Foundation Imaging
Industry | CGI visual effects studio |
---|---|
Fate | Bankruptcy |
Defunct | 2001 |
Key people | Paul Beigle-Bryant and Ron Thornton |
Foundation Imaging was a CGI visual effects studio, computer animation studio, and post-production editing facility founded by Paul Beigle-Bryant and Ron Thornton that pioneered digital imaging for television programming using Newtek's LightWave 3D on Commodore Amiga based Video Toaster workstations.
Notable works
Babylon 5
Foundation Imaging is best known their work on the science fiction series Babylon 5 winning an Emmy Award for the pilot episode.
Star Trek franchise
When Babylon 5 producers didn't renew after the third season,[1] they worked on Paramount's Star Trek: Voyager and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (winning two more Emmy Awards for their work on Voyager).
Batman CG visuals
While working on Star Trek, the company provided CG visuals for the Warner Brothers direct-to-video animated movies based on the Batman: The Animated Series TV series.
Awards
- 1993 Emmy Award – Babylon 5 – Outstanding Individual Achievement In Special Visual Effects:
- Paul Beigle-Bryant, Computer Imaging Supervisor - Foundation Imaging
- Shannon Casey, Visual Effects Coordinator
- Ron Thornton, Visual Effects Designer - Foundation Imaging
- 1999 Emmy Award – Star Trek: Voyager – Outstanding Special Visual Effects For A Series:
- Rob Bonchune, CGI Supervisor - Foundation Imaging
- Elizabeth Castro, Visual Effects Coordinator
- Arthur J. Codron, Visual Effects Coordinator
- Dan Curry, Visual Effects Producer/Supervisor
- Don Greenberg, Visual Effects Compositor
- Paul Hill, Visual Effects Compositor
- Adam "Mojo" Lebowitz, CGI Supervisor - Foundation Imaging
- Ronald B. Moore, Visual Effects Supervisor
- Greg Rainoff, Visual Effects Artist
- Mitch Suskin, Visual Effects Supervisor
- John Teska, CGI Animator - Foundation Imaging
- 2001 Emmy Award – Star Trek: Voyager – Outstanding Special Visual Effects For A Series:
- Robert Bonchune, CGI Supervisor - Foundation Imaging
- Eric Chauvin, Matte Artist
- Art Codron, Visual Effects Coordinator
- Dan Curry, Visual Effects Producer
- Steve Fong, Visual Effects Compositor
- Ronald Moore, Visual Effects Supervisor
- Greg Rainoff, Visual Effects Animator
- Mitch Suskin, Visual Effects Supervisor
- John Teska, CGI Artist - Foundation Imaging
Dissolution
The company was dissolved after work on season one of Star Trek: Enterprise had been completed and the company assets were sold off in a public auction on December 17, 2002 by Brian Testo Associates, LLC.
Legacy
The company's Emmy Award winning work on Babylon 5 popularized using Lightwave 3D on US TV shows for CGI visual effects and becoming an industry standard
Key Emmy Award winning animators from the company, Adam "Mojo" Lebowitz and John Teska remain major figures in the visual effects field for their work on shows such as the rebooted Battlestar Galactica and Lost.
Project history
Movies
- The Jackal (1997)
- Batman & Mr. Freeze: SubZero (1998)
- Today's Life (2000)
- The Legend of Zu (2001) (Blood Sea sequence)
- They Crawl (2001)
- Project Viper (2002)
- The Extreme Team (2003)
- Chrome (2005)
Live action series
- Babylon 5 (1993 - 1996) (seasons 1-3)
- Hypernauts (1995 - 1996) (season 1)
- Star Trek: Voyager (1996 - 2001) (seasons 3-7)
- Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1997 - 1999) (the season 5 finale, seasons 6-7)
- Dawson's Creek (2000) (single episode water effects)
- Star Trek: Enterprise (2001 - 2002) (season 1)
Animated series
- Roughnecks: Starship Troopers Chronicles (1999)
- Max Steel (2001)
- Dan Dare (2002)
Video games
- Twisted Metal: Black (2001) (CG movie and visual effects)
DVD
- Star Trek: The Motion Picture (DVD director's edition)
References
- ↑ Ron Thornton (2008-03-22). "Ron Thornton Interview". B5Scrolls. Retrieved 2011-01-05.
External links
- Foundation Imaging at the Internet Movie Database
- Babylon 5 - Online!: Interview with Ron Thornton
- Trek Today: Interview with Paul Bryant
- Newtek.com: Interview with Kyle Toucher
- Newtek.com: Interview with Kevin "Q" Quattro
- Foundation Imaging at Memory Alpha (a Star Trek wiki)