Tuesday, 25 October 2011

Semiotics

So the topic on this weeks lecture was Semiotics, how we interpret things that we see, and what assumptions we make from this. For example if somebody draw four straight lines connected up, we say square, if they then draw an antenna and a man in the middle, we switch to TV. The principle however, does not just apply to drawings, it can also apply so sounds gestures or pretty much anything. Another example would be if somebody was to hold their hands up in front of their face with their fists clenched, we would assume a fight, or confrontation.
  Going back to the symbolic side of Semiotics the signs we are showed are made up from the Denotation and the Connotation. The Denotation is the sign or symbol we are being show at the most basic level possible - A mans briefcase. the Connotation is what the Denotation suggests, so by seeing a man with a briefcase we automatically can assume businessman? We also looked at the different ways these things can be Iconic, or Arbitrary. Iconic means it is more realistic and Arbitrary is more of a simple or even abstract form, basically less realistic.

Here are two example of Iconic and Arbitrary, although we know that they both represent the same thing! The house on the left is an Arbitrary drawing of a house (probably by a small child), the interesting thing about this picture is that everything in it is iconic, nobodies house looks like that, the sun doesnt have big visible rays with a smiley face, trees do have leafs and peoples faces are not a circle with two dots and a curve. However we still recognize this set of strange and unrealistic symbols as a man and woman outside their house! The picture on the right however is much more Iconic, the trees arent just a solid line with a curvy circle on top, and the house isnt just a block with a chimney on top.
  So how can this help me in Animation? We can depict certain things within a film on purpose, to suggest something, and lead the audience along a totally different trail in order to make the film have a twist. So for example, we could show a mysterious man who always leaves his wife at home, and we could always show him in a shop buying flowers. What is this suggesting? hes buying flowers for another woman. However we could then show the man going to a cemetery, and then we would work out he is putting flowers down on somebodies grave every week. Semiotics is an easy way to lead people on and make them believe something totally different just by using small suggestive things like a man buying bunches of flowers.

No comments:

Post a Comment