Sunday, 15 April 2012

Working in the art and design industry 2





Museums are where artists display their art work and people pay or for are free to view them but some you have to pay for. The painting or art works can be new or very old ones, artifacts.



A museum curator is about £30,935 a year. Entry-level curators will probably start off making about £21,654.50 a year. After some experience, museum curators can make £43,309.



Interior design is where a group of people are set a tack to turn a inner space into an effective setting for the range of human activities that are to take place there, it is a multifaceted profession which in clouds conceptual development, liaising with the stakeholders of a project and the management and execution of the design.



They earn £15.46 an hour, corresponding to £32,166.21 a year. _______________________________________________________________

 Illustrator is someone who draws in books Internet web pages or other types of entertainment. They can describe objects and ideas that are hard to describe with words, they also help the people who can't read well.


There is not really any qualifications needed to be a illustrator, but you need to be interested in art.  



They make about $35,000 per year.
Tattoo art is an person who applies permanent decorative tattoos to the skin, often in a buildings which is usually called a tattoo shop, studio or parlour. They usually learn their craft via an apprenticeship under a trained and experienced mentor.


The qualifications needed to be a Tattoo art are to be able to control what you are doing.


They can make £700-£800 a day.


Game Designer is some-one who makes up a game, based on a theme or a style. they star with a plan and a story bored which is then placed on a computer and drawn in layers so that there can add movement to the character, or a real person is pot in a seance suit and then animated and calibrated to follow controls of the player and the controller.


The qualification needed to be a game designer are, Foundation course- GCSEs at grades E-F, Intermediate course- GCSEs at Grade D, Advanced Course-GCSEs at grade A-C.


They will make around £19,179.70.


Visual or Special Effects Artist is the person who make the effects in a film/programs or a play. They can create an image and/or manipulated outside the context of a live action shoot. This is know as computer generated imagery or for the short was CGI. And they have become increasingly common in big-budget films. They have also recently become easy accessable to the Independent filmmaker with the introduction to affordable animation and compositing software. Newcomers usually enter the industry through internships and apprenticeships.


The qualification needed to be a visual / special effects artist is that a degree or certificate isn't required, but more important is an eye for artistic detail, such as light, shadow and texture.

 They earn about £18.68 an hour or £38,860.55 a year.

They can earn anywhere from £45,0000 to £1 mil a year for top artists.

working in the art and design industry

Role of the marketing team (at chichester college).


Name:Alan Goldsmith.
Job title:Siner Designer.
Qualifications:HMD in graphic design, basic Art and I.C.T
Job role:Design things like postas, lay outs, Ect.


Name: Cherise Loveday.
Job title: Aprentiship.
Qualifications:
Job role: invols aboit of every thing, and confriences.
 



Name: Michael Pink.
Job title: Designer.
Qualifications: HMD in graphic design, basic art and ICT.
Job role: graphic design.
  



Name: Caroline Ponto.
Job title: :Press and communication office.
Qualifications: Writing skills, life exprience, creativity.
Job role: Soicel press, communications



Name: Jane Sumner
Job title: school leason staff.
Qualifications: ---
Job role: goes to school and adivitives the college.




Name: Helen Ward
Job title: head of marketing and addmitions
Qualifications: equnomics, cim, PGCE.
Job role: head of marketing and addmitions.
Name: Jennifer Mitchell.
Job title:  Employer marketing.
Qualifications: ---
Job role: Apprentis finder.

Tuesday, 10 April 2012

julian opie work


My work - by Julian Opie

This is my work inspired by Julian Opie, to make this I had to use photoshop, and the first thig I did was trace the outline of a photo, to get a simple outline.

Then I  skaned the trace in to a skanner to get it on the computer, and then opened up photoshop.

When it was in photoshop, I re-traced the outline using the pencile tool, keeping the feacher very simple, but did each part on a different layer, E.G. a
layer for the hair, hat, clothes, glasses, eye brows and  for my necklaces.

Then I did the colours, i tryed to keep the colour as simple as i could, and the right colours for it to look real but still in the style of Julian Opie, then i added the blue back ground in to make the picture stand out.

<=This is the trace i did of a photo i had taken.










<= And this is the photo i used.