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Sharon Calahan

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Sharon Calahan
Sharon Calahan at the VIEW Conference in 2011
NationalityAmerican
EducationIllustration, graphic design, photography
Alma materSpokane Falls Community College
Occupation(s)Cinematographer, landscape painter
EmployerPixar Animation Studios (1994-present)
Organization(s)AMPAS (2007)[1]
ASC (2014)[2]
Notable work
Websitewww.calahanfineart.com

Sharon Calahan ASC is an American cinematographer who was director of photography on the Pixar films A Bug's Life (1998), Toy Story 2 (1999), and Finding Nemo (2003), and was lighting director for Ratatouille (2007), Cars 2 (2011), and The Good Dinosaur (2015). She took part in the early rise of computer animated feature film making and the acceptance of that medium as cinematography. Calahan is the first member of the American Society of Cinematographers who was invited to join on the basis of a career entirely in animated film. She was nominated, with Bill Reeves, Eben Ostby, and Rick Sayre, for a 2000 BAFTA Award for Best Achievement in Special Visual Effects for A Bug's Life.[3]

Early life and education

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Calahan is a graduate of Othello High School, in Othello, Washington, and of the art program at Spokane Falls Community College (SFCC).[4][5] Her studies did not include filmmaking, computer animation or computer science, but rather illustration, graphic design, and still photography.[5][6] She "stumbled into computer animation by accident", eventually leading to her career in feature film cinematography.[5]

Lighting and cinematography

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Calahan worked in Spokane as an art director at KXLY-TV, KREM (TV), and at documentary film company Pinnacle Productions.[4] Calahan was part of the early years of the computer-generated imagery (CGI) industry's expansion into television and feature films, as lighting director making commercials and TV programs for Pacific Data Images (later PDI/DreamWorks),[7] until she joined Pixar in 1994, first as a lighting supervisor on Toy Story (1995).[2]

The first time Pixar used the title Director of Photography (DP) on a film was on Calahan's next project, A Bug's Life, representing a recognition that the processes and thinking behind computer generated film production had more in common with live action film than with cel animation.[7][8] At Pixar it became an established goal to make films that looked like live action, not cartoons.[9] More than a dozen years later, computer-animated films at other studios, such as How to Train Your Dragon (DreamWorks, 2010) and Frozen (Disney, 2013) still did not credit a director of photography.[8]

Calahan said that on any kind of production, whether entirely made of computer-generated imagery, or a typical modern feature that is usually a hybrid of live action shots with large amounts of added CGI, or a pre-computer era movies shot entirely on film, the director of photography "sets the visual tone" and will "create and realize an artistic vision for the composition, lighting and look of the movie as a whole," meaning that there is little real difference between a traditional director of photography credit and the new labels that were tested during CGI's infancy, virtual cinematographer, director of imaging, or computer graphics director of photography.[7] In a Pixar production, a team of about 30 to 65 lighting artists is overseen by the DP, whose lighting director guides master lighters, who both pre-light each scene and oversee shot lighters who light each shot individually.[7] This takes place in constant collaboration with the layout department, and with teams doing concept art, storyboarding, and previsualization. During pre-production, while sets and characters are being designed by the art department and the technical teams are designing workflows, lighting has not yet begun, but Calahan will paint several hundred lighting concept illustrations, based on the other teams' work but also influencing them as her paintings evolve alongside their design work.[7] During this iterative and mutually collaborative process, Calahan will begin to settle on lighting for each scene and will ask other teams for changes, like recomposing shots.[9]

Calahan's work as both visual designer and lighting director of The Good Dinosaur was based in her experience as a native of the Pacific Northwest and from her time spent painting landscapes around the area of Jackson, Wyoming, which became Calahan's model for the film's setting.[5] Calahan had often vacationed in the mountains to do landscape painting.[9] During location scouting in the Jackson area, as well as in Yellowstone National Park, including a white water rafting trip, digital photos were collected, and added to Calahan's own library of photos of the region.[5] By the time director Peter Sohn and director of photography-camera Mahyar Abousaeedi had sets and rough character animation to work with, they could establish factors such as blocking, camera lens focal lengths, and depth of field. This allowed Calahan and her team of close to 40 lighters to do a first lighting pass, setting the initial tone for the rest of the production, and giving the film its unique look.[5] For The Good Dinosaur, this meant open and natural landscapes with a rugged, pioneering feel, while for Ratataoullie the lighting was soft and romantic, and Cars 2, a "guy's film", was all about shiny metal.[9]

In 2007, Calahan was invited to join the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS).[1] She became a member of the American Society of Cinematographers in 2014, as the first member to be elected to that professional group who had worked only in animation, without also having done live action film.[2][10][8]

Filmography

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Awards

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Works

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  • "Storytelling Through Lighting: A Computer Graphics Perspective" (PDF), SIGGRAPH, 1996
  • Brooker, Darren, ed. (2012), "Making Light Work", Essential CG Lighting Techniques with 3DS Max (3 ed.), Taylor & Francis, pp. 79–, ISBN 9781136138935

Patents

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  • US 9626774  with Shah Apurva. Saturation varying color space. April 18, 2017.

Notes

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  1. ^ a b "oscars.org: Academy Invites 115 to Membership". Archived from the original on 2007-06-20. Retrieved 2007-06-19.
  2. ^ a b c Giardina, Carolyn (January 31, 2014), "Pixar's Sharon Calahan on Animation, Live Action Convergence", The Hollywood Reporter
  3. ^ a b Film; Achievement in Special Visual Effects in 2000, British Academy Television Awards, 2000, Nominees Bill Reeves, Eben Ostby, Rick Sayre, Sharon Calahan. A Bug's Life
  4. ^ a b "The County Lines", The Spokesman-Review, Spokane, Washington, November 22, 1999, archived from the original on March 4, 2018 – via HighBeam
  5. ^ a b c d e f Silberg, Jon (December 2015), "The Good Dinosaur; A Q&A with Sharon Calahan, ASC, about the cinematographer's role in digital animation", American Cinematographer
  6. ^ "Sharon Calahan's Historic 'American Society of Cinematographers' Membership", Pixar Post, Pixar, August 28, 2014
  7. ^ a b c d e Workman, Matt (August 24, 2014), "First CG Director of Photography joins the ASC Q/A with Sharon Calahan, ASC", Cinematography Database, archived from the original on September 13, 2017
  8. ^ a b c Wolff December 21, 2014, Ellen, "The Evolving Role of the CG Director of Photography", Animation Magazine{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ a b c d Pandell, Lexi (November 23, 2015), "How The Good Dinosaur Got Its Stunning Scenery", Wired
  10. ^ Wolff, Ellen; Cohen, David; Barker, Andrew (March 10, 2015), "'Toy Story' at 20, and Counting", Variety, vol. 327, no. 6, Penske Business Media  – via ProQuest (subscription required) , pp. 60+
  11. ^ 10th Annual VES Awards; Outstanding Virtual Cinematography in an Animated Feature Motion Picture, Visual Effects Society, 2011
  12. ^ 43rd Annie Awards (2016); 23. Annie Award for Outstanding Achievement for Production Design in an Animated Feature Production, Annie Awards, 2016

References

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