Subtitles section Play video
-
Do you ever struggle to find the perfect description
-
when trying to convey an idea?
-
Like a foggy picture,
-
adjectives and modifiers fail to depict
-
what's in your mind.
-
Illustrators often face a similar challenge,
-
especially when attempting to explain
-
complex and difficult concepts.
-
Sometimes the imagery is intangible
-
or way too complicated to explain with a picture.
-
Although complex information could be relayed
-
using charts and stats,
-
this could get pretty boring.
-
Instead, just like when writing an essay
-
to describe, for example, emotions,
-
illustrators can use visual metaphors
-
to bring to life difficult concepts.
-
Just as a written metaphor is a description
-
that relates one object to another,
-
a visual metaphor uses imagery to suggest
-
a particular association or point of similarity.
-
Our lesson "Big Data" is a great example
-
of a situation where visual metaphors
-
played a huge role in explaining the concept.
-
What is Big Data in the first place?
-
Good question!
-
Big Data is a huge amount of digital information
-
produced worldwide on a daily basis,
-
challenging us to find solutions
-
for storing,
-
analyzing,
-
and also imagining it visually.
-
Quite an elusive concept!
-
How should we depict this?
-
Let's take a look at our "Big Data" script.
-
We start with smaller computer servers
-
that branch out into bigger networks
-
to produce data,
-
then even bigger networks
-
and production of even more data.
-
You see where we're going with this --
-
an object growing and branching out in many directions
-
and producing something as a result?
-
Does that remind you of something?
-
Just like those computer networks,
-
a tree grows and branches out
-
to produce more leaves each year.
-
And every year, just as the data accumulates
-
and faces us with a challenge
-
to find storage solutions,
-
it gets harder to collect those piles of leaves
-
when they fall off the tree.
-
Aha! There's our visual metaphor!
-
Okay, so we have the script,
-
audio,
-
and a visual metaphor.
-
The next step in visual development
-
is to design the characters
-
and environments of the animation.
-
To do so, we think
-
of an appropriate and appealing style
-
to illustrate the ideas
-
and help the viewer better understand
-
what they're hearing.
-
Let's go back to the script
-
and see if we can find any clues there.
-
Our story starts in the 1960s
-
when the first computer networks were built.
-
This decade will serve as a good point
-
to make the stylistic choice for our animation
-
as it will allow us to refer to artwork
-
from that era.
-
You may want to start
-
by looking at some art books
-
(design, illustrations, cartoons, etc.)
-
from that era
-
and find a style that may fit our own purpose.
-
Look closely,
-
study the material,
-
and try to understand the choices
-
artists of that time made and why.
-
For example, the 1960s minimalist animation style
-
was a significant departure
-
from the cinematic realism
-
that was popular in animated films at the time.
-
The choice to use limited animation techniques
-
was originally made for budgetary reasons,
-
but it became a signature style
-
that influenced many future generations of animators.
-
In this stylistic approach,
-
the simplified characters,
-
flat backgrounds,
-
and angular shapes come together
-
to create new interpretations of reality,
-
which also sounds like a good place
-
to begin visualizing our own Big Data.
-
Well, let's try an experiment.
-
"In the 1980s islands of similar networks
-
speaking different dialects
-
sprung up all over Europe and the States,
-
making remote access possible but tortuous."
-
Is this better?
-
"In the 1980s islands of similar networks
-
speaking different dialects
-
sprung up all over Europe and the States,
-
making remote access possible but tortuous.
-
To make it easy for our physicists across the world
-
to access the ever-expanding Big Data
-
stored at CERN without traveling,
-
the networks needed to be talking
-
with the same language."
-
As you probably observed,
-
graphic representations are a great way
-
to capture the interest of your audience.
-
By depicting what you want to present and explain
-
with strong, memorable visuals,
-
you can communicate your idea more effectively.
-
So, now, challenge yourself.
-
Think of an abstract concept
-
that cannot be explained with simple words.
-
Go ahead and try your hand
-
at visually developing that idea.