Disrupting the long road of learning 3D animation by using game engine technology
This paper discusses the mechanics of traditionally-informed curriculum when the new techniques and processes offered by game engine technology are adopted in digital animation teaching pipelines. The traditional learning pipeline, from concept through storyboard to production, has remained a fir...
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Format: | Conference or Workshop Item |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2020
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Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144940 |
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Institution: | Nanyang Technological University |
Language: | English |
Summary: | This paper discusses the mechanics of traditionally-informed curriculum when the new
techniques and processes offered by game engine technology are adopted in digital animation
teaching pipelines. The traditional learning pipeline, from concept through storyboard to
production, has remained a firm foundation for all forms of animation education as well as most
professional animation production. Even in fully digital mediums, the founding principle of drawn
pre-visualisation followed by production remains a constant. This is further emphasised by the
nature of animation, in that there is nothing to see until it is created. There is no physical set or site
for a director to explore, to plan and design the various shots. Hannes Rall (2018), writes in his
book “…The film has to be planned visually exact in advance, in order not to lose time and money
during the actual production process”. Recently, with examples such as the TV series Zafari,
(Unrealengine.com 2018) game-engine processes give demonstrable advantages, reducing pipeline
costs and time, and allowing creative input and alteration right up to final render. However, within
animation pipeline education, in many institutes world-wide, there remains a firm conviction that
the essential educational fundamentals lie within a traditional workflow. Concept and story
visualisation first, production later. This paper will discuss some of the reasons why pedagogical
change may not be happening as rapidly as the technology allows. |
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