Thursday 4 December 2014

Group Tutorials

From the group tutorial, I now know I need to seriously work out where I want to go with my essay. It was suggested I go with the gig posters in the internet age theme, as the other was too vague.

Suggestions:

  • Look into gig posters and subcultures 
  • Look at older gig posters e.g. the Woodstock ones, and find writing on that
  • Focus on how we can translate modern posters to screen (idea for practical piece)
  • Do some actual research 


Wednesday 3 December 2014

Study Task 5 - Essay Plan

I have decided to go ahead and create an essay plan for the posters theme, as I can re-start the whole thing over christmas if I get a negative response from the group crit. It is going to be more about social and cultural posters though; this included gig and event posters but doesn't limit it down so much, and I can bring in current issues and potentially make a poster for some for my practical piece. My back up themes are the palm oil industry and how it is effecting the environment, or about how the current education system promotes science based subjects over the arts. 


Suggested Essay Titles
1. Are gig posters still relevant to the promotion of music in the modern internet age?

2. Can social and cultural posters communicate issues as effectively  and appropriately as other methods, e.g. an article or debate?


Significance
Not a massively pressing issue compared to something like a big environmental issue, but I really like well designed posters and think they do have a massive impact onto how something is portrayed; it can provoke discussion, emotion, thinking and can look really good on a wall. There is something nice and eye catching about a well crafted poster in the modern age where we look at screens a lot of the time. I would like to highlight and encourage the production of posters through this essay. By doing this, it is also promoting the arts in general; the more art that is around and in the public eye, the more will be created off the back of it. Leeds is a great place to be doing research for this theme as well as there are posters plastered over walls everywhere, and people in my own class creating posters for real events I can talk to.

Primary and Secondary Resources
I need to find out where I am getting my research from. Go and do some!


Methods
I am going to try and find as much material on this subject as possible; the physical won't be a problem, but articles and research may be a little. There are a few internet articles and blogs floating around, and the gig poster.com website and book, but I need to find some proper academic resources. To do this I can look at past dissertations and poster design books in the library, or find some historical posters that were involved in massive social changes and events, e.g. the women's rights posters. 


Limitations
I have chosen to focus on the social and cultural posters instead of purely gig and events, as I can find more secondary research this way. I have also chosen 'posters' instead of 'propaganda' as the latter can often trail into stuff about Nazis and super pressing issues; I still want to include posters created for little events, such as a free pub gig, and focus on the art and production side rather than the historical for the main bulk of the essay.


Essay Plan

Introduction:
300-400 words
Highlight what my theme is, and what I would like to achieve by researching and writing about it; what knowledge I want to gain through it.

Main Body:
1500 words
Argue how powerful a poster is in communicating a theme or opinion versus other methods, e.g. writing or debate, "A picture is worth a thousand words". Reflect on historical events and how posters have been used within them (need to find out which ones). Bring in aspects about how fitting a poster is for what it is communicating, and how effectively it has been designed. Talk about how it is important for us to have posters around us in the modern age, where a lot of what we look at is screens and the impact they have on displaying art and illustration in the public. I will include sources from the three websites I have found so far, and find some research from books (might have to be propaganda based kind of stuff if I can't find much). 

Visual Examples:
700-800 words

  • One gig/event poster, preferably from around Leeds so I can do lots of research.
  • One historical poster that famously had a social effect.
  • One poster dealing with current issues by a current illustrator. 
Compare them all as a set, by what they have been created for and the historical context behind them. When, where, why and how were they made? (Write about them as I did for the visual discourse task, but better).

Conclusion:
300-400 words
Sum up what I have found out; simplify points I have covered and pick out the findings. 

Sunday 30 November 2014

Maybe Changing my Idea….

I didn't realise at the beginning of this module that the first pictures we picked would lead into our essays; I just picked a gig poster I liked and felt able to write about for the first task. I feel like I should change my idea into something that has a bit more depth, for example environmental problems. It will be easier to find secondary research to reference in my final essay this way, and probably will have a lot more illustrations to refer to as well. The gig poster idea would be great for the practical final piece in this module, but I am struggling to come up with an essay question. 



*Although I did find these links about gig posters today and the relevance of them...

http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/art/features/ultimate-pop-art--why-gig-posters-are-a-sound-investment-7827640.html

http://jayel993.wordpress.com

http://www.graphicart-news.com/what-social-poster-design-is-7-significant-poster-designers-advice/#.VH7_8FbN7fU

Wednesday 5 November 2014

Five images that suppport my analysis







These are five images that support my analysis of the gig poster, as I think they have been created to work for, support and advertise brilliantly the event they are about. Two of them are more examples of how the Arctic Monkeys use women as a symbol of fashionable attraction to build a brand for themselves, via male and female fans, as they did in the previous poster.

Friday 24 October 2014

Feedback on Visual Discourse Analysis

The feedback from the peer review session was overall positive and I am happy with it; the essay shouldn't need to many changes before I extend it with quotes. The overall strengths were the focus on context and cultural references as well as visual, linguistic and rhetorical mechanisms. However, it was suggested I could expand on the production process of the poster, for example where it was designed and the parameters of the screenprints. I could also add a little about the band, and my own opinion of the visual look of the poster; do I like it or not? I will take this into account and add a little when I update the essay. 

Wednesday 22 October 2014

Visual Discourse Analysis (500 words)

The poster created by Dan Stiles for the Arctic Monkeys gig would have been advertising a massive event, as the Arctic Monkeys are currently one of the worlds most popular and well known bands, especially in America where the gig was happening (Lewiston, New York). It is also very current, as it was made in the summer of this year, June 2014. The poster would have not just been created for advertising; gig posters are increasingly becoming more collectable and recognised as valuable pieces of  work, selling on the internet and in shops for up to thousands of pounds depending on the rarity. Fans of the band would have bought this poster as memorabilia, or something to hang on their walls as a piece of art whether they attended the gig or not. I came across this poster via the book and website gigposters.com, a well known library of posters created by Clay Hayes, so it is widely accessible around the world.

The target audience for this poster is very wide, as the popular tour it was created for had seats for thousands of people per gig. It appeals to both male and female viewers of a wide age group, by depicting the silhouette of an attractive lady in psychedelic, sixties looking colours and patterns. The majority of the lyrics within the bands songs are based on women, so the poster is literally visualising what the band is 'about'.  The vintage connotations also link directly to the band, as they currently have taken on a more old fashioned look themselves, and gives the poster a more fashionable edge. This would also help the appeal towards the female audience; the only detail on the silhouette are a pair of vintage sunglasses and pouty lips, looking like the kind of editorial illustration you would find within a fashion magazine. The male audience would be (more obviously) drawn into the bold image of a woman with a sexy figure. The graphic look of the poster enhances this, drawing attention to how she has been designed with an exaggerated hourglass figure; what men historically deem as ideally attractive.

The colours involved within the poster reflect the time of year when it was published; sunny yellows, hot pinks, bright blues and clear greens all hint at the idea of summer. June is the month when you can finally start believing the weather might be getting permanently better, and you can start to celebrate the new season. It is a feel-good poster, probably even drawing in the eyes of passers by who are not fans of the band. It is an image of mass communication about the band; bright, bold and relatable.

Personally, I think the poster has been very well designed, as it does it's job perfectly as a bright and eye catching advert, linking directly and indirectly with the music and look of the band, and the current fashionable themes of 2014. It exists digitally all over the world, and in a series of 130 limited edition screenprints, bringing back the essence of handmade quality for the more passionate fans and collectors (of the band and artist alike). This poster gives you the opportunity to own something that was created especially for one evening of great music, something a lot of people would aspire to have.



http://www.danstiles.com

Wednesday 15 October 2014

Choosing my keyword

I am going to focus on the theme of society for my Context of Practice module, as I think it gives me the biggest selection of topics to choose from (history and culture can sort of fall within society itself). I am most interested in people, and since people make up societies, it seems the wisest choice to make. 

At the moment, I am thinking of looking into something along the lines of poster advertising (relating back to the gig poster design book in my last post) and how design can affect the power of the advert. Posters with really eye catching designs and with loads of effort put in are just so much more attractive, and probably attract a certain audience over others who may not be so visually interested. The pictures I have included below make the event seem like more of a one off thing (even if it's not) because they have a one off design. They also make it more of an art piece rather than just an advert. 



 




















I am also interested in how currently maths and science subjects are being regarded much more highly over arts subjects in schools. It really annoyed me when my friends and I were looking into what to do next after sixth form and realising that some universities didn't take art as a qualifying subject, and how teachers constantly tell  younger students that you have to take an academic subject like biology to get anywhere in the future. People don't seem to realise how important the arts are within society; look around any city or town and you can see that art and design makes up a massive part of British culture. However, I need to do some research and find out if this was just the attitude in my schools and where I grew up or if it was the whole country before I take it any further.

Posters by Dan Stiles (Arctic Monkeys, 2014) and John Biddle (Sleighbells, 2010)


Wednesday 8 October 2014

Library Books







These are two books which I could potentially be interested in writing my COP essay about, that I have borrowed from the college library. I love the images they both contain and think both are important subjects; a good book cover and a good poster can completely change how the book or event is being advertised.

The library references are 741.64 and 741.67