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Good luck with everything!
Blogs > Lysenko |
Stijx
United States804 Posts
![]() Good luck with everything! | ||
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Ares[Effort]
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DEMACIA6550 Posts
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Yoshi Kirishima
United States10290 Posts
I love you!!! It's so awesome how Starcraft is! (semi-joking) OMG IM SO JEALOUS YOU HAVE <THE> ABSOLUTE ONLY LICENSE PLATE WITH 6 POOL !!! <3 This is really great and a bit inspiring too! Thanks for sharing :D It's a bit amazing how you went from a Science degree to movies! Which you sort of wanted from the beginning. Very interesting... I bet it was hard ![]() | ||
Lysenko
Iceland2128 Posts
On June 07 2011 04:12 Clearout wrote: Wow amazing read, really interesting the careers turns you made ![]() I'm not sure that it's ever really easy -- people will always want to hire the person whose background is EXACTLY like what they're trying to do. If you go through my post and take careful note of the timeline, it took me from 1996 to about 2005 to start doing artistic as opposed to technical work. I spent almost four years at Disney getting nowhere in that regard (but having a lot of people say encouraging things!) Then, when I was at PDI, I got a firm promise that I could move into lighting by the end of the year 2000, but unfortunately that commitment didn't really come to pass once they started laying off my division. Finally, it took forging a really close working relationship with my sequence supervisor at Dreamworks on Madagascar, in 2005, to get a chance to light a shot. Fortunately, he and I continued working together on Over the Hedge, so it was possible to pick up a bunch of shots on that show, and that was enough of a body of lighting work to get a job elsewhere. | ||
StarStruck
25339 Posts
On June 07 2011 04:30 Yoshi Kirishima wrote: Oh my god, what an AMAZING READ I love you!!! It's so awesome how Starcraft is! (semi-joking) OMG IM SO JEALOUS YOU HAVE <THE> ABSOLUTE ONLY LICENSE PLATE WITH 6 POOL !!! <3 This is really great and a bit inspiring too! Thanks for sharing :D It's a bit amazing how you went from a Science degree to movies! Which you sort of wanted from the beginning. Very interesting... I bet it was hard ![]() On the contrary, I've worked with all walks of life in film: astrophysicists, heart surgeons, criminologists, firefighters, etc. The industry is great because of the trade exchange. | ||
TBO
Germany1350 Posts
On June 07 2011 03:20 Lysenko wrote: Show nested quote + I was so mad when I saw Golden Compass... they cut out everything that could be subversive for the audience. Thing is, they really didn't! About all they did was refer to the "magisterium" instead of the "church" in a few places, and the book uses both terms. It was an incredibly faithful interpretation of the book. Show nested quote + It felt empty compared to the books. I'm even more mad right now if you say that you worked on the real and actual ending! + Show Spoiler + What they did was save the ending of the first book to be used as the opening of a second movie. Test audiences, who mostly hadn't ever read the book, found the ending a total depressing downer (which it pretty much was!). Had there been a sequel, their choice with this would have worked pretty well, because the ending of book 1 set up a great conflict for book 2. Yah thought it was pretty faithful to the book too, except for the ending... such a shame that we probably will never see part 2 or 3. Maybe someone will start a new attempt in 10 or 20 years. | ||
Krimancer
Sweden150 Posts
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LuckyMacro
United States1482 Posts
Lovely license plate! | ||
VIB
Brazil3567 Posts
![]() So today you're working exclusively as a lighting artist or do you still do some technical work as software engineer? Which do you prefer, being an artist or engineer? What do you think of the potential of open source software like Blender 3d on professional development pipelines? (I made some small code contribution there ^^) | ||
Golden Ghost
Netherlands1041 Posts
On June 07 2011 04:12 Clearout wrote: Wow amazing read, really interesting the careers turns you made ![]() Although a lot of people indeed end up working in a job they did the education for there are (at least here) also a lot of people ending up in jobs unrelated or having little to do with their original education. A lot of where you end up has to do with either who you know or what opportunities you get in your company. I personally studied Information Management (working as a administrative assistant next to the study) but somehow never ended up working in that field. Instead I rolled into a job as a Business/Operations Analyst and from there towards Financial Administrator and currently looking into Project Management as a next step. You always take your background with you and use it to bring some fresh perspective to the table but that doesn't mean your education has you firmly locked into a certain path. You just have to formulate clearly for yourself why you want to go in one direction or another and try to see what positions / people you can use to take the steps to get there, shifting the horizon step by step. So keep that always in mind while cramming for an exam. It provides you with a fallback. It's not there to keep your life in a death grip. ![]() | ||
Lysenko
Iceland2128 Posts
On June 07 2011 05:48 VIB wrote: So today you're working exclusively as a lighting artist or do you still do some technical work as software engineer? Which do you prefer, being an artist or engineer? Actually, with the move into commercials I'm more of a generalist, because we try to get by with a smaller number of people. My main areas are look development, lighting, and compositing, but I occasionally dabble in layout (camera animation), character animation, or effects animation depending on what we need and how confident I am about being able to do a good job. Also, as the senior lighter on most of our jobs, I'm involved in helping bid new work, estimating how long tasks will take to complete, identifying when we need specialized skills we don't have in our group to get the work done, and helping plan where we're going technically on future projects. What do you think of the potential of open source software like Blender 3d on professional development pipelines? (I made some small code contribution there ^^) I haven't tried using Blender in many years. My impression at the time was that it had a lot of interesting features but that the user interface was enough unlike other tools out there to do the same kinds of work that it would be difficult to transition from, say, lots of Maya experience to working in Blender or vice versa. However, enough time has passed since then that I'm sure it's greatly improved, and I have seen some awfully nice work that's been done in Blender. If someone's looking to work on their own project, it's absolutely an option I'd recommend they look at using. | ||
Lysenko
Iceland2128 Posts
On June 07 2011 04:20 Stijx wrote: This is all amazing ![]() I've certainly spent enough time doing all kinds of work in this industry to be past the point of having much of an ego about it, though at this point I'm pretty confident in my essential job skills. That said, Rhythm & Hues is certainly among the top five visual effects companies in the U.S. right now, so it's not a bad place to be for name recognition. Over the years, R&H has won two visual effects Academy Awards (for Babe and Golden Compass) and consistently employs about a thousand visual effects artists on a wide range of projects. Also, Rhythm has a fancy new website now, I recommend taking a look! http://www.rhythm.com/ Edit: Another interesting note: Blizzard's cinematics group has a large number of ex-Rhythm artists working there, because both companies have a heavy emphasis on digital compositing. So, next time you see some great work from them, chances are a few of my friends worked on it! | ||
Mehhht
13 Posts
I was in an animation class that used maya in high school, and we visited Rhythm and Hues. It seems like such an awesome place to work! I remember a lot of people would bring their dogs to work, haha. Anyway, congrats on 15 years! | ||
FenneK
France1231 Posts
I hope your next 20 years are as good ![]() | ||
Swwww
Switzerland812 Posts
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The KY
United Kingdom6252 Posts
Almost makes me a little bit sad that I decided not to do that animation degree... | ||
jimmydu444
Canada250 Posts
But Congratulations on your success! From Physics to animation, who would've guessed :D | ||
KrisElmqvist
Sweden1962 Posts
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zul
Germany5427 Posts
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Z3kk
4099 Posts
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