Nick Pugh

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Nick Pugh (born January 15, 1967) is an American artist, designer, and educator known for his work in digital fine art, originality in design, entertainment, and transportation.

Contents

[edit] Artistic Themes

Nick has explored many artistic themes including environmental-human entropy, bioengineering, advanced concept transportation, and evolutionary nanotechnology.[1]

[edit] Luminair

Pugh’s first solo publication, Luminair presents a collection of digital life paintings developed in a novel approach to traditional representational art. Painting from life, Pugh's canvas is the laptop computer screen and his palette is the multitude of colors available to the digital artist. Traveling from his home in California to rural New England, Europe, and South America, he has painted a variety of images that capture the light and emotion of the scenes. For aspiring digital painters, the book contains instruction on the process used to create the images in the work.

[edit] Design Instruction

For the past two years, Nick has taught design courses at Art Center College of Design, including Originality in Design and Digital Rendering. In addition, Nick is the creator of a series of created with the [2]Gnomon Workshop] on the topics of creature design illustration, environment rendering, and originality in design.

[edit] Xeno III

Nick is also the creator of the Xeno III, a fully functioning, 500 horsepower, natural gas-fueled concept car. The design of Xeno III is raw and skeletal, but it is largely gold plated removing it from being either being a racecar or a luxury car.[2]


The Xeno III project is the subject of the book by Mark Christensen titled Build The Perfect Beast, published in 2001 by Thomas Dunne. The entire project was profiled in 2002 by Car Design News.

During the Xeno III project, Nick co-founded an alternative-fuel transportation company called NGV-USA to do research in the field of automotive engineering. As a member of this firm, Pugh received a U.S. Patent (Patent number 5,370,418) for inventing a unique design wherein natural gas cylinders are integrated with a standard "ladder" chassis. A prototype of the chassis was installed into a customized Dodge Ram Van called the "Long Ranger". This van was used by Cal Start and other government organizations to promote alternative fuel vehicles.

[edit] Concept Design Series

In addition to Luminair, Nick’s work is featured in both releases in the Design Studio Press series Concept Design, with his work featured on the cover of Concept Design 2.

[edit] Entertainment

Since 1997, Nick has been the lead concept artist for visual effects studio Rhythm and Hues. Nick's recent film projects include The Chronicles of Narnia, The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift, Serenity, and Superman Returns.

[edit] Personal life

Born in Paris, Nick grew up in the Berkeley Hills east of San Francisco. During his youth, Nick spent his time split between California and New England where both his grandmothers still live. Before moving to Los Angeles in 1986 to attend Art Center, Nick lived in Coventry, England where he took design and engineering courses at Coventry University. Since Art Center, Nick has lived in Belmont Shore. He currently resides in the Bixby Knolls neighborhood of Long Beach with his wife Eileen, their daughter Serena, their cat “Turtle Bus”, and their dog Logs.


[edit] External links

Nick Pugh's Official Web Site

Nick Pugh's entry at IMDB

[edit] References

  1. ^ [1]
  2. ^ Wired Magazine, Issue 8.01, Jan 2000. Ground Xeno: Nick Pugh's car designs are too radical for Detroit. So he's building the ultimate driving machine in a Los Angeles garage.