Foundations of Design : REPRESENTATION, SEM1, 2017 M2 JOURNAL - FLATNESS vs PROJECTION Jianan Zhang(889570)
Mr.Junhan Foong Tutorial11
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WEEK 3 READING: TITLE OF READING
Question 1: What is Pictorial Space according to Le Corbusier? (Maximum 100 words) Answer 1: Le Corbuiser thought it is the space which cannot be entered or circulated through; apart from that, the space is irremediably viewed from a diatance, and therefore, it is eternally resigned to frontality.
Question 2: The Flatness of Le Corbusier’s painting’s are attributable to two properties. What are they? And what are these pitted against?(Maximum 100 words) Answer 2: Relate to the Le Corbyusier’s painting, the distance and depth can be represented in the painting. For distance, it is the cesura between the appearance of the object and the object itself and against with shadow. As for depth, white and black are generally used to show the span from edge to edge, and it is against the texture of the object.
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MARIO’S WORLD
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1ST MARIO’S WORLD
This is my first draft with inaccuracy and wrong understanding. One of the non-negligible mistakes is that the order of the backwards view is inverse, which means objects supposed to be at the right side are shown at the lift, thus, I have to redraw it. Apart from that, the fine lines on the paper are not parallel and vertical to each other due to the early hurry-up work, and the whole work was not neat and fancy.
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COMBINED MARIO’S WORLD
My final hand drawing is a milk factory. The mistakes in layout were fixed and new elements were created, such as the glass section of underground factory,low level milk machine and boxes of milk. With using of T square and set square, angles of the pen line are neat and clear.
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WEEK 4 READING: TITLE OF READING Complete your reading before attempting these questions:
Question 1: Explain the difference between Pictoral (in this case perspectival) space and Projection? (Maximum 100 words) Answer 1: System of projection is utilizing vanishing points, converging projectors and picture planes, and when they are aligned, perspectives created, otherwise, the projection is the distorted anamorphic. Perspective was scientific and generalizable, always linked to a fixed point of view.
Question 2: Where did Axonometric projection first arise, and why? (Maximum 100 words) Answer 2: The axonometric arose at the early twentieth century by avant-garde artists in European. There two main reasons. Firstly, the desire of objectivity of science and the traditional concept of the artist. Moreover, it is the ideal device to represent universal geometry and infinite space.
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ILLUSTRATED MARIO’S NEW WORLD
Mario, Mario an extreme Milk Factory milk lover, owns an automatic and industrialized milk factory. This drawing shows the detailed layout and construction of the whole site. There are three main parts within it(from the front to the back): ˙ Cow Farm ˙ Processing of Milk ˙ Sales and Office Area The following features of the factory can be told from the drawing: ˙ Majority of cows are bleeding in underground area ˙ Milk is made by a huge machine in the middle of the lower ground floor and added various flavours ˙ The tall blocks located in the factory are boxes of the milk, those are not only the tourist attraction, and also with milk storage function ˙ The factory is 99% automatic ˙ Pipes in different colors transfer different flavour of milk ˙ The owner of the factory is a huge guy with fatty ass, addicted in milk
Welcome to the Mario and Milk World! Enjoy the attractive view and free milk!
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HAND DRAWING ON PAPER
APPENDIX
Fig.1
Set up the drawing table
Fig.3 Half part of the final drawing
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Fig.2 First back part of hand drawing
Fig.4
Front part of the final drawing
COLORING AND TRACING IN ILLUSTRATOR
Stage 1 Skeleton of draft
Stage 2 Add color to the ground Factory divided into parts
Stage 3 Add color to the architecture
Stage 4 Add the texture and more details
Stage 5 Add the upper level
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ADDITIONAL ELEMENTS
Fig.1 Model of Bull
Fig.6 Clouds
Fig.4 Icon of Mario Milk Factory
Fig.2 Model of Cow
MARIO MILK FACTORY Fig.5 Title on the Lawn
Fig.3 Pipe
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Fig.7 Coins and Blocks
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MAIN CHARACTER