1 / 38

Slide and bullet transitions have not been set.

Slide and bullet transitions have not been set. How to Train Your Technical Artist. Jeff Hanna Senior Technical Artist THQ/Volition, Inc. Who am I?. Making games since 1995 Worked as an artist, art director, and now a technical artist Member of the GDC Advisory Board.

carlislew
Télécharger la présentation

Slide and bullet transitions have not been set.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Slide and bullet transitions have not been set.

  2. How to Train Your Technical Artist • Jeff HannaSenior Technical ArtistTHQ/Volition, Inc.

  3. Who am I? • Making games since 1995 • Worked as an artist, art director, and now a technical artist • Member of the GDC Advisory Board

  4. Who have I worked with?

  5. What will be covered in this talk • A brief history of how Technical Art became a valued discipline • An overview of the skills all Technical Artists should possess. • Ways that Technical Artists can increase the efficiency at your studio.

  6. To understand the value Technical Artists provide we should first look at how the discipline has evolved.

  7. How did it all start?

  8. One person with a problem to solve…

  9. If he worked at a smart studio they might have promoted him.

  10. He made tools and solved problems, but did not craft pipelines.

  11. Where is the discipline currently?

  12. We’re growing in skills and in number.

  13. We’ve proven our worth to the industry.

  14. We’re included in future product planning.

  15. Where is technical art headed?

  16. We’re becoming specialized • Technical Animators • Vehicle specialists • Lighting specialists • Shader authors

  17. Technical Artists are displacing tools programmers.

  18. What skills should you look for and foster in a Technical Artist?

  19. Do they need to have good communication skills?

  20. They must be able to build relationships.

  21. Do they need to possess art skills?

  22. It depends…

  23. They need to be understood by artists.

  24. They need to know the art creation packages the artists use.

  25. Do they need to possess programming skills?

  26. They don’t need to know low level languages like C++.

  27. But knowing how to use scripting languages will help them tailor your pipeline.

  28. Wait...TAs don’t need to know art or programming?

  29. Don’t they need to know both?

  30. Let’s review • Technical Art has grown from simple scripting to complex pipelines. • The game development industry recognizes us and what we do. • As we’ve grown we’ve specialized into numerous roles. • Technical artists should understand what the artists do and the tools they use. • Technical artists should be able to speak with programmers on their terms. • While a TA doesn’t need to be good at both aspects of the role, most are.

  31. How can Technical Artists bring value to your organization?

  32. They can retroactively improve existing workflows to save time and money.

  33. They can fix problematic pipelines.

  34. An example.... • 20 races • Armor all hand modeled • 1 artist, 1 month • Identified standardized measurements per race • Automated the conversion • 1 month became30 seconds scale image with animated bullets?

  35. They can provide support services to the art department. • Artists can get back to working as quickly as possible. • Helps foster Artist -> Technical Artist relationships. • Decreases the response time on bugs sent to other people.

  36. They can provide important skills early in a project’s development. • Collaborate with rendering engineers on features • Provide valid time estimates for art workflow tasks • Design and implement art tools to support new rendering features

  37. ...and one more thing they can do...

  38. Contact Information • jeff.b.hanna@gmail.com • http://www.tech-artists.org

More Related