Friday, November 14, 2008

Requirements

All course requirements should be completed and handed in on CD-Rom and hard copy (color paper print-out) by:
BA113/02 Tuesday 12/9/08
Since Tuesday is marked as a study day, you may leave your CD's and paper copies in my
mailbox.
BA113/03 Friday 12/12/08
Remember these materials will not be returned.
If a paper copy of the item has already been handed in and graded it is not necessary to hand it in again. The item still must be saved to the CD.

Below is a list of the semester's requirements:
• Research Paper and Timeline
• PhotoShop Poster
• Illustrator Woodcut
• Illustrator Logo
• Power Point Digital Portfolio- Print a hard copy by choosing FILE> PRINT> Make the correct selection for the printer (Color 34) and amount of copies> go to PRINT WHAT and choose multiple slides per page (you can choose from 2 - 9 slides- try to sum your power point up in two pages)

• InDesign CD Design
• Blog: The blog will include all items listed above along with tutorials pertaining to each program (this includes: MS Word Timeline, PhotoShop Threaded Image, Derek Lea's PhotoShop Low Brow Art Tutorial and B-Movie Poster Tutorial, Illustrator Pumpkin Tutorial, Illustrator Logo Tutorials- Curved Text, 3-D, Image in Text, Figure-Ground)

Grading Criteria (all of which are equally important to your success)

Quality Excellent Superior Adequate Minimal Failure

Subject & Content _____ _____ _____ _____ _____

Demonstrated Effort _____ _____ _____ _____ _____

Compositional Choices _____ _____ _____ _____ _____

Media Experimentation _____ _____ _____ _____ _____

Technical Proficiency _____ _____ _____ _____ _____

Overall Effectiveness _____ _____ _____ _____ _____

Monday, October 20, 2008

DreamWeaver/ Web work

Brief discussion on Dreamweaver and options for websites will take place the last two classes.
Information will be handed out.

Please check back for Dreamweaver and website suggestions and links. Information will be updated here.

InDesign

InDesign CD Layout
Use sample templates to design a CD booklet or book sleeve. Replace existing images or text with your own designs to recreate a CD booklet or book sleeve for a band, a musician or create your own compilation. InDesign is a layout program. You will use PhotoShop and/or Illustrator to alter your images before dragging or placing them into InDesign.

Choosing a Compact Disc Format:
•Open New Document and a new document dialogue will appear
•Go to Page Size and click in the name of the default preset
•A setup menu will drop down revealing presets
•Choose Compact Disc
•Choose your document preferences and click OK when you are done
•You now have CD booklet dimensions so begin your project.
or choose an appropriate template from Adobe Bridge to begin with.
The instructor has templates prepared and will place them on your computer. You may choose the booklet or book sleeve. The CD label is not a requirement but a fun addition to to the Cd package.

Booklet





Book Sleeve


CD/DVD Label


Sample CD:
Booklet 1





Book Sleeve 1


Label 1


InDesign Tools:



Important Tools for Beginners:


Printing your Booklet:
The hard copy you hand in does not have to be a folded CD booklet or printed back to back. Which ever format you choose, print as usual. Be sure to use Page Setup and choose the landscape format. The image must fit in the page entirely.

Printing the Booklet from the Instructor's Layout:

• Go to PRINT> PAGES> RANGE> 2-3
Turn it over and place it back in the printing tray
• Go to PRINT> PAGES> RANGE> 8-9

• Go to PRINT> PAGES> RANGE> 4-5
Turn it over and place it back in the printing tray
• Go to PRINT> PAGES> RANGE> 6-7

PowerPoint

A PowerPoint Artist:
E.E.E.I.
Envisioning Emotional Epistemological Information
I have been working with PowerPoint, the ubiquitous presentation software, as an art medium for a number of years. It started off as a joke (this software is a symbol of corporate salesmanship, or lack thereof) but then the work took on a life of its own as I realized I could create pieces that were moving, despite the limitations of the "medium." I have shown these pieces in galleries and museums and most recently have produced a book with a DVD (Envisioning Emotional Epistemological Information) as means of presenting these curiosities.
http://www.davidbyrne.com/art/eeei/index.php

Byrne, PowerPoint

David Byrne’s Trees, Tombstones, & Bullet Points

George Eastman House, the world’s oldest photography museum, continues its commitment to displaying new media this fall with a digital display by musician and artist David Byrne, best known for his band Talking Heads. Byrne has created Trees, Tombstones, & Bullet Points, which includes an animated PowerPoint presentation, corporate sign series, and tree drawings, on view at Eastman House Oct. 2, 2004 through Feb. 6, 2005.

Byrne’s 20-minute PowerPoint display treats visitors to psychedelic graphics, satirical charts, and morphing photographs. Byrne, who was trained as a fine artist, has developed an animated presentation unlike any seen at a corporate sales conference. PowerPoint’s slick graphics and pre-designed templates can make even the blandest lecture look good, but it has never been considered as a tool for creative expression. Until now.

The project began “as a joke,” explains Byrne. “But then the work took on a life of its own as I realized I could create pieces that were moving, despite the limitations of the medium.” The exhibition is accompanied by a 96-page book and DVD, available in the Eastman House Store.

satirize postmodern posturing, typographical compositions that present absurd abstractions with straight-faced conviction and deadpan photographs of the most humdrum of everyday objects all morph into one another with the steady pacing of corporate sales conference . . . Eventually, the obsessive nature of the process yieldsHere’s how The New York Times in 2003 reviewed Byrne’s artwork: “Mr. Byrne subjects PowerPoint’s characteristic graphic templates to a radical metamorphosis. Arrows that curve out of their trajectory and into psychedelic rainbow-colored curlicues, surreal charts that unexpectedly beautiful results.”

Storytelling: Contemporary Approaches to New Media. The Eastman House’s next new-media display follows in late October, with Within the Stone by Apple Computer pioneer Bill Atkinson, who invented the pull-down menu. Within the Stone, which realizes the full potential of digital printing, will be on view Oct. 23 through Jan. 9, 2005. The display will feature the fine art of color photography by showcasing his high-resolutionEastman House launched its ongoing new-media showcase in May, with the exhibition images of sliced, polished stones from around the world, revealing abstract, painterly qualities. The images are printed on the large-format Epson Stylus Pro 9600 using custom software the artist developed. Atkinson will visit George Eastman House Oct. 24 and 25 for a public workshop, lecture, and booksigning.

http://www.eastmanhouse.org/exhibits/container_13/index.php

Digital Portfolio- Power Point Presentation
Due Date:
BA113/02 12/2/08
BA113/03 12/12/08

You will be creating a Power Point presentation that includes your professional information and images of your artwork. In the future you will be asked to submit portfolios of your work for competitions, grant proposals, internships, scholarships, galleries, admission to graduate school as well as for employment.

For this assignment you are required to produce the following:

1- Personal Logo

2- Artist Statement:

Write two or three paragraphs, no more than a page, describing why you are an artist and why you make art. You may wish to discuss specifically the art you create or the field in which you wish to enter. Many applications require you to explain and demonstrate how sincere and dedicated you are to art. In addition to acting as a sample of your communication skills and professionalism it offers an opportunity for juries and admissions staff to get a better understanding of you and your personality.

Consider:
• A crucial point when you realized you needed to be an artist/designer
• Your inspiration to express yourself visually
• Goals and aspirations for the future, etc.

3- Art Samples

Include at least 9 different works of your art, which may be related or may vary in medium and subject. Scan your work in Photoshop or use images taken with a digital camera to achieve clear accurate reproductions of artwork. If you decide to use sketchbook pages,consider cropping or including the presentation of two consecutive pages in one image.Clean up dust, dirt and fingerprints that do not belong.

Be creative. Consider using effects, transitions, animations and sounds. Your Power Point presentation should incorporate your content in a fluid manner. The goal is to acquaint you to Power Point and communicate using presentations.

Each image should be saved as a JPEG file at a resolution (dpi) of 72 and no larger than 8”x10”. Artwork will display well if it is set on a single (neutral) colored background (such as black, gray, off-white or white). Write the title, the size, the medium and the date of the art’s completion next to, below or above the image.

4- Artist Resume: http://www.collegeart.org/guidelines/

Go to the College Art Association web site. This site can be useful as a resource for structuring your resume. Click on the link: artists resume. It has a detailed description of how to create an appropriate artist resume.

• At this early stage in your career as artists, you will need to include such information as: education- high school, your starting date at Moore, Saturday art school programs, high school art classes and clubs, art related school community projects and programs, any exhibitions you took part in (including at Moore and the student gallery), scholarships and other related awards you’ve earned… If there is a category that is not appropriate to your experience you may omit it for your resume.

5- Hyperlink to Blog

Visit my personal blog spot at…

•Explore Power Point. Information is in the packet. Use the information you have obtained on various programs throughout the course to create a dynamic presentation.

Example:

Power Point Tips:
Correcting your images in PhotoShop

Use PhotoShop to create an accurate digital portfolio.

Under the IMAGE menu> ADJUSTMENTS> LEVELS and adjust the light levels.

The three sliders on the Levels tool adjusts the light levels of your image.
• Right Slider: Highlights
• Middle Slider: Middle Tones
• Left Slider: Shadows
This is useful for images that lose any details in specific areas like the middle grays or shadow areas.


Another option is to simply alter the brightness and contrast controls when a less complex edit is called for.

Also, the Hue/Saturation tool allows you to generally adjust the color.
Clicking on the arrow next to the EDIT window where MASTER is, you can choose specific colors to adjust, rather than all of them.

This is useful when one color seems incorrect. You can also adjust the SATURATION and LIGHTNESS here.

How to use Power Point 2008:
http://www.microsoft.com/mac/help.mspx?app=3
See options on side menu for further information

Information below is taken from above URL and modified to suit the needs of this assignment.

To create a basic presentation or your own template:

Slide master: Automatically adds a slide master to the first slide in your presentation. Any change you make to a slide master is reflected on each slide or layout that is associated with it.

Slide layout: Defines positioning and formatting for text and objects that appear on a slide. Choose the layout that best suits the slide you are creating. You can create your own custom layout.

Choose the right layout for your slide
(Taken from http://www.microsoft.com/mac/products/powerpoint2004/using.aspx?pid=usingpowerpoint2004&type=howto&article=/mac/library/how_to_articles/office2004/ppt_layout.xml)

A PowerPoint for Mac presentation typically includes slides arranged in a variety of layouts. While some slides contain text only, others might include a chart or two, and still others contain text and pictures. Rather than design a slide from scratch, you can save time by choosing one from the collection of slide layouts that is built into PowerPoint.

T
he layouts are designed to work in conjunction with the design templates. The design template controls the overall look of the slide, whereas the slide layout affects the arrangement of specific elements on an individual slide.

• Create a new slide based on a slide layout

On the Formatting Palette, under Add Objects , click the Slides tab.
If the Formatting Palette is hidden, click Formatting Palette on the View menu.

• Click the slide layout thumbnail you want.
A new slide appears, arranged like the thumbnail layout you chose.

The new slide contains boxes, called placeholders, that indicate where information will go. Each placeholder displays a line of instructions, like those in the following picture.

To populate the placeholders with your own information, click or double-click the placeholder as indicated and enter the information you want on the slide.

You can also apply a different layout to an existing slide. Any information you have already entered on the slide is automatically reconfigured to match the new layout.

Apply a different layout to existing slides
In normal or slide sorter view, select the slides you want to change.
On the Formatting Palette, under Add Objects , click the Slide Layout tab. To apply a different Slide Design, on the Formatting Palette, under Change Slides, click the Slide Design Tab.
• Click the slide layout thumbnail you want.

Theme: Creates a unified look for your presentation by using colors, fonts, backgrounds, and graphics that complement each other. Power Point opens up with a specific theme but you can change it anytime.

Theme colors: Uses a different color for each element on a slide, such as the text, hyperlink, and background. Choose your colors for each slide element to unify the look of your presentation.

Adding new slides

Continuing adding slides with layouts that suit your needs. Create slides that will show off your work in the best light. Images of your work must be corrected in PhotoShop, set at 72 dpi and saved as a .jpg files. Customize your slides based on what colors, layout, background… will look best with your work.

•View menu> Normal

•In the top of the left pane, click the Slides tab> choose the slide next to where you want to insert the new slide. Drag a slide to reposition it if needed.

• Elements Gallery> Slide Layouts tab
(The Elements Gallery is below the standard toolbar.)

•Insert new slide> Elements Gallery> choose the slide layout that you want.

Adding or replacing a picture
Add a picture

• Click where you want to insert the picture

• Insert menu> Picture

• Browse the picture that you want to insert> Insert

Add clip art

• Insert menu> Picture> Clip Art

• Browse the clip art that you want to insert>Insert

Replace a picture

• Click the picture that you want to replace and follow the above instructions.

Images may also be inserted from the Formatting Palette under Graphics:


Inserting Transitions

Transitions move one slide to the next using an effect during a slide show. You can add a transition to just one slide, different transitions to different slides, or the same transition to all slides.

• Be sure to be in Normal mode on the View menu.

• In the left pane, click the Slides Slides tab tab, and then click the slide that you want to apply the transition to.

• To select multiple slides, hold down Apple/⌘ as you click the slides.

• Go to Elements Gallery> Transitions tab> click the transitions that you want to use

Change the Speed

• Go to Elements Gallery> Transitions tab> Options

• Under Effect> Slow, Medium, or Fast> Apply

To apply the changes to all slides in the presentation, click Apply to All.

Add a Sound

• Go to Elements Gallery> Transitions tab> Options

• On the Sound pop-up menu> Sound effect> Apply

To apply the changes to all slides in the presentation, click Apply to All.

How to Advance Slides

• Go to Elements Gallery>Transitions tab> Options

• Under Advance Slide, select the On mouse click or the Automatically after seconds check box, and then click Apply.

• If you select Automatically after seconds check box, type the number of seconds.

• To apply the changes to all slides in the presentation, click Apply to All.

Deleting Transitions

Normal mode should be selected on the View menu.

• In the left pane, click the SlidesSlides tab tab, and then click the slide that you want to delete the transition from.

• To select multiple slides, hold down Apple/⌘ as you click the slides.
• Go to
Elements Gallery> the Transitions tab> No Transition No Transitions tab

Note: When you delete transitions, PowerPoint resets all the options you selected in the Transition Options dialog box.

Apply a transition to all slides

Transitions make moving between slides more visually interesting.

• Go to Elements Gallery> Transitions tab

In Elements Gallery, click Transitions

• Choose your transition.

Click transition

• Click Options

Click Options

• In the Transition Options dialog box, click Apply to All.

In Transition Options dialog box, click Apply to All

Hints

• You can also change the speed of the transition in the Transition Options dialog box.

• When you click Apply in the Transition Options dialog box, it applies only to the current slide selected

See Make Slides Come to Life with Transitons and Animations Course on Side menu of http://www.microsoft.com/mac/help.mspx?app=3 under Transitions.

Inserting Animating Effects

Animate text and objects

• Select the text or object that you want to apply an animation. For example — you can fly in text bullet points from the left, one word at a time, or add the sound of applause to a picture when it is uncovered. to.

• Animation applies to all text in a text box or
placeholder- a box with a dotted outline that appears when you create a new slide. Placeholders reserve a space for such objects as the slide title, text, charts, tables, organizational charts, and clip art. For example, if you add an animation to a bulleted list, the animation applies to all the text in the bulleted list placeholder but not to the title text, which is in a separate placeholder.

• On the
View menu> Custom Animation

To animate/Click
How the object or text enters/ Add Entrance Effect Add Entrance Effect button, and then click the effect that you want.

How the object or text appears/ Add Emphasis Effect Add Emphasis Effect button, and then click the effect that you want.

How the object or text exits/ Add Exit Effect Add Exit Effect button, and then click the
effect that you want.


Sounds and movies/ Add Media Actions Add Media Actions button, and then click the effect that you want

Note:
Sound and movie animation effects are available if you select a sound or movie file on the slide.

On a Mac in PP 2008, you can play motion path- the path that a specified object or text will follow as part of an animation sequence for a slide. To preview the animation, click Play Play Animation button

• To change the order of animations, click one of the arrows to move it up or down in the list

Inserting Sound

Add and format sound in a presentation

You can add any sounds that are located on your computer, including sound files or songs from your music library.

Add a sound to a slide

• Click the slide that you want to add sound to.

• Click Media Media button> Insert Sound and Music Insert Sound and Music button

• Choose your file and double-click it.

• To see all the sound file types (for example, .mp3 sound files), on the
Enable pop-up menu, click All Files.

To play/ Click

The sound automatically when the slide appears in the presentation/ Automatically

Note: The sound applies to the current slide and stops playing when you move to the next slide.

The sound when you click the icon/ When Clicked

Note: The sound applies to the current slide and stops playing when you move to the next slide

Inserting Hyperlinks

• Select and highlight text or an image that you wish to add a Hyperlink to. (In our case it is the Blog’s URL at the end of the slides.)

• Insert menu> Hyperlink

• Link to> Paste the URL> OK



Posting your Portfolio to your Blog:

• Title your new post> Digital Portfolio

• Copy and paste your artist’s statement.

• Copy and paste your artist's resume.


• In PowerPoint go to View menu>Notes Page.

• Here you can scroll down each slide using the side bar. On each page take a picture of only your slide by holding down Apple/Command, Shift, and 4. You will target the slide and drag over it to copy the image. The image should appear on your desktop. We have done this before with our timelines. Starting from the last slide up will place them in the correct order on the blog-- it is more efficient this way.

• Upload the pictures to your blog and arrange them if need be.

Printing a hard copy to hand in:

Print a hard copy by choosing FILE> PRINT> Make the correct selection for the printer (Color 34) and amount of copies> go to PRINT WHAT and choose multiple slides per page (you can choose from 2 - 9 slides- try to sum your power point up in two pages)