Scribbles (image warning)

Posted by Taizen Chisou on Jan. 29, 2013, 6:03 p.m.

Mainly because they're rather large.

I constantly have dreams like this. When I realize that this dream is recurring, though, it usually immediately shifts to a sort of romantic comedy.

This is reinforcing the fact that I can't draw animals.

This assignment was given the topic "silence and noise."

This assignment was given the topic "water." I applied the topics of "smoking," "drinking," and other such stuff in it.

Those jerks look familiar.

This assignment was "draw weird shapes and give them shading."

I'm out of art.

No, Yukari, you can't be called art.

I do have writing.

But y'alls probably wouldn't read it.

“So… what are you going to do now?â€?

“Isn’t it obvious? I’m leaving.â€?

“But… why? You don’t have to. You could pick any one place to stay and live there. You wouldn’t have to keep traveling.â€?

“This is all I know how to do now, Ryan. I can pick up so many of the finer points and details of a person from mere observation, but all my life I’ve never known what I would be for. What I would do, what I was about.â€?

Anyway. I'll post another art blog eventually. Art class makes us do things, you see.

Comments

JuurianChi 11 years, 9 months ago

"Makes us do things."

You're making me want to do an art blog.

ShinseiOnnen 11 years, 9 months ago

The "draw weird shapes" one reminds me of Dali's melting clocks/landscapes.

But yeah, I love the first one, it's very balanced/has good overall composition to it. And you portrayed silence and noise pretty darn well too.

Castypher 11 years, 9 months ago

Oh my god, it's Sakamoto.

Taizen, I'd like to see your take on digital art.

Taizen Chisou 11 years, 9 months ago

Thanks y'alls.

Quote:
You're making me want to do an art blog.

Do eeeeeet.

Quote:
The "draw weird shapes" one reminds me of Dali's melting clocks/landscapes.

The landscape deal wasn't even a thing that he asked for. I just turned it into one and I feel like it turned out pretty well.

Quote:
Oh my god, it's Sakamoto.

> Yoshio Sakamoto?

Thank you?

Quote:
Taizen, I'd like to see your take on digital art.

I figure I could pull some pretty stupid shit given a tablet and SAI. :D

Kunedon 11 years, 9 months ago

Quote:
I figure I could pull some pretty stupid shit given a tablet and SAI
Why use SAI when you can use FireAlpaca?

colseed 11 years, 9 months ago

That was a pretty cool story actually. I found it unclear in a bunch of parts (i.e. how some of the characters relate to each other exactly), and it felt like the blue-haired girl traveled through almost too quickly, but the characterization/dialogue was good and the idea was interesting.

Quote:
Yukari
i felt so proud of myself for actually knowing who that is right up until kilin said

Quote:
Sakamoto
then i was just confused

:c

Visor 11 years, 9 months ago

Excellent drawings. I like the 4th one the most. You are very talented.

mr8bit 11 years, 9 months ago

That story is a confusing mess of disembodied dialogue spoken by undeveloped characters who are mainly just sitting around. Your tenses also get messed up at points.

I think the main problem with it is that there is no movement. No action. It relies on the characters' conversations, yet you give little explanation of who these characters are or why we should care about them. And they never DO anything. They just walk from one conversation to another in an incredibly disjointed way. And they eat. Boy do they eat!

I mean, I get that the girl is supposed to be mysterious. But the way you are trying to express this is by having her say things that don't make any sense. I'm really not so sure that YOU, the writer, even knows what is going on.

This has a very distinct "seat-of-your-pants" writing style. Starting the story with your main character waking up and doing all these mundane things is a dead give away. It's like you are just writing, waiting for the story to unfold before you. This is okay for brainstorming, but not much else.

I suggest you START the story when the girl first enters the classroom. I mean, that's the first interesting thing that happens. Do some character exposition. Get inside the main character's head. Let us know what he's thinking when he first sees the girl. Let us know what he's thinking as he sits in his classes. Let us know his internal reactions to the bat-shit things this girl is saying (and the bat-shit clothing she's wearing.) As it is, he just comes across as an unaffected observer who gives the reader very little to identify with. And please be more clear as to whose mouth spoken dialogue is coming out of.

Sorry if I'm coming across as too critical. Writing is very, VERY hard. This story is riddled with first-timer mistakes. If no one points them out to you, you'll never be able to fix them.

Taizen Chisou 11 years, 9 months ago

I'm sorry, but there was only so much I could have done. It was a school assignment, you see, one that everyone else wrote two-paragraph essays for.

I had to trim out about 60% of like, everything.

As for the action, I'm a very inactive person.

I don't write action very well.

Quote:
Ryan approached Tees, who sat by the train tracks.

"Stalker!" she screeched, and vaulted her foot into his pants before she took off running down into the forest.

mr8bit 11 years, 9 months ago

Yeah. I understand it was a school assignment and time was limited. But you put it out there, so I figured you wanted some constructive criticism. Personally, I hate it when I post something and no one comments on it. Or people just say "good job."

Again, sorry if it was harsh. Didn't mean to be a dick.