ev.k. : diyeceğim ki neredeyse 2008 balonla kaçış eskizlerimle akraba.,
guest lecture: Damian Gascoigne
He’s broken the presentation into four sections.
Number 1. Research: when you just got things going on.
He makes some jokes about his Fear of the North, his fear of his Auntie Lizza and I am right on board, he is a funny guy.
A theme that runs through the presentation is about how he is learning 3D animation software now, at a late stage in his life. He talks about tech, how it has improved so much so quickly. Anyone can be slick and do all this cool stuff but coming up with good ideas is just as hard as it ever was.
Creative people – they’re nosey, they need to be. He is so nosey. It’s part of creating. It’s all snooping, doodling, collecting. He shows a photo of the top of a supermarket carrier bag on the floor. It is an interesting shape, almost a rabbits head.
When you’re waiting around, even without a sketchbook, you doodle on receipts. He is amazed by students who don’t have a pen or a sketchbook to hand. Sometimes these doodles become something more, they stand out, put their hand up, ask to be used again, to stretch out. Some doodles he shows us.
To this end he talks about how, having none, he is into hair. Draws hair all the time. Also posture and goddamnit if I don’t love postures. It’s Egon Schiele’s fault. I love weird exaggerated poses, all twists and angles and he does too. He sketches and takes photos of people, strangers, his students, all in these weird poses. Maybe they don’t lead to anything, but they don’t have to.
That resonates with me. I’m always looking for drive and purpose. Not always, sometimes a thing is an end in itself, or it doesn’t have an end; you’re just doing it.
Maybe it doesn’t lead to anything, but it doesn’t have to.
This is the start of something big, Damian. He is pull the curtains on something I’d forgotten about: genuine interest in other people and things.
He draws everyday, all too often not from life. But man he shows us these stone bastard drawings he did in
He wants students to notice the things around them, not to just have blank pages in your sketchbook to look at. He shows us a picture of a couple in a Korean café. He is rigid, in a suit, she is in a frock (?), a cardigan. His hands are on his lap, her drink has hardly been touched. He says it is a first date, you just know there isn’t going to be a second. For half an hour he was stood there taking pictures, peering into someone else’s life.
There are stories starting all around, he says, he shows us a picture of a child at the Tate Modern. The kid’s dad, in this art gallery, all he wants is to take a photo of his kid walking around.
This is why I like the music I like, the books I like. It’s stories, other people.
**
Part 2: personal work.
Yeah he talked briefly about this gallery thing he did in
Part 3: Pitch Requiem.
You don’t get paid to pitch, suckers. It is deadly competitive. Last year he made seven pitches and none worked out. He shows us these pitches. They are clean. His commercial work is much, much cleaner than his personal stuff. Which makes sense and is fine. You can see how it all fits together and that’s the important thing.
His pacing of slides is fucking great. Mountain Dew is delicious.
You need nerves of steel for this job, the spirit of a gambler. Despite the seven that didn’t work out he got one, or two, that did. He’s more in love with his work than ever, but he’s now unemployable. He couldn’t have a boss telling him when to get to work, what to do, all that shit and I start thinking maybe I can be an illustrator, maybe this is what I am.
He talks about the conversations we’re going to have with ourselves, the ugly ones when the jobs don’t come. Why am I doing this? The sweat soaking stone whatever. You either walk out or you don’t, spirit of a gambler.
Part 4: new territory.
This presentation was a roving drive through Damian Gascoigne. He shows us part of an animation he’s working on. It’s good because it’s not generic. Has all this pen texture and 2d drawn quality but also this 3d thing going on. It was nice to watch, not to write about.
But it showed how the people around you become a direct inspiration.
He ends saying he’s enjoying the battle.
http://www.animateprojects.org/films/by_artist/g/d_gascoigne
http://fada.kingston.ac.uk/staff/damian_gascoigne/damian_gascoigne.php
http://www.stanleypickergallery.org/archive/2005/Damian%20Gascoigne/complex_embrace.htm
http://www.animateonline.org/films/howtogetridofinformation/all.html
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