Sunday, 27 September 2015

Non Degree Art Education

I have not used these schools but these are the ones I have heard good things about. These are great places to take a class to improve in certain areas

Art Center at Night
https://www.artcenter.edu/acn/

Gnomon
https://www.gnomon.edu/

CDA
http://conceptdesignacad.com/

Brainstorm
http://brainstormschool.com/

LAAFA
http://laafa.org/

Vancouver Film School
https://vfs.edu/

Art Camp
http://artcamp.com/



PORTFOLIO RUBRIC

Here is a guide to building a portfolio that I used to get into Art Center. Different schools have different requirements for portfolios but all you need to do is figure out what they are and put them in the left section of the rubric. This Rubric is not what I would use to get work but simply for making a school portfolio. I believe this rubric should help with getting into most entertainment design focused course like Art Center, Gnomon, FZD etc.

EXPLANATION:
20 pages are the required amount for a standard portfolio. Generally they can tell if you are good enough with just 20-25. Some students have 100 page portfolios. You might think this is a good idea but it really shows that you can not edit down your work to what is asked for. If the school says they want 20 then don't do 100, follow the instructions. Anyway.
The top bar lists each page number.
The left bar lists each requirement.
When you make your portfolio go through each page and put a tick mark in the area you have completed. shown in the 2nd example
For Example If page 1 has reference images of anatomy, characters and the layout is nice, then tick Character, Reference and Layout.


Now look at the massive gaps! This person has shown great characters, props, creatures and sketches but nothing in the red zones. This person will need to go back into the portfolio and make sure to show that they can fill the requirements.
I hope this helps! If you want more of an explanation let me know and I will go into more depth in a video or something
I might also make a post on each requirement.

Saturday, 26 September 2015

Youtube Channels to Follow

Here are some youtube channels that I know of that are great to be following. Watching these four will give you a large library of videos that will be helpful for answering questions when starting out.

Art of Ahmed Aldori
https://www.youtube.com/AhmedAldooriArt

Scott Robertson
https://www.youtube.com/user/scottrobertsondesign

FZD
https://www.youtube.com/user/FZDSCHOOL

Level up
https://www.youtube.com/user/levelupsessions

Kienan Lafferty
https://www.youtube.com/user/KienanLafferty


Great Books Concept Artists Should Read

Here are some general books in my opinion are some of the most helpful for starting out and improving skills. Study these books and you will see massive improvements!

How to Draw - Scott Robertson and Thomas Bertling
http://designstudiopress.com/product/how-to-draw/

How to Render - Scott Robertson and Thomas Bertling
http://designstudiopress.com/product/how-to-render/

Color and Light - James Gurney
http://www.amazon.com/Color-Light-Guide-Realist-Painter/dp/0740797719

Framed Ink - Marcos Mateu-Mestre
http://www.amazon.com/Framed-Ink-Drawing-Composition-Storytellers/dp/1933492953

Alla Prima 2 - Richard Schmid
http://www.richardschmid.com/Alla-Prima-II-By-Richard-Schmid-p/skuap.htm

Human Anatomy for Artists - Eliot Goldfinger
http://www.amazon.com/Human-Anatomy-Artists-Elements-Form/dp/0195052064

The Visual Story - Bruce Block
http://www.amazon.com/Visual-Story-Creating-Structure-Digital/dp/0240807790/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1443306644&sr=8-1&keywords=the+visual+story+2nd+edition

Figure Drawing - Michael Hampton
http://www.figuredrawing.info

Force - Mike Matessi
http://www.amazon.com/Force-Dynamic-Drawing-Animators-Series/dp/0240808452

Thursday, 24 September 2015

NEW BLOG!

Hi! I am a concept artist trying to help students build portfolios and artists get a little better.