Chimaera was already featured on a Flash animation site? WHAT. WHAT. This is awesome!
I think I'll be working in this program a bit more!
Click the pic below!
Thursday, October 27, 2011
Chimaera already made print?!
Posted by Unknown at 10:18 AM 0 comments
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Senior Thesis Animation 2 - Chimaera
Senior Thesis Project #2 is complete! And just in time for Halloween. :) This was a way of forcing myself to get more familiar with anatomy and moving volumes around in space. Adding the sound changed it from beautiful to gross in no time flat. Ew...
27 seconds, 10 days.
Frame-by-frame in Flash.
Posted by Unknown at 9:28 PM 0 comments
Labels: animation, senior thesis
Blue Jay Lipsync
First lipsync, back in 2010.
Posted by Unknown at 9:24 PM 0 comments
Labels: animation
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
Postcard
The UPenn art department sometimes distributes postcards advertising certain classes/concentrations. This year's animation postcard features some familiar faces!
Posted by Unknown at 10:04 AM 0 comments
Saturday, October 15, 2011
Thesis Anatomy Sketches 1
Next thesis project is going to be a forced attempt to get better at anatomy. Will I succeed?? ...Who knows, but here, have some skeletons. This is gonna be a very Halloween-y project.
Posted by Unknown at 2:24 PM 0 comments
Labels: senior thesis, sketches
Monday, October 10, 2011
Selective Echo Blog - Utah Arts Festival
How the Coyote got his Cunning was featured at this year's Utah Arts Festival in Salt Lake City, and a visitor outlined some of the entries of the show on his blog. Nine different showings, based on the Nine Muses, were the basis of the festival, and Coyote was put in the Comedy section, which was entirely kid friendly — the selections of which were determined by the curator's own kids!
"COMEDY
This provided the ideal opportunity for Horman to give the Art Yard its first kids’ version of Fear No Film. A half-hour screening of seven clever, cute, and whimsical pieces will screen every hour while the venue is open. All the films are suitable for children ages three and older. Horman screened the selections with his children, who gave their rousing endorsements.
All of the selections are as charming as one can imagine ... [including] ‘How the Coyote Got His Cunning,’ a definitive example of soundly executed old-school animation from Pennsylvania."
Click the pic below!
Posted by Unknown at 1:37 PM 0 comments






