Brickyard VFX Hand-paints Watercolor World Tour to Promote Beyonce's 4
July 21, 2011

Brickyard VFX Hand-paints Watercolor World Tour to Promote Beyonce's 4

Boston, Mass. - Visual effects boutique Brickyard VFX completed a breathtaking commercial, "Around the World," with a hand-painted view of iconic international landmarks in just six days to promote Beyonce's new album.

Record label Columbia and Parkwood Entertainment hired the Brickyard to work on the spot, which opens as a few drops of paint bleed into the hand of the Statue of Liberty, and then quickly morphs into a shot of the Christ the Redeemer statue in Rio de Janeiro. A painting of the Arc de Triomphe artfully turns into the Taj Mahal. Elements around the Taj Mahal fall out of frame and jump to a shot of Egypt's famed pyramids that transform into the Sydney Opera House. The shot moves on to the Great Wall of China that grows upward into the Eiffel Tower.

A hand-painted version of the album's "4" logo with splotches of paint and watercolor drips is used as a transitional element from scene to scene. The spot ends with painted renditions of a highly stylized Beyonce, and closes with her current album's cover art. 


To create the piece, Brickyard VFX started by purchasing stock photos of the global landmarks featured in the commercial. Artist and Brickyard VFX co-founder Geoff McAulliffe created two watercolor paintings based on each of the photos, one lighter and a second with a more pronounced color palette. He also created several paintings of the album's "4" logo, and of transitional elements, such paint drips, brush strokes, and splotches.

All the artwork was scanned, digitally enhanced, and manipulated by the Brickyard VFX team guided by lead VFX artist, Jimi Simmons. Ink layers and camera moves were added digitally into the sequence, and the morphs were creatively constructed blending elements from one scene into the next, with cutaways inserted in the tighter shots.



"This project literally fell into our lap six days before the delivery date," explains Simmons. "It was an exercise in harnessing the creative expertise of so many individual artists here and pooling that into the massive amounts of energy and sheer stamina required to turn the project around in such a short timeframe. In the end, it was such a rewarding and fun project--everyone from Beyonce herself to creative director Jenke was amazingly collaborative and receptive to our ideas. Having this much creative latitude allowed us to stretch ourselves creatively."