A Kick in the Head, Part One

A couple of weeks ago I gave a lecture at CalArts. While trying to think of interesting things to talk about, I decided part of the lecture should be about the simple things that people seem to forget about when they leave school and get out into the professional world. I think that when you start working at a studio and have to start dealing with the issues of collaborating with other artists, deadlines, meetings and all the other new variables that come with that change, many artists find it hard to remember the simple basic things that can make the difference between a good drawing and a poor one. Especially with the hectic pace that artists have to work at these days it's always easy to tell yourself that there's not enough time to fix that one drawing that doesn't work, or push that one expression just a bit further....and then after a while every drawing is just a "placeholder" that's just blocked in and no drawing is very good or descriptive or helpful to the artists that have to come after you and use your work to actually make the movie.

Drawing is made up of a few rules that are deceptively simple, and it's very easy to just let one or two fall by the wayside, particularly when you can blame the schedule. But once you drop one or two of those basic drawing rules, your drawing never has even a remote chance of being good. I would say that a hectic production schedule actually makes it more imperative that we do the best drawing that we can and solve as many problems as we can for the people (layout and animators in particular) who have to follow us up because they are going to be pressed for time too. Any "leg up" we can give them - whether it's the environment and staging for layout, or the acting, the expression and the pose for the animators - will help them do the best job they can within the limited time they have.

Anyway, "Silhouette Value" is the most basic of concepts and suffers the most from being so basic that most people don't give it much thought once they're not a student anymore.

If you're not familiar with the concept, here's a quick review:



It's simple, it's obvious, and it's so basic that we learn it right away in art school and then we forget it. It's so simple and basic that I think we de-value it...we think to ourselves, "that can't be that important, it's too basic and obvious...forget that, I want to learn the complicated (and therefore better) drawing tricks!"

But the truth is that there aren't really any special drawing tricks...it's just the same basic things, repeated over and over again, used with increasing sophistication and subtlety that makes a drawing great.

I also think that 3D animators don't tend to remember silhouette value as much as 2D animators because they're not dealing with drawings as much as they animate.

I think if you took one day to walk the halls of any studio and just take stock of the artwork on the walls, the visual development, the storyboards and the animation the animators are doing, you'd be surprised how little of it actually has good silhouette value. Don't get me wrong, it would all be extremely well done and inspiring, I'm sure, but almost nobody gives this concept the respect it deserves in their everyday work. The reason silhouette value is important is because it's a great aid to "foolproofing" the clarity in your drawings - it helps make sure that everyone can tell exactly what your character is doing at all times.

Chuck Jones




Milt Caniff



This one is pretty interesting. Never seen a better drawing of a guy hitting a dragon on the head and seeing it barf treasure into a lady's skirt before.



I do have one small quibble, however...



More Silhouette goodness...






More kicks to come...

Dan Harmon on "Monster House"

I've never seen "Monster House", but it was apparently written by Dan Harmon, creator of the NBC show "Community". When a friend of his wrote to him because her daughter was having nightmares after seeing "Monster House", Mr. Harmon wrote a letter to her daughter explaining that a scary movie should be scary but also empowering, giving you the message that you can confront and overcome your fears (like "Jaws"). Most scary movies are worthless and a complete waste of time because they have no message and all they try to do is scare the bejesus out of you by having things leap out at you constantly.

Anyway, I'm interpreting what he said, you should read the original letter and his full response here. It's short and great and very inspiring.

I don't know if he ever meant for the letter to become public because he calls Spielberg a "moron".

To me, Dan Harmon is a genius because "Community" is my favorite show these days, I think it's amazing, and I can't figure out why nobody else is watching it, especially because "The Office" and "30 Rock" seem to have lost their sense of humor this season, but maybe that's just me.