The Computer Graphics Society
THE COMPUTER GRAPHICS SOCIETY (CGS) is an international, professional society whose purpose is to promote computer graphics by exchanging ideas to find innovative solutions. It is a non-profit-making association, that is at the service of its members. CGS was formally founded in Geneva in 1992 by:
Prof. Rae Earnshaw
Prof. Tosiyasu L.Kunii
Prof. Nadia Magnenat Thalmann
Prof. Daniel Thalmann
Currently, the President of CGS is Prof. Nadia Magnenat Thalmann
CGS has founded 4 conferences:
Computer Graphics International (CGI)
Computer Animation (CA)
Pacific Graphics (PG)
MultiMedia Modeling (MMM)
CGS arranges conferences and workshops. It also edits journals and books independently or in cooperation with other professional societies.
The Computer Graphics Society is now responsible of the global organization of two conferences:
- The Computer Graphics International conference (CGI) that was founded in 1983 by Prof. Tosiyasu L. Kunii in Tokyo, Japan
- The Computer Animation and Social Agents (CASA) conference, formerly named Computer Animation, that was founded in 1988 by Prof. Nadia Magnenat Thalmann in Geneva
A steering committee (SC) is composed of members, mostly who have organized the conferences in the past. It decides about the strategy of the CGI and CASA conferences, considers and approves potential organisers, and monitors how the conference organisation is running. The SC requests a proposal including conference and program chairs proposals, financial budget and dates to be submitted to the SC no later than 14 months before the date of the new conference. A report after the end of the conference (number of participants, acceptance rate, financial issues) is also required.
Since 2013, the Computer Graphics Society (CGS) discerns two different awards:
- The CGI Best Paper Award (CGI 2013,[1] CGI 2014,[2] CGI 2015 [3])
- The CGI Career Achievement Award (CGI 2013,[4] CGI 2014,[5] CGI 2015 [6])