Merging Hand-Drawn Tradition with CG Artistry for Mamoru Hosoda’s ‘Mirai’
The acclaimed director of ‘Wolf Children’ and ‘The Boy and the Beast’ paints an intimate portrait of a young boy’s vivid imagination and how it helps him accept the arrival of his baby sister in one of the last Japanese animated features to employ hand-drawn animation.
Asifa India is back with yet another the most impactfull Celebration of IAD'17 on 22nd Feb 2018 at Shilpakala vedika Hyderabad
Every participant was keen to hear what the Government had to say about
this on day.
Experts from the Animation industry and Government officials gave their
valuable guidance and career making suggestions to the students who were
the major audience of the event.
Sridhar Muppidi: co-founder of PurpleTalk:
"The industry is growing 18% a year, it means its doubling every 4 years,
the number of people, number of jobs, amount of content consumption is
literally doubling every 4 years.
On
Phenakistoscope (1831) A phenakistoscope disc by Eadweard Muybridge (1893).The phenakistoscope was an early animation device. It was invented in 1831 simultaneously by the Belgian Joseph Plateau and the Austrian Simon von Stampfer. It consists of a disk with a series of images, drawn on radii evenly spaced around the center of the disk. Slots are cut out of the disk on the same radii as the drawings, but at a different distance from the center. The device would be placed in front of a mirror and spun. As the phenakistoscope is spun, a viewer would look through the slots at the reflection of the drawings which would only become visible when a slot passes by the viewer's eye. This created the illusion of animation.