During their first year on the MA Animation course,
students take part in several workshops that train their animation
skills and techniques. Students work in small groups and learn to
experiment with image, sound and mixed materials. Samples of these workshops can be seen on this site.
A brief description of each first-year workshop follows.
Image Workshop
For
this project students are asked to discover a ‘small object of desire’
through the use of film / photography and image manipulation. Students
work within certain limitations; they are restricted to working within
the non-digital environment. Traditional drawing methods are limited to
a minimum and no model making is allowed. Apart from these
restrictions, students are free to experiment and explore the
photographic medium.
It is designed to explore the photographic
processes to produce images for the moving image. The use of light and
the objects become the pencil. Students produce and intervene with
images in a non-digital environment. Explore the creation of image and
movement without the concerns of the interaction of sound,
characterisation or story.
The ideas of experimentation, play, discovery and happy accidents feature heavily.
All projects are realised on 16mm film.
Sound Workshop
In
animation, visual elements and the soundtrack share an excitingly close
partnership. Sound plays a paramount role in defining the pace, the
characters and the spaces of a film.
In the 1st year Sound
workshop, students collaborate in groups of two or three to create
sound pieces. The main idea is to explore ways that sound shapes space,
time, textures etc. By means of sound recording and editing, students
experiment freely to develop their specific sound worlds and sound
language. The projects encompass the whole process, from conceiving a
piece together, through recording, shaping and mixing it.
Space, time and emotion are key areas explored in this workshop.
Storyboard Workshop
Timing and pacing are an important aspect of storytelling as are structure, sequencing events and viewpoint.
The
storyboard workshop takes place over 4 days. The workshop aims to give
students decision-making experience with tight deadlines.
Students
write their own stories that have to work as text, they are then
adapted and visualised in storyboards. Sound is given equal
consideration to the image. There are intentional restrictions that
encourage spontaneity and experience directing skills.
The
opportunity for students to develop their storytelling skills is
coupled with an exploration of form and structure without the pressure
of production.
Lip-Synch Workshop
Embodying voice.
Lip
sync in its simplest form is breaking down sequences of dialogue into
phonetics, then synchronising mouth shapes to the soundtrack.
We
not only use our mouths to talk a large amount of information can be
conveyed by body language, gesture and in this case animation and
design.
In this project students use pre-recorded interviews
from the Imperial War Museum Archive to explore and interpret
characterisation and acting.
The Lip-synch workshop is a two week exercise during Term 1 of the MA Animation course.
Drawing in Animation
Click
here
to find out more about Drawing in Animation.