Pulp Fiction 14 Welker
Forum rules
• Posts in this forum should directly relate to the artist, art, or artwork.
• Do not post ISOs or FS/Ts in this forum section. Please use the Open Market section of the EB forums for all secondary (resale) market activity.
• Do not post details of your order process, shipping status, or condition upon arrival in this forum section. Please use the item's Release Discussion thread for this activity.
• Posts in this forum should directly relate to the artist, art, or artwork.
• Do not post ISOs or FS/Ts in this forum section. Please use the Open Market section of the EB forums for all secondary (resale) market activity.
• Do not post details of your order process, shipping status, or condition upon arrival in this forum section. Please use the item's Release Discussion thread for this activity.
bam! the man is in an insane zone!
http://www.MoonSetGallery.com - the bestest silkscreen, gig poster and fine art work..
https://www.facebook.com/RockandRollPosterBowl
http://www.BrooklynBowl.com
https://www.facebook.com/RockandRollPosterBowl
http://www.BrooklynBowl.com
- mademehmmm
- Art Connoisseur
- Posts: 387
- Joined: Sat Jul 06, 2013 12:26 am
One of my favorite movies and I love Welker but I dont dig the execution. My eye was first drawn to the blueberry pancake girl, she looks off compared to the rest and should be in a corner. The car takes up such a large portion of the print, but at the same time is barely noticeable. I do enjoy seeing Vincent Vega on the can.
The blueberry pancake girl is part of a narrative sequence that tells the story of the watch. If she were in a corner her placement would be arbitrary. Personally I like how the car compositions add scenography, cinematic effect and motion. It's a refreshing departure from montages based on character screen time. I get the warm fuzzies from this poster. I love it & yes I am biased.mademehmmm wrote:One of my favorite movies and I love Welker but I dont dig the execution. My eye was first drawn to the blueberry pancake girl, she looks off compared to the rest and should be in a corner. The car takes up such a large portion of the print, but at the same time is barely noticeable. I do enjoy seeing Vincent Vega on the can.
- FrankBooth
- Art Expert
- Posts: 3885
- Joined: Sun Nov 02, 2014 12:01 am
- Location: Queens, New York
It feels a little too cluttered, the car smack in the middle breaks up the flow a bit too much. Vega on the can is a nice touch, pretty funny.mademehmmm wrote:One of my favorite movies and I love Welker but I dont dig the execution. My eye was first drawn to the blueberry pancake girl, she looks off compared to the rest and should be in a corner. The car takes up such a large portion of the print, but at the same time is barely noticeable. I do enjoy seeing Vincent Vega on the can.
Don't think it's a matter of artist preference, just a matter of execution.
- shibbyaholic
- Art Connoisseur
- Posts: 652
- Joined: Wed Jun 16, 2010 11:28 am
I think when artists consider a montage they have to balance the composition with a combination of narrative significance and visual flow and it's certainly not an easy task. My feeling is that aside from adding an extra narrative, Vincent's car racing to get Mia a shot of adrenaline in the heart purposely breaks up what would be the clutter of just another "big head" montage and adds both cinematic effect and deep space. I'm sure jpegs don't do this piece enough justice. I've seen the original ink but I'm looking forward to seeing the screen prints in person.FrankBooth wrote: The car smack in the middle breaks up the flow a bit too much. Vega on the can is a nice touch, pretty funny.
- mademehmmm
- Art Connoisseur
- Posts: 387
- Joined: Sat Jul 06, 2013 12:26 am
Zed's dead scene is classic but her role could have easily been replaced with *Butch left his watch behind* He could have still smashed a hotel rooom tv, gone to his apartment kill vega, save wallace from turning into a gim p and himself without her in the story, just another annoying girl that looked good in panties.downtown wrote:The blueberry pancake girl is part of a narrative sequence that tells the story of the watch. If she were in a corner her placement would be arbitrary. Personally I like how the car compositions add scenography, cinematic effect and motion. It's a refreshing departure from montages based on character screen time. I get the warm fuzzies from this poster. I love it & yes I am biased.mademehmmm wrote:One of my favorite movies and I love Welker but I dont dig the execution. My eye was first drawn to the blueberry pancake girl, she looks off compared to the rest and should be in a corner. The car takes up such a large portion of the print, but at the same time is barely noticeable. I do enjoy seeing Vincent Vega on the can.