Monday, May 30, 2011

Copyright Issues

FONT
Font: 256 Bytes Std Regular
From the website www.linotype.com
The font is Free and you have the option to download straight from their website.
Highlights from the terms and conditions:
- All additional edits, copies or distributions and/or public re-production, especially unapproved adoption to an internet- or intranet-offer is an exceeding of the standard appraisal of the databases and therefore will be considered as an infringement of copyrights which will be prosecuted and obliges to payment of indemnifications.
- All patent design rights and trademarks mentioned in the online-offer or protected by third parties are all exclusively subjet to the provisions of the respective valid identification law and the respective registered proprietor.
- Owing to a simple statement it shall not be concluded that trademarks are not protected by rights of third parties!








IMAGE
Image1 - from the web site www.istockphoto.com
Go access the image I have to sign up and choose a plan that works better for me. After sign up I have to buy stock credits and with this credits to purchase the images.  This image is on the standard license and cost 20 credits




Restrictions:
- Online "print-on-demand" products
-Use in any logo or trademark
- sub-license, give away, share or otherwise transfer stand-alone images/files


Image2 - from the from the web site www.istockphoto.com
To access the image is the same procedure as the first image. But this image cost 15 credits.
Same restrictions as on the above image related to copyright. 
















Image3 - from the web site shutterstock.com
To download the image is required to register on the website and choose a plan.
One that would suits for this image is the cheapest one ( 2 downloads= $199 USD = $185.785 AUD)
Highlights from the terms and conditions:
- The images can be reproduced as prints, posters (i.e. a hardcopy) and other reproductions for your own personal, non-commercial use and display, not for resale, download or distribution;
- On letterhead and business cards, pamphlets, brochures, catalogs
- DO NOT: Share an Image by providing access to such Image on shared disk drives, computer networks, intranets of any nature or otherwise.
Sources:
www.shutterstock.com/licensing.mhtml
www.istockphoto.com/help/licenses

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

My team Logo

POWER BULL - The minotaur holds a rugby ball in one hand and on the other
a thunder that is related to power.

FURIOUS ENERGY - Two thunders on the place that suppose to be the horn.
Just eyes and maybe nose of the minotaur.

KNNOSSOS POWER - Knnossos is the place where the labyrinth that was made for the minotaur were.
Use of the name and the buff shape of the bull to emphases the power of the beast. 

The three first concepts are related to the Greek God Minotaur illustrating some of his characteristics as power, anger, persistence, determination. 
The colour combination used hasn't been used yet for any of the league teams. (NRL)
The logo is going to be for a team on the NRL (Rugby). 

Monday, April 4, 2011

Indigo Design Network

http://www.indigodesignnetwork.org/?p=637&cpage=1#comment-317

Trends and Designers

Design Trends


Some of the trends that I notice are:
  • RGB colours - bright colours
  • Rainbow like colour
  • Minimalism (simplicity) - use of basic geometric shapes. Not just onto the graphic design but as well on the technologies interfaces, software.
  • on line growing
  • animation Craft
  • 3D
  • constructivism influence






Designers


- Bruce Bigelow ( Electric Art)


He spoke about images with re-purpose and to build the mood of the art work.
Good example about craft, retouching and 3d images.









- Fanette Mellier (France)

This French graphic designer is an example about the use of the rainbow colours in her art work.
Was interesting to see she using different colour and typeface as a detail through the book and the the left justified giving the impression of the water movement.









Concept Evaluation



Phaidon Book cover: "A smile in mind"

- Designed by Christopher Doyle
- It is a book about witty thinking in graphic design.
- The elements and principles of design are applied as a colour, form, space, contrast, line. It is effective because communicates the book content in a simple and direct way just using type.
- The art style that should be classified is 'contemporary' because of the colours, modern feeling that the cover has.
- The concept of to turn over the letter "D" creating a smile face is clever and easy to understand that the book has some sort of funny mood.
- Smile Face motif, to call the attention to the book mood.
- The book cover is simple but creative. The way that a good design has to be. The typeface goes along to the mood of the book and the contrast of the colour red emphases the main focal point.









Sources


- http://www.underconsideration.com/speakup/archives/newtype_alphabets_04.gif
- http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_U9HFjWO3U38/S94pGkkDr-I/AAAAAAAAAfA/CQaOeee5OPs/s1600/Image+11.png
- https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhg7IgnmJV3kBoiIFJ1Am5VZ1l4NZ8hk9Sk5ewB7fsL8eGIA_ugcmG6pQ5ZRvkMcAfUmL9PAlkbt8Zq60YawYJ0iOiDMuNfeb1f5SsI_W6sZN9ba6bRGgsl7I8UJk6VNpVM5FhVBl2ui-Wo/s1600/fanette_mellier.jpg
- www.electricart.com.au
-
http://www.philipharper.info/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/41KBNTQRVML._SS500_1.jpg



    Monday, March 28, 2011

    Aboriginal Motifs

    Functions and Philosophies








    - Respect:
    The rights of Indigenous people to own and control their heritage, including Indigenous images, designs, stories and other cultural expressions, should be respected.
    Public art – acknowledging land
    It is common practice for Indigenous artists to seek approval from the Indigenous community for public art-based projects in any particular ‘country’ within Australia.

    -Communication, consultation and consent
    Interpreters and translators
    Indigenous artists in remote communities may require interpreters. Ask the artist if they require an interpreter.
    Sensitivity of content
    Sensitive content, such as secret and sacred material or gender-based works, may require special communication procedures that should be ascertained first.
    Gender
    When engaging in consultation with a community be aware there may be a gender division of responsibilities and cultural knowledge.
    Photography of Indigenous people
    Ask an artist’s permission to photograph them at events, and to use their image, especially for wide promotions and on the internet.
    Collaborating with Indigenous artists
    It is important that communication and consultation with Indigenous artists and their communities takes place in the initial development phase of the project. Consent should be obtained before going ahead.
    It is also important to discuss copyright ownership at the outset where more than one artist or a community is involved.



    Moral Rights and Issues




    -Attribute the cultural source of an image or story that I intent to use on my artwork. 
    For example, an image originating from a particular language group should be attributed 
    in each and every publication illustrating the artwork.
    - Ask the artist permission to reproduce his or her work and mention the artist name
    - The destruction or mutilation of, or material alteration to, the work that causes harm to the artist’s reputation.
    - Exhibition of the work in public in a manner or place that causes harm to the artist’s reputation.

    Sources:

    http://www.australiacouncil.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0004/32368/Visual_arts_protocol_guide.pdf

    Native American Motifs

    Cleveland Indians

    The Cleveland Indians began, as the Cleveland Blues when the American League opened their doors in 1901, became the Cleveland Naps in 1905 and changed to the modern day Indians in 1915. The logos for the Cleveland Indians appear below in chronological order.

    1915-1920
    1921-1928

    1929-1932

    1933-1939
    1940-1950

    1951-1972

    1973-1979

    1980-current
    The Cleveland Indians current logo it’s a review from the one used in 1951-1972.
    The different is the red colour tone.
    The mascot still been used as a logo and on the uniforms the logo application is on the cap and sleeve. The logotype is placed on the t-shirt at the front.
    It is a friendly logo; the use of the colours is related to the American colours.
    Thick and dark brush stroke used on the mascot outline. Inconsistent outline. Use of complementary colours.
    Old-fashion that could be Re-designed to be used current.

    The Chief Wahoo, mascot of the Cleveland Indians is a cartoon logo that have been criticised for perpetuating Indian stereotypes.
    But the real concept of the logo is to associate the characteristics of the native american to the team players. i.e: brave, courageous, valiant, unfrightened.
    The Native America Motif on the logo history started subtle. The native illustration, in profile, had just two feathers and a plait, no colour. With the passing of the time, the motif started have more details, colour.

    Various other patches were worn for the next few years, none of them featuring Indians. In 1946, both the home and road shirts featured a City of Cleveland Sesquicentennial patch. In 1947, home and road uniforms began featuring the first incarnation of Chief Wahoo, replacing the old profile with a three-quarters face style. A newer style of Chief Wahoo replaced that one on the uniform shirt sleeve starting in 1951. That style has remained the model for Chief Wahoo to this day.

    Sources:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleveland_Indians
    http://www.logoserver.com/Cleveland_Indians_Logos.html
    http://www.sportslogos.net/team.php?id=57





    Monday, March 21, 2011

    Melbourne Sports Museum Critiques

    Logo: Sydney Olympic Games 2000
    - The colours used are related to the official Olympic games logo.
    - Designed by Michael Bryce, an architect and graphic designer in 1992
    - The elements and principles of design are applied as a colour, line in different tyoe of brush strokes,dot, dynamic,shape, space. It is effective because brings to the logo balance, harmony when using the colours and positioning the shapes in certain positions that gives the whole logo unit and when we pay attention we can see that the shapes creates a character as well.
    - The art style that should be classified is 'contemporary' because of the colours, modern feeling that the logo has.
    - The concept of the bid logo is a stylized image of the Sydney Opera House, whilst the official logo featured the stylized image of a runner in motion. And is the motif of the boomerang that is as aboriginal flying tool that is related to Australia (where the Olympics games were sited).
    - The logo is really well done and creative. Suit to the target and brief. It is friendly and easy to understand. The typeface used goes along with the graphic style used on the graphic too.



    Uniform (logo application): Western Bulldogs
    - Official colours Blue Guernsey with red and white bands and bulldog Motif.
    - The elements and principles of design are applied as a colour,line,shape,space,contrast. It is effective because the the scale and proportion or the elements works well and the colours (red and blue) contrasts with the white of the bulldog.The design is simple but that helps to communicate clearly that the bulldog motif is the main focal point.The negative space around the motif helps that too.The is the contrast between the rounded shape of the logos and the squareness of the uniform shape and lines.  
    - The art style that should be classified is 'contemporary' because of the colours, the logo style.
    - The concept of the uniform is to emphasize the team visual identity so they can be easily recognized. 
    - The uniform is fine. Simply and communicates to the target. I'd make it with a bit of more details or maybe bit 3d not to flat as it is.

    Sources:

    www.9visionsart.com/eng/contemporary-art.asp
    www.gg.gov.au/content.php/page/id/4
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000_Summer_Olympics
    www.westernbulldogs.com.au

    Tuesday, March 8, 2011

    Critiquing Tools

    Art Vocabulary List





    Emphasis- is a principle of art which occurs any time an element of a piece is given dominance by the artist. In other words, the artist makes part of the work stand out, in order to draw the viewer's eye there first.

    Balance- As a basic principle of art (specifically of design), balance refers to the ways in which the elements (lines, shapes, colors, textures, etc.) of a piece are arranged. Balance is one of those useful terms to know, if one is to employ Art Speak.

    cross hatch styles
    Cross Hatch - Hatching (hachure in French) is an artistic technique used to create tonal or shading effects by drawing (or painting or scribing) closely spaced parallel lines. (It is also used in monochromatic heraldic representations to indicate what the tincture of a "full-colour" emblazon would be.) When lines are placed at an angle to one another, it is called cross-hatching.
    Symmetry - is what occurs when one side of something balances out or mirrors the other. If you were to draw a midline from the top of your forehead, down the middle of your nose, over your lips and to the bottom of your chin, you could see that your eyes, ears, nostrils, and teeth all mirror each other on either side of the line. That's symmetry.
    Rhythm- is a principle of art that's difficult to summarize in words. Assuming that you've picked up on a rhythm in music before, take what you heard with your ears and try to translate that to something you'd see with your eyes. Rhythm, in art, is a visual beat.



    Adjecticve List
    Value- Shadows, darkness, contrasts and light are all values in artwork.
    Collage -Collage is from the French meaning "paste up". The combination of pieces of cloth, magazines and other found objects to create artwork.
    Impasto
    Fresco-Pigment is applied directly to damp plaster making this wall painting medium one of the most permanent form of wall decoration.
    Impasto -A manner of painting where the paint is laid on thickly so texture stands out in relief.
    Pigment-Pigment is the material used to create the effect of color on any surface.




    Principles and elements of Design
    Principles:
    Emphasis- is the design principle that makes sure attention is drawn to the most important part of a design. This can be seen in the design to the left. This design uses scale and proportion to draw your attention to the main focal point.
    Balance- is what gives a design stability and equilibrium. It distributes visual “weight” throughout space making the design seem fluid rather than lopsided or heavy. There as the symmetrical balance and asymmetrical balance.
    Harmony- Harmony in painting is the visually satisfying effect of combining similar, related elements. eg.adjacent colours on the colour wheel, similar shapes etc.
    Scale-Scale controls object size and make sure everything is well balanced and ensure a smooth and eye-catching design.

    Elements: 
    line
    Line- Line can be considered in two ways. The linear marks made with a pen or brush or the edge created when two shapes meet.
    Value- Value is the lightness or darkness of a colour. Value is also called Tone

    Texture- Is the surface quality of a shape - rough, smooth, soft hard glossy etc. Texture can be physical (tactile) or visual.
    Shape- A shape is a self contained defined area of geometric or organic form. A positive shape in a painting automatically creates a negative shape.
    Direction- All lines have direction - Horizontal, Vertical or Oblique. Horizontal suggests calmness, stability and tranquillity. Vertical gives a feeling of balance, formality and alertness. Oblique suggests movement and action

    Monday, March 7, 2011

    Style Time line

    Cupid 1601 by Caravaggio

    1600-1750 - Baroque

    Baroque was born in Italy, and later adopted in France, Germany, Netherlands, and Spain.
    In painting and sculpture we recognize three main forms of Baroque:

 Baroque that was primarily associated with the religious tensions within Western Christianity: division on Roman Catholicism and Protestantism.
    Baroque is a style in which painters, sculptors, and architects rummaged emotion, movement, and variety in their works. Baroque favors higher volumes, exaggerates decorations, adds colossal sculptures, huge furniture etc. Sense of movement, energy, and tension are dominant impressions. Strong contrasts of light and shadow often enhance dramatic effects.
    Baroque famous artists:
    - Michelangelo Merisi-Caravaggio
    - Agostino Carracci
    1700-1760 - Rococo




    Jean-Honore Fragonard:
The Swing
     Oil on Canvas- 1766 -The Wallace Collection, London


    Based in France, Rococo was a decorative style most often used in interior design, painting, architecture, and sculpture. Rococo was manifested out of this new era of thought where society abandoned the formality of the earlier years and began pursuing personal amusement and happiness.
    The term Rococo was derived from the French word, rocaille, meaning rock and shell garden ornamentation. The style appealed to the senses rather than intellect, stressing beauty over depth. The movement portrayed the life of the aristocracy, preferring themes of romance, mythology, fantasy, every day life to historical or religious subject matter.
    Rococo was a light, ornamental, and elaborate style of art, identified by elegant and detailed ornamentation and the use of curved, asymmetrical forms.
    Other elements of the style included graceful movement, playful use of line, and delicate coloring. Dominated by feminine taste and influence, the lively colors and playful subject matter made it suitable for interior decoration. The Rococo style was also used in portraiture and furniture and tapestry design
    Rococo famous artists:
    - Ricci
    - Jean-Honore Fragonard


    Karl Schmidt-Rottluff  Portrait of Emy,
    1919, Oil on Canvas
    Beginning 1905 - 
    Die Brucke  


    Die Brucke was the association of artist expressionists from Dresden, Germany. Their first exhibition was held in 1906. Die Brucke made use of a technique that was controlled, intentionally unsophisticated and crude, developing a style hallmarked by expressive distortions and emphases. Die Brucke artists often used color similar to the Fauves, and they were also influenced by art form from Africa and Oceania. Some of the painters in the group sympathized with the revolutionary socialism of the day and drew inspiration from Van Gogh's ideas on artists' communities. Die Brucke expressionists believed that their social criticism of the ugliness of modern life could lead to a new and better future.


    Die Brucke famous artists:
    - Karl Schnidt-Rottluff
    - Emil Nolde


    1911 - 1914 - Rayonism ( Cubo-Futurism ) 


    A type of abstract or semi-abstract painting characterised by the fragmentation of forms into masses of slanting lines.
    Rayonism represents one of the first steps toward the development of abstract art in Russia and was founded by Mikhail F. Larionov and his wife Natalia Goncharova.
    The new style was a synthesis of Cubism, Futurism, and Orphism and is also known as Cubo-Futurism.
    Mikhail Larionov,1913, Russia
    The brief life of Cubo-Futurism (Rayonism) suggests the considerable confusion that many Russians felt over the question of rural versus urban, agrarian versus industrial, and Russian versus French. The one issue Goncharova and Larionov were not in doubt was artistic progress and they wanted to contribute to it. After Larionov's return to Moscow, the Suprematists and the Constructivists were now center stage.
    Rayonism famous artists:
    - Natalia Goncharova

    - Mikhail Larionov
    1918 - 1941De Ploeg

    Johan Dijkstra (1896-1978)  A country road in Groningen, oil on canvas 
    The artist’s association ‘De Ploeg’ was founded in 1918 in reaction to the artistic climate in Groningen. A number of young artists felt they did not have enough opportunity to develop themselves and exhibit their work. They hoped that as a group they would be able to exhibit their work and also organize exhibitions and lectures through which artists and the general public could learn about recent developments in art, architecture and literature.
    De Plog famous artists:
    -Jan Wiegers
    -Johan Dijkstra
    Lettrism - Mid 1940s

    Isidore Isou, Amos,1953. 
    Lettrism is a French avant-garde movement, established in Paris in the mid-1940s by Romanian immigrant Isidore Isou. In a body of work totalling hundreds of volumes, Isou and the Lettrists have applied their theories to all areas of art and culture, most notably in poetry, film, painting and political theory.
    Gabriel Pomerand, Sans titre, 1951
    The term, having been the original name that was first given to the group, has lingered as a blanket term to cover all of their activities, even as many of these have moved away from any connection to letters. But other names have also been introduced, either for the group as a whole or for its activities in specific domains, such as 'the Isouian movement', 'youth uprising', 'hypergraphics', 'creatics', 'infinitesimal art' and 'excoördism'.
    Lettrism famous artists:
    -Gabriel Pomerand

    - Maurice Lemaitre
    Hard-Edge
    Late 1950s, Early 1960s


    The term Hard-edge painting was coined in 1959 by art historian Jules Langsner to characterize the nonfigurative work of four artists from California in an exhibition called Four Abstract Classicists. The term then gained broader currency after British critic Lawrence Alloway used it to describe contemporary American geometric abstract painting featuring an “economy of form,” “fullness of color,” “neatness of surface,” and the nonrelational, allover arrangement of forms on the canvas... 
    Also described as Abstract Imaginism.
    Hard- Edge famous artists:
    -  Frederick Hammersley
    - John McLaughlin

    Op Art (Optical Art)
    
 - Beginning in the 1960s
    Jessus- Raphael Soto Spiral, 1950

    Op Art made its appearance in the United States and Europe in the late 1950s. Op Art, also called Optical Art, was popular along side Pop Art. Branching from the geometric abstraction movement, Op Art includes paintings concerned with surface kinetics. It was a movement which exploits the fallibility of the eye through the use of optical illusions. The viewer gets the impression of movement by flashing and vibration, or alternatively of swelling or warping. Two techniques used to achieve this effect are perspective illusion and chromatic tension. Artists used colors, lines and shapes repetitive and simple ways to create perceived movement and to trick the viewer's eye.
    Op Art famous artists:
    -  Victor Vasarely
    - Jessus - Raphael Soto

    Minimal Art - 1970s
    TRABUM (part of the Element Series) 
    Title is derived from the Latin for log or timber.
    Minimal art was an artistic style, which emerged in America the late 1950s. The term was taken from an essay about modern American art by art philosopher Richard Wollheim in 1965. Minimal Art first established itself in painting, and then sculpture, where it had the greatest impact.
    Minimal art sculptures were primarily made from industrial materials, such as aluminium, steel, glass, concrete, wood, plastic or stone. The objects, frequently reduced to very simple geometric shapes, were industrially produced, thus removing the artist’s personal signature from the work. The works were also characterised by serial arrangements of a number of bodies/shapes, and large dimensions.
    Minimal Art famous artists:
    - Carl Andre
    - Dan Flavin
    Relational art - 2002

    Gabriel Orozco, Black Kites, 1997.



    Relational Art is an emerging movement in art identified by Nicolas Bourriaud, a French philosopher, who recognized a growing number of contemporary artists used performative and interactive techniques that rely on the responses of others: pedestrians, shoppers, browsers—the casual observer-turned-participant. As an art critic, Bourriaud has reviewed many internationally renowned exhibitions and performances. Over the course of writing editorials for the French magazine Documents sur l’Art, Bourriaud came to term what he was seeing—more accurately, experiencing—as a movement in Relational Art.

     Relational Art Famous Artists:
     -Nicolas Bourriaud
     -Felix Gonzalez-Torres


    Sources:
    http://www.huntfor.com/arthistory/c17th-mid19th/baroque.htm
    http://wwar.com/masters/movements/rococo.html
    http://www.huntfor.com/arthistory/c20th/diebrucke.htm
    http://www.ncmoa.org/collections/highlights/20thcentury/20th/1910-1950/028_lrg.shtml
    http://www.huntfor.com/arthistory/C20th/rayonism.htm
    http://en.mimi.hu/finearts/rayonism.html
    http://the-artists.org/artistsbymovement/de-Ploeg/
    http://www.wendtroot.com/spoetry/folder4/ng441.html
    http://the-artists.org/artistsbymovement/Hard-Edge/
    http://www.visual-arts-cork.com/history-of-art/hard-edge-painting.htm
    http://www.kettererkunst.com/dict/minimal-art.shtml