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Ohio State University's pioneer in computer animation has received
the state of Ohio's highest recognition for an individual artist.
Gov. Bob Taft Wednesday presented Charles Csuri, professor emeritus
of art at Ohio State, with the 2000 Governor's Award for the
Arts for the best individual artist.
Known worldwide as the father of computer art, Csuri also is
a pioneer in animation and scientific visualization; the founder
of the interdisciplinary studio model for technology and visual
art; and a proponent and creator of aesthetic excellence. His
contributions to excellence, artistic growth and dissemination
of new art forms have deep roots that begin within the fine
arts tradition and extend to the movie and animation industry.
Csuri, of Clintonville, received both his B.F.A and M.A. degrees
from Ohio State. He became a faculty member in the Department
of Art in 1953 and was an established painter and sculptor when
he began to create art on the computer in 1964 long before
technology was recognized as a medium for artistic expression.
Csuri worked collaboratively with computer scientists, engineers,
artists and educators, and found support for his work from sources
such as the Navy and Air Force Office of Scientific Research.
He was the first artist to be funded by the National Science
Foundation, in 1969, and continued to receive funding over the
next 20 years.
His effective leadership and extensive artistic experience enabled
him and his cross-disciplinary team to establish the Computer
Graphics Research Group, now the Advanced Computing Center for
Art and Design (ACCAD)
in the Ohio State College of the Arts; and Cranston/Csuri Productions,
one of the first and most influential computer-generated special
effects production facilities in the world. ACCAD works with
a wide variety of institutions and corporations, and educates
many students in special effects and animation for the film
and entertainment industry.
Recognition of Csuri's pioneering work began in 1967 with the
prize for animation at the 4th International Experimental Film
Festival in Brussels, Belgium. His work is owned by the Museum
of Modern Art in New York and many other museums, corporations
and individuals. His ground-breaking accomplishments are included
in The History of Computer Graphics, a film that premiered at
the 1999 international SIGGRAPH conference.
A professor emeritus of art education and computer and information
science, Csuri, 76, continues to make art and to push the boundaries
of emerging technologies.
More Information
College
of the Arts
ACCAD
SIGGRAPH
profile-Charles Csuri

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