Art direction of Royal Space Force: The Wings of Honnêamise

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Gainax's 1987 debut work Royal Space Force: The Wings of Honnêamise was the first project on which Hiromasa Ogura served as art director; although later noted for creating much of the aesthetic behind the influential 1995 film Ghost in the Shell,[1][2] Ogura himself in a 2012 interview regarded Royal Space Force as the top work of his career.[3] Working from Yoshiyuki Sadamoto's color scheme and Takashi Watabe's architectural drawings, Ogura then gave a "a sense of life" to the aesthetics of the world setting of Royal Space Force[4] through background paintings created by himself and a staff of 16, including future Studio Ghibli art director Yōji Takeshige, whose first work in the anime industry was on the film.[5] The film's writer and director, Hiroyuki Yamaga, sought to avoid using what he regarded as the usual visual symbolism of anime, and instead wanted Royal Space Force's art direction to express specific times of day and night; Ogura attempted to convey Yamaga's verbal instructions in graphic form.[6][7]

Nobuyuki Ohnishi, a contemporary illustrator whose work director Hiroyuki Yamaga knew from the music magazines Swing Journal and ADLIB, was chosen by him to create the film's title sequence and closing credits. Yamaga viewed Ohnishi's style, which employed classical sumi-e ink wash painting technique to depict modern subjects, as a method to convey an alternate perspective and suggest the film's exercise in worldbuilding also included a conceptual past and future, rather than a world brought into existence for the sake of one particular narrative in time.[8] Yamaga believed using contributions only from artists inside the anime industry set limits on the creative potential of an anime project, and compared Ohnishi's involvement to Ryuichi Sakamoto serving as the film's music director or Leo Morimoto as its lead voice actor.[9]

The climactic visionary montage of the protagonist Shirotsugh's childhood and the history of the film's world was referred to in production as its "image scene"; Yamaga, who had written the scene in the script simply as a flashback, worked closely with future The Animatrix and Gankutsuou director Mahiro Maeda to develop the image scene through meetings and discussion, reworking the impressions developed and adding material until a storyboard was completed, based on which Maeda created the finished sequence.[10] Royal Space Force planner Toshio Okada stated in his memoirs that he regarded it as the only place in the film appropriate to the true artistic potential of Maeda; Okada argued that not even Hayao Miyazaki had employed Maeda's talent properly when he had worked on the previous year's Castle in the Sky.[11]

Hiromasa Ogura joins project

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