Thursday, July 10, 2008

Background Design

Renée came to me the other day with a question about background design...mainly that she wanted some inspiration to look at, so I pointed her in the direction of Rob Richard's Animation Backgrounds blog. I'd seen it referenced before on John K's blog as a one-stop depot for animation backgrounds of all styles, minus the characters! There's even a handy list on the side that helps organize them into films and periods. Well, a day later, John K. is blogging away about backgrounds. Check out his post here, as I'm referencing only a few of the images he pulled from Rob Richard's site.

I'll be the first to admit that I have a difficult time with backgrounds. John K. does a good job breaking down the key principles of composition and hierarchy—how you frame a shot and how you organize elements on a page. Like with everything else in image-making, it's always key to consider things like contrast, positive and negative space (you know the laundry list)...all the things you would consider as a designer of anything. Here are two "stylized" backgrounds that really excel (from Warner Brothers Cartoons of the 1950s):



Breathtaking! I can recall a recent film we did where we had a scene with a park bench —notice the frame of reference here. I know I fall into the trap of keeping the horizon at a flat 180 degrees. See how much more dynamic these compositions are because of the angling of forms? They still adhere to a system of perspective and logic. Here are poignant words from John K:

"Some modern layout artists see a license for anarchy in these stylized images. I see very slightly distorted perspectives and stylistic interpretations of reality, but with still great planning and organization of all the graphic elements into a quickly readable statement that has a purpose in the scene and story. Each element does not follow its own physics ; it is subservient to the overall composition. Every detail follows and helps define the larger object it is part of."

Check out this fire red background from 101 Dalmations:

Here's a random shot from The Jungle Book. You can tell right away where Mowgli is supposed to go, and the background is balanced as to not overwhelm you with jungle:

Or a house fit for a mouse! This is from "Jonann Mouse", a Tom and Jerry cartoon that won an Oscar. This is the full pan...low to the ground (notice the chair leg in the foreground):

Anyway, that's just a small sampling. Definitely check out this invaluable resource!

2 comments:

Renee Kurilla said...

So, here is my question now...How do the characters come in to play? Do you think these background artists stuck specifically to the original storyboard - or did they elaborate at all?
I'd be intrigued to go back even a step further to the storyboard and see how the characters are worked into the scene in the sketch.
The backgrounds shown here stand alone as beautiful illustrations. I think the staircase is just amazing, I'd totally hang that framed on my wall.

Bob Flynn said...

Wow, really good question. I guess we wouldn't know for sure unless we got a peek in on the production art. You know, Michael Sporn does a good job of setting up the full picture on his blog. Check out the section just on storyboarding:

Story & Storyboards

You can compare it to your memory of the films, or cross reference with the art from the Animation Backgrounds blog. Actually, that might be a fun post to draw up.

My hunch is that the background artists stay VERY strict to the storyboard, considering character placement BIG time.

For a direct example, I noticed they have a clips of the movies on the blog when possible. You love that staircase, its from "Hyde and Hare", which you can watch here:

Hyde and Hare