Archive for the 'Animation' Category

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010
Airside recently finished production on an NHS campaign to increase awareness and screening of Hepatits amongst prisoners of UK women’s prisons.
We worked with creative agency Sainted, who were using digital kiosks installed in prisons to get the message to an audience with restricted access to traditional media.

The kiosk’s interactive content features animation and live action footage –designed and produced by Airside –which needed to appeal to a tough crowd about issues such as sexual activity and drug consumption.
Therefore our designs had to be gritty, engaging and entertaining. So, as well as drawing lots of scratchy characters having sex, sharing needles and getting tattoos on their bums, we got to mess around with fake movie blood for those ikky live action scenes.

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Monday, April 5th, 2010
There is nothing quite like a toy version of one of our characters to get us eggs-cited at Easter. And how appropriate that the star of our NTV Friday Roadshow bumper campaign, Stanley, should be stuffed to immortality at this time of the year.  Though we’ll ignore the fact that the Easter Bunny and that death and resurrection malarkey doesn’t mean all that much in Japan.
Stanley was created by Airside for Japanese TV station NTV. He and the other characters we designed have proven very popular and already feature on these charming stationery sets. And now comes the stuffed toy treatment of Stanley, in both day and evening wear. We have no idea how to get our hands on them, though we do have our ex-intern Yoshi on the case.  Sort it out big guy!

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Wednesday, March 31st, 2010
Back in January (the cold time you’ve done your best to forget), a less cold part of the world (Santa Barbara, California) added further warmth to their already toasty lives with volume two of the Amazing Animated Jukebox. The event, quite simply, consists of people sitting in a room watching animated music videos, which sounds like fun to us.
The good people behind the night asked if they could show the video for Lemon Jelly’s Shouty Track. We said yes, and they recently reported back that Shouty’s hand-drawn head-banging and ultra-violence caused much chuckling and chortling amongst the obviously mature and cultured crowd. Check out some photos from the night here.

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Friday, February 19th, 2010

When The Guardian called to see if we were available for a job, there was initial disappointment amongst certain Airsiders, that it wasn’t to help James Richardson write puns for the Football Weekly podcast.  Still, doing some illustrations and an animation to promote their Better Relationships supplement was a fine consolation – though we’re still waiting for that call from AC Jimbo.
Better Relationships is a two-part guide to getting along with your friends and family that came free with The Guardian and The Observer on Valentine’s weekend. Airside created a number of promotional illustrations that appeared in the newspaper, along with a TV commercial that features the return of the chest bump.  All right!  Watch the TV ad here.

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Thursday, January 21st, 2010
When our ace animator Jimi Newport told us he was working on a film for David Shrigley, it felt like a betrayal. Our beloved Jimi had climbed into bed with some other hussy, leaving us alone on a Friday night with nothing but ice cream and reruns of Scrubs for company. But then we remembered that Jimi is a freelancer and working for other people is quite a normal thing for him to do. Still, it doesn’t mean we have to like his film. Except we do.
Shrigley’s latest creation is a hilariously offbeat history of Scottish luxury knitwear manufacturer, Pringle. The film was unveiled last week at the launch of Pringle’s menswear collection in Milan. The three-minute animation is packed with Shrigley’s beautifully wonky illustrations, all brilliantly brought to life by our Jimi. Or James as he is called in the credits. Well, la-di-da Jimi.
Watch A Short Film About Pringle of Scotland by David Shrigley.

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Friday, January 15th, 2010
This has been all over Twitter in the past few days, but if you haven’t seen it already, allow us to fill you in. The guys at Motionographer have posted a review of The Power Gap – our short film collaboration with left-wing think tank, Demos. And jolly nice they were about it as well.
Our favourite line is “Airside deftly used the jester’s tactic to reach its audience: humour mixed with equal parts profundity.” Ahh shucks, thanks you guys. Though we should point out the profundity was mostly Demos. Read the full review here.

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Friday, January 8th, 2010
The Guardian is recommending the Northern Gallery for Contemporary Art’s Think Tank exhibition in their Exhibitionist section. The online feature promotes the best of the week’s exhibitions from around the UK.
Their Think Tank coverage is illustrated by a still from The Power Gap, Airside’s animated collaboration with Demos, which is currently showing as part of the exhibition. Think Tank’s run has now been extended to 13 February 2010.

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Wednesday, December 9th, 2009
Airside was recently approached by the Sunderland-based Northern Gallery of Contemporary Art (NGCA) to take part in an exhibition entitled Think-Tank: A Marketplace of Ideas. The exhibition – part of Design Event 09, the North East’s annual design festival – sees Britain’s leading think tanks collaborate with its top designers to imagine how we might create a better nation.
Being your typical yoghurt-knitting, Guardian-reading liberal lefties, we were only too happy to be paired with the left-wing think tank Demos. Until we saw the intensely detailed statistical study on power in 21st century Britain that they wanted us to explain in a two-minute animation.

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Demos had just completed a nationwide survey, the results of which were used to rate every single constituency in Britain according to a number of different social and economic aspects. Each of these aspects has an effect on the power held by individual people in each area, and by the constituencies as a whole. For Demos, this survey helped explain theoretical concepts about power as well as showing its practical implementation in 21st century Britain.
For Airside it was an epic spreadsheet of numbers with far too many digits after the decimal point (see below). They patiently explained to us what all these numbers meant. We politely nodded our heads and scratched our chins. Eventually the ideas began to sink in but as soon as we began to understand the various implications of the study, another problem arose. How could we possibly even begin to touch on these complex issues in a short animation to be displayed on a loop in an art gallery?

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Obviously Demos weren’t expecting us to cover everything – they just wanted to get ordinary people thinking about the issues raised by their survey. Things like how unemployment makes individuals more dependent on state benefits, thereby reducing their political power, as they would always have to vote for the party who promised to safeguard these benefits. It follows that a region’s overall employment level affected its power and areas of high unemployment had less power and influence than those with plenty of jobs.
This was the kind of simplified explanation that helped us start to understand the study. And given that we are ordinary people, we figured this should work for everyone. We just needed a hook on which to hang our painted-by-numbers picture. The variety of different factors that could affect an individual’s power seemed to have parallels with card-based games like Top Trumps or fantasy role-playing games like Dungeons & Dragons. This analogy was easily extended to the world of video games where characters often have energy bars that are lowered by damage or increased by “power-ups”.

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Our first script was a straightforward explanation of the different factors, such as education, wealth and employment, measured by the Demos study. It featured two characters from different regions, whose power bars would increase or decrease according to the particular score of their area. The designers began work on character design, based on simple pictograms that, besides being a classic staple of information graphics, would signify the everyman nature of the data.
But it soon became obvious, that while this approach would fulfil its function of explaining the various aspects of the survey, it was also quite boring. A series of voice-over explanations with some accompanying pieces of animation would be more like a pretty lecture and seemed unlikely to get its intended audience thinking about the subject for themselves. Another problem was that the information didn’t have any context. It was all about the here-and-now, but surely power is a subject that has concerned humanity for its entire existence?

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One of the design references that Demos has brought to our first meeting was a book called Rank: Picturing Social Order 1516-2009. This was a catalogue that had accompanied a previous exhibition at NGCA collecting over 100 works of illustration and art dealing with class and social order in Britain. It is a beautiful book filled with wonderful images – and if it hadn’t been their only copy, we definitely wouldn’t have given it back – but the one that really grabbed our attention was the front cover.
The book jacket reproduced a famous etching by the 17th century French artist Abraham Bosse (see below). It had originally been the frontispiece for Thomas Hobbes’ book, Leviathan, a profoundly famous and influential work about society and government. The main image features a king, holding symbols of power, emerging from a landscape. The king’s body and arms are made up of people. Below are other images that signify power such as castles, guns and churches. All of this got us thinking about the history of power and its development in Britain from the preserve of the few to the many. This was the context we needed.

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We had now gone from worrying about how to explain the Demos study in two minutes of animation, to deciding to not only do that, but to include a brief history of power to boot. Our next script began with this brief and irreverent introduction before moving onto the computer game style power bar explanation of the study. Further discussions with Demos lead us to pare down the latter aspects into the two main concepts explained in the final film: Resilience and Agency.
From a design point of view, this first appeared like a drastic change. However the pictogram characters that we had developed proved very adaptable and soon they were being fitted with cavemen beards and bishop’s miters. Taking another cue from Bosse’s Leviathan cover we decided do away with the power bar and instead use symbols of power to visually represent the concepts of Resilience and Agency. So each historical figure holds corresponding instruments such as a sword and shield or a crucifix and bible, which transform into a mobile phone and briefcase when we reach the modern age.

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With the script and design in place, we were finally able to explain some of the implications of Demos’ statistical survey to ordinary people and get them thinking about the contemporary nature of power. Now all we needed to do was make sure they watched it. The final animation needed to be engaging, interesting and amusing so as to attract the attention of a naturally wandering gallery audience. Fortunately, this is the fun bit.
However the production budget was very small and we were running out of time before the exhibition opened. So big thanks to our amazing animators Jimi Newport and Robert Milne whose underpaid, long hours of hard work added dollops of humour and intelligence to the final film. Thanks also to Suzanne Cave for her persuasive voice-over, Philip Pinsky for the perfect sound effects and Factory for putting all the sound together.

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The Power Gap is currently showing at NGCA in Sunderland as part of their Think-Tank: A Marketplace of Ideas exhibition. The show runs until 23 Jan 2010.

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Wednesday, September 30th, 2009
Our latest film for Moblin is now being shown at trade shows. This time we’re demonstrating how Moblin’s Linux-based Operating System works on mobile devices.
We thought the best way to do this would be to have a giant cat roaming a city. OK, and have some explanation of how it actually works. But check out that cat here.

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Monday, September 21st, 2009

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The characters from our NTV idents now feature on a lovely set of stationery for sale in Japan.

Stanley and the other cinema-going woodland creatures appear on sticker set, plastic folders, mouse mats and ticket books.

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All of these products are available to buy on the NTV website.

Though our poor grasp of Japanese prevents us from finding out where exactly you might find them.

 

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