Wednesday 6 August 2008

Speed Painting - Nico Di Mattia



On the Internet, Speed Paintings are known as a time-lapse video featuring the construction of an image. It is primarily a digital art form whereby the image is hand-drawn and rendered using a tablet and graphics editor such as Photoshop or Painter. The artist may use his imagination or take direct inspiration from a live scene, but will typically choose to recreate an image depicted in a photograph. Whilst the image is in production, every single action on the computer screen is automatically captured and compiled into a real-time video. That recording, which begins with a blank background and ends with the completed piece, then undergoes an editing process. The video is accelerated by a factor of between forty and sixty, components are added or removed and it is also given an appropriate soundtrack. The finished SpeedPainting, which may have taken the artist more than five hours altogether, will usually last little more than three and a half minutes – the average length of a song.
In few words: is the “Behind the Scenes” of an illustration.

1 comment:

Tammy said...

Its amazing to see a piece of art develop over time and when its speeded up like this its really interesting, especially in this picture of lock from lost, you see how much they change the shadows on his face to get it perfect. the finished artical is a true likeness aswell.
I wonder if the Macs at uni have the programme on them to record how we construct a piece!?