Nimbupani Designs

arts

Infamy

I wanted to paint something for inparty that was happening on 28th Sept, but it was too late. This was/is meant to be a study that will finally go into a canvas. Obviously, it is not meant to be symmetrical as it appears here.

It was the first time I was using acrylics - all thanks to Mito who had generously donated her acrylics, awesome paperworks (which you saw in Juggle), and other stuff that is inspiring me to paint more!

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Juggle

After a long time, I managed to get some art done. I did a collage for Illustration Friday

Ratatouille : A Rat in the House

An advantage of being in the U.S. is watching movies as soon as they are released - and not waiting for eternity (or downloading a bad quality print). So, as soon as I was free, I made my way to the nearest theatre to watch my most anticipated movie of the year Ratatouille (yep, I am copy-pasting from google’s very helpful suggestion for my contorted spellings of the movie).

Of course, there is one thing that is better than the movie - and that is the short “Lifted” that plays before the movie starts. I kinda slept through the boink-boink sheep that played before Incredibles, but “Lifted” is a whole new world. Ever know what goes on in the minds of aliens as they try to “lift” sleeping humans into their UFOs in the dead of the night? If you dont, you have to watch Lifted for a very hilarious take on it.

On a sidenote, Brad Bird is my new hero. I have read on several animation blogs how he took charge only 18 months before and significantly re-wrote the script while personally going through every animation. I loved Incredibles and I am so in love with Ratatouille.

Back to the movie. Ratatouille obviously means a french vegetable dish, but to us french illitrates the most obvious conclusion is it has got something to do with a rat. Ratatouille (the french dish) plays a very critical role in the film, while also ending up as a name of a restaurant (in the film). We get to see Remy, the rat, develop an acute sense of culinary excellence while watching Gusteau, the celebrated french chef on TV (whose claim to fame is the book “Anyone can cook”). The most excellent scenes in the movie are when Remy tries to get his brother to understand how to sense taste and what good food means. If you have cooked for a while, you would understand exactly how that feels like.

Then there is Linguini, the pimply boy who is so painfully shy and so afraid of saying “no” and always screws things up. But, the character that takes the cake is Mr. Anton Ego - the harshest food critic of all France. Peter O’Toole excels in his voice over which is completely contrasting to what you know of him. Mr. Anton Ego looks talks and writes like a vulture but at the end - is a transformed man.

There are interesting scenes where Gusteau appears as a “figment of imagination” of Remy. And Remy asks him, “Didnt you know this?” and Gusteau (voiced by Brad Garrett of Robert Barone - Everybody Loves Raymond - fame) replies “I only know what you know, after all, I am only a figment of your imagination”. It is a kid’s movie and this kind of intelligence is never shown in any such movie. Perhaps, it is time for children’s movies to grow up!

There are hilarious moments in the movie which are not just witty dialogues but amazing physical humour. What struck me was the amazing character design that was necessary to bring all this to life. Every pose of Remy or Linguini is potent with action that voice seems almost unnecessary. It almost transported me back to the era of silent tom and jerry.

The bottom line is: Watch the movie. It makes you a child again!

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Giant Robot

Times of my life has blogged about something I thought was lost after I grew up: Giant Robot.

Even though, this series was apparently most popular in the 70s, it was aired in my dear old DD (India’s only television channel till early 90s) in the late 80s - early 90s.

I remember fragments of the series mostly because I remember being scared by the robot and how threatening it looked but also enthralled by fights with godzilla and other mean creatures in Japan.

I never really bothered to find out about it and let it be a show that I once enjoyed till I saw the post on Times of My Life. And I cant imagine, for the life of me, why I was afraid of the stupid looking robot (though there is some fun in watching the idiotic actions of the robot). Nevertheless, it still captures my attention - which is why I spent the last half an hour catching glimpses of it on youtube!

More about Giant Robot on wikipedia

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Farm

This is my entry to Illustration Friday’s topic of ‘Farm’.

See Original Size on flickr:

Woman

It may sound weird, but this sketch actually looks better in the original than through the camera. Guess it is my shaky hands to be blamed!

Meanwhile, congrats to my mums who has won the Best Letter of the Day award from Deccan Chronicle for her letter which was published in the City Chronicle this Sunday! Keep writing mums!

Portraits

I think I caught the art bug real bad this time! Here is another pastel sketch I made yesterday while watching Batman Forever (which shows how boring the movie was!).

Dreams Come True, They do!

Thursday was the last day to redeem my $100 Starhub voucher to buy mobile phones, and just as fortunately, Deepak lost the ugly sony ericsson he had (gathering showers of blessings in the process for losing a phone that looks fitting only in a garbage bin) and so I, generously went with him to get a phone from my $100 voucher.

As usual, I couldnt take my eyes off the V3 Pink. And miraculously, I had enough sense to ask for the price with my current plan and the voucher. It was $98.

Dreams come true. Now.

My Grandpa's Collection

I finally posted a set of pictures of my grandpa’s collection of coins from his travels around the world as part of the HMIS Rana during the world war 2. I havent even travelled to more than 3 countries and he travelled to more than 6 before he was 18! :(

Lost typography

An awesome discussion on the typographic bungling of Lost is on at Typophile. The discussion also veers towards the signs used in Lost.

I didnt notice it much, but it is so weird that atleast three different typefaces are used for the title! Aick.