Three School Of Visual Arts Thesis Projects Are Honored With The Alumni Scholarship Award
Three SVA Alumni Scholarship Award winners discuss their work and how it was influenced by their time at the school.
Three SVA Alumni Scholarship Award winners discuss their work and how it was influenced by their time at the school.
A one-of-a-kid artist, Mundie's definitive works include the tv special 'Hey, Hey, Hey, It's Fat Albert,' and 'The Door,' which is arguably the oddest short ever released by Warner Bros.
Director Fable Siegel tells us about the challenges of adapting a hit comic series and animating anthropomorphic cats.
Glasgow and Women in Animation teamed up to present a conversation about gender constraints that women working in animation are likely to face, both on the creative and business sides of the industry.
In honor of Women’s History Month, we’re highlighting just a few of the trailblazing women who made important contributions during the Golden Age of Animation.
Co-directors Shane Plante and Collin Tsandilis discuss the techniques they used to bring their characters to life.
“Isolated and alone in an industrial and hyper-masculine world, it’s the story of someone’s struggle to discover their truth,” says Brown.
As 'Strange World' gets set to blast off in theaters this week, Vincent Alexander reminds us about some amazing animated aliens.
Eggleston's storied career at Pixar included winning an Oscar for his short "For the Birds."
Paris-based vfx-animation company Hecat has joined Mexican's Ocelotl Co and Brazil's Origem on the feature.
Previews of three upcoming anime standouts from this year's Crunchyroll Expo.
Without the RISD, there would be no Superjail!, Avatar: The Last Airbender, or Family Guy.
The school benefits from the involvement of Japanese indie icon Koji Yamamura who helped start the animation program.
Morgan Galen King and Philip Gelatt started the film as a self-funded passion project. Eight years later, it's in the running for an Oscar.
The software was used to create characters' clothes in the game, as well as cybernetic parts, backpacks, ammo bags, and even weapons.
Troy is gone. The animation industry has lost a legend. And I, and countless others who were lucky enough to know him, have lost a friend.
The festival's program runs the gamut from indie to industry, tech talks to rare retrospectives.
Animation educators at the Toon Boom-accredited online school discuss their teaching philosophies.
We sat down to watch the three most exciting anime films at the fest.
An insightful, if sometimes dryly academic, look at the development of abstract in animation, chiefly between the 1950s and 1970s.