Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Flip Book

Christopher: The animation of the man with the color cloud was good, but I would put some more action to make it more entertained.

Erin: The concept of the animation was very cool. I like how you played with the colors and how each character was developed.

Kimberly: I love that the book is very colorful and the animation was well developed. I really enjoyed it.

Brian: I like the interaction of the cube with the music notes. It was something simple but complete.

Lauren: It was really good animation, it makes want to see more.

Juan: Very unique concept. It was hard to read the letter, but what I like about it is that it was something out of the common.

Sabrina: I like how you used color in the animation. I like the color in the music notes.

Arielle: Well develop of the story. It was so sad, that almost makes me cry. It was really good because it plays with the viewers eyes and feelings.

Michelle: i like that you used color in the entire book and I love the story.

Megan: Very creative and good story line.

James: I like the interaction of the color and how you make the story interesting.

Nakota: I love that it is very colorful and the story it was easy to follow.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

BluBlu


The Stop-Motion Interactive Graffiti work of Blu is a hard work that requires time to planning and patience to make it works. In this amazing work the artist is trying to show that people have been destroyed everything over the time, which it will end with the destruction of the society.



MUTO a wall-painted animation by BLU from blu on Vimeo.

Jazz

Jazz began with the African Americans who were brought over by slave ships. People took the African Americans' music and change it to form jazz. Jazz started in the Western Hemisphere, and it first reached critical mass in New Orleans. The founders of Jazz were all a races, but the key innovators were African-Americans. Nobody knows how the early jazz sound because of the virulent racism in New Orleans, black musicians from that city were not welcome in recording studios.