2009 Demo Reel from
Stephen Tucker on
Vimeo.
Unfortunately, not everything I've done to date has been rendered in HD, but here is my demo reel for 2009. This encompasses mostly work I did while hired at Side Effects Software Inc. working with Houdini, but also includes some other work.
Breakdown:
1. Sunset Shot - All Elements: Camera movement connected to waves
2. Blood Cells - All Elements: Particle blood cells with animated displacement on blood vessels
3. Polish Vigo Ad - Particle Fluid Simulation, Geometry Operations, 3D Rendering
4. Airplane Shot - Partial modeling of aircraft, all other elements: L-systems on sprites for crop effect
5. Shattering Glass of Water - Rigid Body & Particle Fluid Simulation, Lighting, Shading, Rendering, Compositing
6. Shattering Glass of Water - See above
7. Particle shot - 100 million points advected through a fluid simulation
8. Oil tracking - Particle Spray direction determined by rotation and angle of tires, oil sticks to wheels and is transferred from wheels to road.
9. Footprint Test - Intelligent subdivision and deformation based on character animation
10. Particle Fluid Simulation - 500k particle fluid test
11. Aral Sea - Animated Matte Painting over satellite imagery
12. Siggraph 2006 Demo - Rigid Body, Particle, and Shader Effects
13. Airplane Shot - Partial Modeling of Plane, Initial Set-Up, Z-Depth Volume Rendering, Compositing
14. Smoke Bomb - Emission based on direction of nozzle; custom smoke color field. Rigid Bodies and Fluid Sim.
15. Character on Fire - Character Animation, Volumetric Fluid Fire
16. Candle - All Elements: Volumetric Fire and Smoke with instanced lights
17. Dough Cutter - Particle Fluid Simulation, and keyframed animation on the blade.
Quiet Chernobyl: The Aral Sea from
Stephen Tucker on
Vimeo.
First off: Just a warning that the email address at the end of the film no longer is valid. I gave up the allegromation.com domain in 2008. You may find my current contact info in the About section.
This film was my thesis project when I graduated from Animation school. Looking back, there are a lot of things I would do differently, but hey, that's how you learn.
On a serious note, The Aral Sea is one of the worst man-made disasters of our time. At the time that this video was made (2007) it had declined to 10% of its original size, splitting into three lakes – the North Aral Sea and the eastern and western basins of the once far larger South Aral Sea. By 2009, the south-eastern lake had disappeared entirely and the south-western lake retreated to a thin strip at the extreme west of the former southern sea.
The region's once prosperous fishing industry has been virtually destroyed, bringing unemployment and economic hardship. The Aral Sea region is also heavily polluted, with consequent serious public health problems. The retreat of the sea has reportedly also caused local climate change, with summers becoming hotter and drier, and winters colder and longer.
There is now an ongoing effort in Kazakhstan to save and replenish the North Aral Sea. A dam project completed in 2005 has raised the water level of this lake by two metres. Salinity has dropped, and fish are again found in sufficient numbers for some fishing to be viable. The outlook for the remnants of the South Aral Sea remains bleak. I hope this short intro to the topic inspires you to go learn more about the sea. Of course there are many resources out there, but
here is a summation I wrote on the topic while working on the film.