The Visual Effects Society announced today that it has inducted seven Fellows to its Society based on their contributions to the art and science of visual effects.
The new Fellows include visual effects supervisor Richard Edlund; Pacific Data Images founder Carl Rosendahl; Ed Catmull, president of Walt Disney Animation Studios and Pixar Animation Studios; director, producer, visual effects supervisor and stop motion pioneer Phil Tippett; cinematographer and visual effects supervisor Bill Taylor; visual effects supervisor Mark Stetson; and visual effects producer and software developer Ray Feeney. VES Fellows are honored for making exceptional achievements and sustained contributions to the art, science or business of visual effects and maintaining outstanding reputations. No more than ten Fellows are created in any given year. The inaugural Fellows who were inducted last year are Dennis Muren, Doug Trumbull and Jonathan Erland.
Jeffrey A. Okun, Chair of the Visual Effects Society, comments, “Fellows represents the pinnacle achievement possible by Visual Effects Artists and Scientists. To be recognized by the VES as a Fellow is not just an honor, but also recognition of the scope and impact they have made on the entertainment industry and storytelling. Each of our new Fellows have demonstrated not only a mastery of art and imagery, but also provided the leadership and inspiration that make the visual effects and the world of entertainment in general, a brighter and more compelling and imaginative place to work. Each of them have changed lives due to what they have brought to life, created or imagined and then realized. Each have contributed to the industry in a significant manner and we are proud to award them this prestigious honor.”
The VES Fellows steering committee employs the following criteria in evaluating the candidates:
Leadership/Management: Exemplary leadership, administration and management of people, projects, policies and programs that have significantly advanced the practice and the pursuit of excellence of visual effects.
Service: Activities sustained over an extended period of time that have significantly advanced the profession and promoted visual effects in the eyes of the public, and that serve as examples for other local, regional, national or international efforts.
Works: Mastery of design in significant works that have advanced the art, stewardship and social responsibility of visual effects
Knowledge: The creation of significant new knowledge that advances the pursuit of excellence and the profession of visual effects, or the communication of knowledge to others with exceptional effect.
Academy® and Emmy® Award winning visual effects supervisor Richard Edlund has worked on films including Star Wars, The Empire Strikes Back, Raiders of the Lost Ark, Poltergeist, Return of the Jedi and Ghostbusters. Edlund was the one of the founders of the Visual Effects Branch of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
Emmy® Award winner Carl Rosendahl, helped pioneer computer animation with his founding of Pacific Data Images in 1980. The company was sold to DreamWorks SKG in 2000. Rosendahl was a founding board member of VES.
Edwin Catmull, recipient of the Gordon E. Sawyer Award at the Academy Awards®โamong many other awardsโis president of Walt Disney Animation Studios and Pixar Animation Studios. As vice president at Lucasfilm, he helped develop digital image compositing technology.
Director and Academy Award® winning visual effects supervisor and producer Phil Tippett co-developed the technique ‘Go Motion’ while at ILM, which was utilized in the Star Wars films, Dragonslayer and Starship Troopers. He is the founder of Tippett Studio.
Bill Taylor has supervised and photographed visual effects on films including the Fast and the Furious, Bruce Almighty, Casanova and Milk. Taylor has received a Saturn, an Emmy and a Motion Picture Academy Technical Achievement Award. He has served several terms as a governor of the Visual Effects Branch of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
Visual effects supervisor Mark Stetson received a BAFTA (British Academy) award for visual effects in his debut effort, The Fifth Element. He also won an Academy Award® and a second BAFTA award for visual effects in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring. Mr. Stetson founded his own models and miniature company, which later was purchased by Digital Domain.
Academy Award® winner Ray Feeney is president and founder of RFX, Inc. He has pioneered numerous new technologies for the visual effects industry that have become industry standard techniques and are currently in use to produce visual effects for feature films, television shows and commercials.
The Fellows were announced at the Annual 2012 VES Membership Meeting, September 27 at the Academy’s Pickford Center.
About the VES
VES is a professional, honorary society dedicated to advancing the arts, sciences and applications of visual effects and to upholding the highest uniform standards and procedures for the visual effects profession. It is the entertainment industry’s only official organization representing the extended community of visual effects practitioners, including supervisors, artists, producers, technology developers, educators and studio executives. VES’s more than 2,500 global members contribute to all areas of entertainment โ film, television, commercials, music videos, games and new media. VES strives to enrich and educate its members and the entertainment community at-large through many domestic and international events, screenings and programs. www.visualeffectssociety.com
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