and interpretation of any research material and to create many recognisable links to the original painting, for example through brushstrokes and colour choice.

The project also served as a first introduction to Photoshop and explored the merging of traditional mark-making and digital applications. The results are wonderfully painterly and deceiving in that they don’t look that digitally-generated at all!

Our final crit took place in public, right in front of the original artwork, and with an unknown audience of gallery visitors. This would be a good reason to be nervous, even for the most experienced of artists, but our first years managed just fine.

So can you guess which paintings our students were looking at?

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Unspoken – visual narratives

‘Unspoken’ is a first year Illustration project inspired by the Impressionist Room at the Scottish National Gallery. Students were each assigned a painting from the room and asked to create a three piece sequential, wordless narrative based on their research; this included a detailed study of the artwork on location as well as more background research into the artist and his times.

Students were asked to explore composition, and the use of colour and mark-making in their assigned painting. Gestural effects, colour palette and Impressionist painting techniques were explored in a series of workshops, one of which was led by artist in residence Joanna Srokol. Workshop results were then scanned and digitally assembled, and a limited colour palette applied in a first introduction to Photoshop.

The result is a collection of vivid storytelling; below are some examples of student’s work alongside the original paintings.

Sherry Ye & Monet’s Boats in Harbourunspoken-a

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Kat Cassidy and Cezanne’s Montagne Sainte-Victoireunspokendraft2-a

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Claudia Carreras and Sisley’s Molesey Weir, Hempton Court

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Geraldine Sawyer and Seurat’s Study for Bathers at Asnières thumbnail_final-composition-2img_4264

 

Vivian Chen and Guigou’s The Olive Trees 

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Heidi Tamminen and Luce’s Lucie Couturier in her Garden print

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Emily Lowes and Van Gogh’s Olive Trees

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Carolina Haraki and Viullard’s The Pink Bedroom finalprint-aimg_4280

 

Rory Lee and Viullard’s The Open window

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Mel Grandidge and Cezanne’s The Big Trees 

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Hollie Middleton and Monet’s Vetheuil hollie-sequence-monet-a

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