Dripping In Animation

Well, here I am again. After several weeks without any posts, I decided I had to put something up that would demonstrate and explain what I have been up to. Namely: studying and practicing animation.

Dripping In Animation

The link above takes you to the Tink N. Putter section of the NFMOA site and presents a VERY simple animation that I hope communicates both how much fun I am having and how much I have yet to learn. The sound that accompanies the animation is from my own collection of audio samples. My favorite part of doing any animation is the adding of sound.

You will need the current Flash Player to view it.

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Totem Repair Shop: The Last Detail

"Totem Repair Shop, detail #5" - a digital decalcomania painting

This is the latest and last sneak preview by way of an enlargement of a small area selected from my current color digital decalcomania project: “Totem Repair Shop.”

Totem Repair Shop is finished! All that remains to be done is to optimize it for printing and for sharing on the web, then I will post it here. That post will include a link to a larger version so the detail can be more easily seen.

For my own curiosity, I will make at least one digital print of it to see how it holds up in the real world as inks on paper instead of being millions of glowing pixels on a flatscreen monitor. That test print will have to wait a couple weeks while we replace the computer used to communicate with our printer. Hence, I will not be posting the full finished version of this project until I am satisfied that it yields a good print.

I was surprised by how involved this project became. I thoroughly enjoyed creating it and I learned a lot about the potential of Painter software. The completion of this project frees me to focus all my time and attention on my next digital adventure: animation.

After a full year of digital drawing and painting, I feel confident enough at last to seriously commit to creating digital animation. Depending on how an animation is set up it can require from 12 to 30 drawings for just one second of on-screen action! It is going to be a LOT of drawing. Animation is labor intensive and slow-going!

After personally testing several programs and reading a lot of reviews, I decided to use Toon Boom Animate 2 for my first project. I will also be using images created and processed in Photoshop and Painter and compositing everything in Adobe After Effects. Initially I will be focusing on traditional 2D frame-by-frame animation, which lately I have seen being referred to as tradigimation when accomplished using software instead of paper, pencil, ink, and paint.

Animate 2 comes complete with a nice steep learning curve and an 870 page user guide. A computer geek’s delight for sure. I certainly have my work cut out for me with this new direction.

Hopefully, fairly soon I will be able to tell you and show you how my animation progress is going. But, until I have some actual animation news and/or examples to share, my posts in the near future will contain previously unpublished material from the NFMOA archives involving sound, sculpture, drawing, and painting. Right now I am busy getting acquainted with the software and its tools and busily searching for and developing story ideas.

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Totem Repair Shop: detail #4

"Totem Repair Shop," detail in progress

“Totem Repair Shop,” detail of work in progress.

Above is an enlargement of a small section from my current color digital decalcomania project: “Totem Repair Shop.” It just keeps on growing: more details arise that need finishing, new possibilities reveal themselves, and I find myself with plenty to do every day.

Animation Lust Complicates Things

After a year of daily digital drawing, I feel confident enough now to consider exploring animation again. I am still working on the Totem Repair Shop project about 3-4 hours a day and have promised myself not to actually start any animation projects while this digital painting is still in progress.

Meanwhile, in addition to drawing, I spend several hours each day researching animation software and techniques as well as looking at every possible type of animation (and the stories they tell) from all over the world, including examples from early animation to the amazing range of works being done today.

The magic of creating images that change over time and then when combined with sound seem to come alive, is just too tempting to resist! I hope at some time within the next few months to begin posting about the development and evolution of one or more animation projects.

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Found Surfaces: Another Random Image Resource

The Duck-Billed Hat, Wandering in Diagonal Land - oil on canvas

"The Duck-Billed Hat, Wandering in Diagonal Land" - oil on found canvas, 17"h x 13"w, 1984(?)

Using Found Surfaces as Random Image Source

Finding a Random Surface
For decades, I have used found surfaces to inspire me. Scraps of old torn wallpaper or advertisements found in a gutter, or the back of a rusty road sign can be full of surprises. Usually it is the accretion of experience, history, and the textures these surfaces possess that appeals to my eye.

Sometimes I photograph them and use them as material in a digital decalcomania process. Sometimes I have used them as if they were a sketch for a painting, which I then develop and explore on a new surface. This one is unique as a random image source, because it began life as a painting discarded by another artist and was left to collect dust until I asked if I could have it.

Acquiring the Surface
I spotted the painting sitting ignored in a corner, untouched for several years. There was something about it that intrigued me. I asked if I could have it. The artist agreed and gave it to me to do whatever I wanted with it.

I recently asked that artist what she could still recall about the painting. She said that it had been started as a horizontal semi-abstract bio-morphic landscape. But it had lacked any real reason to exist, she came to realize the she had not known why she was painting it, so she had abandoned it.

Using the Random Surface as Inspiration and Canvas
The first thing I did was to turn the landscape on its side so that it became a potential portrait. I was in love with Naples Yellow at the time and began to cover ever-increasing amounts of the original painting, in some places hiding what the first artist had done while leaving it untouched in others.

The forms on the far right side remain exactly as they were when I acquired the surface. Only now they are vertical and refer to or suggest a figure, not a landscape. The cloud-like forms in the sky above the main character also reveal some of the original color and brushwork.

Announcing What I Saw
What had prompted me to want to work on this surface was the complex main figure that I saw or sensed in the middle of the canvas. It was just waiting to be announced and celebrated. That is exactly what I did. This process introduced me to the namesake of the work The Duck-Billed Hat and the struggling figure underneath burdened with the weight of the main character, both leaning into the landscape or Wandering in Diagonal Land.

The Surprises
I especially enjoyed the surprises this surface had to offer: the six-fingered hand, the erotic bird being played like a stringed instrument, and of course “The Duck-Billed Hat,” which is at the same time a mysterious and goofy head. I also liked that the main figure exits the frame both at the top and the bottom of the composition leaving the completion of the figure and the world in which it wanders to the viewer’s imagination.

This painting was a total delight to paint. Or should I say finish. It did not take long to do and just seemed to come together by itself. I have always felt a special fondness for it, in spite of (or perhaps because of) its rather crude execution and bizarre content. When I look at this painting, I remember how much fun it was to discover its surprises and I enjoy being reminded of the original artist as well.

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Preparing Random Image Sources

Cave Dreamer at Work: Preparing for Death Valley

"Cave Dreamer at Work: Preparing for Death Valley," 1988, 16"h x 20"w, acrylic on modeling paste and gessoed canvasboard.

Surprise and Discovery

My ever-present desire and need for surprise and discovery in every image I create has, over the years, led me to a variety of methods that have helped to guarantee the experience of surprise and a sense of discovery in my painting process almost every time. If that does not happen in a particular painting, I do not finish or in some cases do not even start the project.

Instead of painting a preconceived idea or an observed scene or object, I like to use my image-making to find out what is in my head and heart. The most recent in this quest are the digital decalcomania projects I have described in recent posts.

Stains on Modeling Paste

One such method was used to prepare the image surface in the painting above, “The Cave Dreamer at Work.” The process included applying earth-tone stains onto a surface of acrylic modeling paste that had itself been randomly applied with palette knives then, while it was still wet, slashed with various tools including an x-acto knife, a nail, and an ice pick to create incised lines of various widths and depths.

The random intersection of slashed lines with the paste textures suggested shapes to me, which I enhanced with the least amount of paint possible. It was not until I was well into this process that I “discovered” or realized the subjective content of the painting: I found myself doing a kind of self-portrait. It was painted in the weeks prior to a family trip to Death Valley, California in the Spring of 1988.

As we planned the trip, my mind was filled with the anticipation of getting to see and walk among all the rocks and colors of that amazing place. The prepared random image surface provided just enough suggestions and possibilities to elicit and give form to what was really on my mind at the time.

Scumbling

When I used to work in acrylic, especially in my decalcomania projects, and in the painting above, I always applied the paint to the random surfaces by scumbling with stiff bristle brushes that had been wiped almost clean. I held the brush perpendicular to the canvas and applied the paint in small circular strokes. This created a soft, almost airbrush-like look to the painted surfaces, but quickly wore out brushes. When working on large paintings, I had to buy stiff “bright” bristle brushes by the dozens.

Next Post

My next post will describe a very different type of random image source, one that was used in a small oil painting done in the early 1980’s titled “The Duck-billed Hat, Wandering in Diagonal Land.

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Totem Repair Shop: detail #3

Totem Repair Shop: detail #3

Totem Repair Shop: detail #3, a section from the current color digital decalcomania project that is currently in progress. Most of the content in this image is very close to how it will appear in the finished drawing.

Yes, this project is still underway. I work on it almost every day. Since I have not posted in a while I thought it was a good time to give everyone a peek at some more of the content that is slowly taking form in this, my first color digital decalcomania project.

The above image is an enlarged detail from just left of the center of the composition. That eye resting on the bottom right actually rests on the very bottom of the complete drawing.

I have appreciated and enjoyed the comments that have come in via the “Replies” here on the blog and via personal email messages. Thanks so much. Maintaining this blog is a good discipline in my life, otherwise I think I might just completely disappear and merge into my recliners and computers. Happy Spring to all!

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First Bolinas Instrument

Another post from the NFMOA Archives: The First Bolinas Instrument . It came into being out of a real fascination with the ephemeral sound of overtones and a strong desire to explore and listen to them.

I started looking around for materials that I could use to do pursue this interest. Among my assorted treasures I had the well-crafted wooden shell of a 1940-vintage radio console. The front gracefully curved around to the sides. When new, it had stood about 40″ tall and 30″ wide. I took it apart and used one half of the front of the console as the base, frame, and foundation for my new instrument.

After installing a couple of my homemade tuning pegs and attaching a steel guitar string, I tightened the string and after only one pluck I could tell I had struck overtone paydirt. The wooden shell served as an excellent sounding board. The resonance was spectacular. The curved shape of the instrument bounced all the sound out and up directly to the ears of the player. It was easy to hear and focus on the overtones produced by plucking or striking any of the steel strings.

Homemade tuning pegs

By drilling a hole in an assortment of screws I was able to fashion some crude but effective tuning pegs that were used in all of my Bolinas Instruments.

I proceeded to install numerous strings running in different angles across the length of the old console. I installed several drone strings whose job was to vibrate sympathetically with the played strings. I next added a few twangers (broken bits of steel street sweeper brushes), old and decorated palette knives, then gathered a selection of wood and metal mallets and rods and suddenly found myself in drone heaven.

I could easily explore overtones by repeatedly striking a string or a group of closely arranged parallel strings. By changing the location on the strings where I struck them different complexes of harmonics would sound. I also experimented with different tunings. It was possible to have an ongoing drone and play a kind of subtle melody just with the overtones.

I spent many hours playing this instrument and even performed with it during a show of my 2D and 3D artwork at the Unicorn Gallery in San Francisco in 1968.

The First Bolinas Instrument, made entirely from found objects.

The First Bolinas Instrument,shown here being played in a solo show at the Unicorn Gallery in 1968. In the background is the acrylic on canvas painting "The Dream of the Invasion and Naming of Tommy Rot" 1967.

As with the Bolinas Balafon, there is no recording currently available. I am hopeful that there is an old cassette recording stored away somewhere. If it ever surfaces, I will add it to this post. Until then you have to use your imagination to hear what either of these instruments sounded like.

Both the Bolinas Balafon and The First Bolinas Instrument are shown and discussed in Art in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1945-1980: An Illustrated History by long-time San Francisco art critic, the late Thomas Albright and published by the University of California Press in 1983.

I gradually became frustrated by my limitations with the First Bolinas Instrument and wanted to make a sound generating object with more options.

I have found over the decades of making sound sculptures that once an object has been constructed I tend to learn a limited number of rhythmic and melodic patterns or riffs by playing and exploring the possibilities suggested by the instrument. Those riffs and patterns, I hesitate to call them compositions, are usually the extent of what I can do with that instrument. To be able to play and hear new sounds and patterns, I always had to make a new instrument. This limitation clearly demonstrates how I am not a natural musician. A real musician does not need a new guitar every time s/he wants to play a different song. I totally lack the facility to work with chords, to hear melodies, to feel rhythmic patterns if the instrument does not easily reveal them to me.

Hence the sound sculpture: The Second Bolinas Instrument, which will be posted next in this series of sound experiments from the archives.

Decalcomania Update

For those of you following the progress of my digital decalcomania drawings: the colored project is almost 50% complete. I will post some new enlarged details soon. It is great fun, but the addition of color to the process creates almost infinite possibilities so I have to spend lots more time deciding what not to do!

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The Bolinas Balafon

Bob Comings playing pianissimo on the Bolinas Balafon, 1970

Bob Comings playing pianissimo on the Bolinas Balafon, 1970. In the background is the painting "The Dream of the Invasion of Tommy Rot," acrylic on a 7' x 7' diamond-shaped canvas,1967.

For a change of pace and in keeping with my recent promise, I am today stepping away from the digital decalcomania projects to present some content from the sound experiment and toy-making archives.

The Bolinas Balafon lacked any sounding chambers, but its easily moved “notes” and soft, resonant tones made up for the crude construction. It came into being as a result of my many beachcombing hikes along Duxbury Reef in Bolinas, California, during the years 1967-1970. I walked several miles of that beach many times every week looking for materials to use in my assemblages. In addition to beat-up leather shoes, mountains of plastic scraps, pieces of dolls and toys, parts of wooden shipping crates, and all kinds of weathered and salt-coated junk I found a lot of pieces of ocean-worn redwood lumber of varying dimensions.

I discovered that these salt-soaked chunks of usually very straight-grained redwood generated beautiful soft tones when struck with a knuckle or soft mallet. Each piece had its own unique pitch. I would test each piece as soon as I found it on the beach by supporting it on the fingers and thumb of my right hand then tapping it lightly with the knuckle of the index finger on my left hand. If the piece of wood held any promise I would carry it back to my house. If it had a disappointing buzz due to cracks, I dropped it on the spot. Were I to gather wooden “notes” today (40+ years later), a note with a buzz might just be a keeper.

At home, away from the sound of the surf and wind, I tested each note again. This time with found wooden mallets. I kept editing my set of musical wood scraps always seeking the most clear, resonant sounding pieces.

The Bolinas Balafon, 30" x 30", found redwood "notes" on partial wood pallet.

The Bolinas Balafon, 30" x 30" approx., found redwood "notes" on leather pads that were nailed to the remnant of a found wooden pallet, displayed here with two found wooden mallets.

To facilitate playing these pieces of wood, I added two slightly elevated leather-covered pads of cloth to the top of what remained of a heavily scarred wooden pallet about 30″ square. It was itself held together and supported on three two-by-fours. The whole rig was played while sitting on the floor. The individual pieces of wood (the notes) rested on the leather pads, which made it possible to play the collection of pieces like a marimba or balafon. The individual note pieces were never permanently attached to the pallet so I could easily slide them and re-arrange them quickly or replace one with another from the many extra “notes” I kept spread out around me on the floor.

I played rhythmic repetitive patterns with little concern for melody. I performed with this instrument in my 1970 solo show at the Unicorn Gallery in San Francisco. Other than a few fragments of Bolinas Balafon sounds buried in the noisy mix of the soundtrack for the 1968 film boc ging, there are no recordings of the wonderful sounds it could make.

When I left Bolinas to move back into San Francisco in late 1970, I returned the Bolinas Balafon to the elements.

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Totem Repair Shop: detail #2 from work in progress

Detail #2: Totem Repair, work in progress

Detail #2: Totem Repair, work in progress

I am still drawing every day on my first color digital decalcomania project: The Totem Repair Shop. That title had started out as just a working title, but I am growing to like it. It will probably stick.

Thanks for following the development of this digital painting. On the left edge, near the top, you can see some raw undeveloped content from the random image source that inspired this work. Most of the rest of the content in this enlarged detail is completed. And yes, that is something of a self-portrait on the right side of this enlarged detail. My ego usually grabs at anything in the random source content resembling me and makes me develop it.

Promises, Promises, Promises

I learned many years ago to never promise to add content to a web site unless that content is truly ready to post. Delays always occur and viewers are left with doubts.

Well, I know that I have frequently mentioned that I would soon be adding posts containing photos of audio experiments and visual works from the past… archival material that is not yet anywhere on the web. But I just can’t tear myself away from this current work. Maybe when this one is completed and no new digital decalcomania gets started I will catch up on my past promises and post some of that archival material that really is ready to post, including The Bolinas Balafon, Power Man, The Covelo Rd. Gong Collection, The First Bolinas Instrument, The Second Bolinas Instrument, and more.

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Totem Repair Shop: detail from work in progress

Detail from work in progress: Totem Repair Shop

Detail from work in progress: "Totem Repair Shop"

To welcome a new subscriber who signed up earlier today, I am presenting this enlarged detail of the current color digital decalcomania drawing in progress. The title may be tweaked a bit later on, but this section of the drawing is very close to the way it will appear in the finished version.

The more time I spend adapting my digital decalcomania methods to a color resource, the more I am enjoying the possibilities and surprises that arise.

Part of the above image appeared in an earlier post. Now you can see the context in which the little “Listener” in the lower left corner finds himself.

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