Showing posts with label final major project. Show all posts
Showing posts with label final major project. Show all posts

Saturday, 6 June 2015

FMP: Graceland


"And my travelling companion is nine years old, he is the child of my first marriage, and I have reason to believe we both will be received in Graceland..."

Graceland is the title track from the album so I thought it would be foolish not to make a storytelling map for it! Paul Simon describes the song as a 'country travelling song', inspired by the musicians he met whilst working in South Africa, but there is also an underlying story of love and loss which I found to be very important within the story of the lyrics. Although never formally mentioned, the song suggests that the narrator has been through a recent breakup with his wife and is extremely heartbroken. This leads to the idyllic ideals that Graceland will be all receiving and that he should travel there with his nine year old son.

I wanted to convey this feeling of moving away from loss and into a happier place. The right hand side of the map is bare and lifeless, as if to represent the emptiness in his life. But he and his son are moving onwards to the left of the map which is full of crops and trees and people and bountifulness, conveying the richness of life he hopes to receive when reaching Graceland. I liked the idea of Graceland not just being the home of Elvis, but also this amazingly fantastical funland which was dedicated to the King himself!

Whilst this is all unfolding on the earth below, the ex-wife looks on brushing 'her hair from the forehead'. I wanted the perspective of the story to be seen almost through her eyes as, even though she isn't even named in the song, she plays a very important role in the emotions of the song.

Other elements from the lyrics have been picked up such as 'the Mississippi Delta', 'the civil war', 'pilgrims', 'the wind blows' and, in the background, 'there is a girl in New York City who calls herself the human trampoline...' The space of the island itself is Tennessee.






Friday, 29 May 2015

FMP: Diamonds on the Soles of her Shoes


"People say she's crazy, she's got diamonds on the soles of her shoes, well that's one way to lose these walking blues, diamonds on the soles of her shoes..."

Her is one of my four final pieces for my FMP. This is probably the picture I am most happy with, I feel the composition and the colours work well together.

The idea behind this image was that the 'poor boy' was looking up at the 'rich girl' from his home in South Africa where he was a diamond miner. This is both a reference to lyrics in the song and the blood diamond fiasco that happened around the time that the album was made (which some people believe the song has made reference to). He is looking up to her lovingly, as she is almost unattainable because they come from two different worlds.

The 'rich girl' sits almost on top of the world as she is perched about New York, specifically Broadway, which shows a number of different buildings including theatres, dancehalls and bodegas (a bodega is a small supermarket!). These two worlds have been separated by water, which features in all of the images. As the girl looks down, we see her focused on two characters, who are actually her and the 'poor boy' who find love against the odds and end up 'sleeping in a doorway' together.

The idea for the landscapes of these islands was that they were a bit whimsical and fantastical, hence water cascading down into the abyss and mountains with faces and features. The colour palette was taken from the earthiness and tribal-like twigs I painted for my promotional materials.

I am not 100% happy with the final outcomes for my pieces, but I think they express a personal representation of each song from the album, interlaced with the ideals of others' accounts as well. It is hard to decipher a song accurately unless you have the lyricist telling you the meaning! All songs mean different things to different people, it is up to you to pick out the elements that you want to understand or create a narrative from. The idea behind these illustrations is that it just gives you a starting point, and you can go from there...



Tuesday, 26 May 2015

FMP: Colour

Here are a few photos of my starting to colour my final pieces...





FMP: Snippets

For my Final Major Project, I created four A2 illustrated storytelling maps depicting four of the best known songs from Paul Simon's icon 1986 album, 'Graceland', as a celebration for the 30th anniversary next year.

Here are some snaps of some WIPs from the project...
(sketchbook work to follow)