• About us
  • Contact
Friday, June 2, 2023
No Result
View All Result
NEWSLETTER
Times Of Nation
-18 °c
  • Top Stories
  • Genetics
  • Environment
  • Wildlife
  • Outer space
    You Can Detect Tsunamis as They Push the Atmosphere Around

    You Can Detect Tsunamis as They Push the Atmosphere Around

    James Webb Space Telescope finds water in super-hot exoplanet’s atmosphere

    James Webb Space Telescope finds water in super-hot exoplanet’s atmosphere

    Dark Sky Utah: A complete guide to astro-travel in America’s darkest state

    Dark Sky Utah: A complete guide to astro-travel in America’s darkest state

    Exactly How Massive is the Milky Way?

    Exactly How Massive is the Milky Way?

    The Expanse: A Telltale Series preview — Trust your gut before your head gets in the way

    The Expanse: A Telltale Series preview — Trust your gut before your head gets in the way

    Odd supergiant star Betelgeuse is brightening up. Is it about to go supernova?

    Odd supergiant star Betelgeuse is brightening up. Is it about to go supernova?

    Zany new trailer for Fox’s ‘Stars on Mars’ reality show counts us down to launch (video)

    Zany new trailer for Fox’s ‘Stars on Mars’ reality show counts us down to launch (video)

    Saturn’s moon Enceladus is blasting a plume of water 6,000 miles high. Could life be lurking under its icy shell?

    Saturn’s moon Enceladus is blasting a plume of water 6,000 miles high. Could life be lurking under its icy shell?

    Hubble captures starry tentacles of faraway ‘jellyfish galaxy’ in stunning detail (photo)

    Hubble captures starry tentacles of faraway ‘jellyfish galaxy’ in stunning detail (photo)

  • Physics
    Tiny quantum electronic vortexes can circulate in superconductors in ways not seen before

    Tiny quantum electronic vortexes can circulate in superconductors in ways not seen before

    Optical effect advances quantum computing with atomic qubits to a new dimension

    Optical effect advances quantum computing with atomic qubits to a new dimension

    The ‘breath’ between atoms—a new building block for quantum technology

    The ‘breath’ between atoms—a new building block for quantum technology

    Trending Tags

    • geophysics
    • quantum
    • physicists
    • physiology
    • physical
    • holography
  • Top Stories
  • Genetics
  • Environment
  • Wildlife
  • Outer space
    You Can Detect Tsunamis as They Push the Atmosphere Around

    You Can Detect Tsunamis as They Push the Atmosphere Around

    James Webb Space Telescope finds water in super-hot exoplanet’s atmosphere

    James Webb Space Telescope finds water in super-hot exoplanet’s atmosphere

    Dark Sky Utah: A complete guide to astro-travel in America’s darkest state

    Dark Sky Utah: A complete guide to astro-travel in America’s darkest state

    Exactly How Massive is the Milky Way?

    Exactly How Massive is the Milky Way?

    The Expanse: A Telltale Series preview — Trust your gut before your head gets in the way

    The Expanse: A Telltale Series preview — Trust your gut before your head gets in the way

    Odd supergiant star Betelgeuse is brightening up. Is it about to go supernova?

    Odd supergiant star Betelgeuse is brightening up. Is it about to go supernova?

    Zany new trailer for Fox’s ‘Stars on Mars’ reality show counts us down to launch (video)

    Zany new trailer for Fox’s ‘Stars on Mars’ reality show counts us down to launch (video)

    Saturn’s moon Enceladus is blasting a plume of water 6,000 miles high. Could life be lurking under its icy shell?

    Saturn’s moon Enceladus is blasting a plume of water 6,000 miles high. Could life be lurking under its icy shell?

    Hubble captures starry tentacles of faraway ‘jellyfish galaxy’ in stunning detail (photo)

    Hubble captures starry tentacles of faraway ‘jellyfish galaxy’ in stunning detail (photo)

  • Physics
    Tiny quantum electronic vortexes can circulate in superconductors in ways not seen before

    Tiny quantum electronic vortexes can circulate in superconductors in ways not seen before

    Optical effect advances quantum computing with atomic qubits to a new dimension

    Optical effect advances quantum computing with atomic qubits to a new dimension

    The ‘breath’ between atoms—a new building block for quantum technology

    The ‘breath’ between atoms—a new building block for quantum technology

    Trending Tags

    • geophysics
    • quantum
    • physicists
    • physiology
    • physical
    • holography
No Result
View All Result
Times Of Nation
No Result
View All Result
bayan çanta
Home Outer space

James Cameron recounts 50 years of cinematic art in lavish ‘Tech Noir’ book (exclusive)

by TimesOfNation
December 18, 2021
in Outer space
James Cameron recounts 50 years of cinematic art in lavish ‘Tech Noir’ book (exclusive)
1
SHARES
6
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

James Cameron recounts 50 years of cinematic art in lavish ‘Tech Noir’ book (exclusive): Times Of Nation

RelatedArticles

You Can Detect Tsunamis as They Push the Atmosphere Around

James Webb Space Telescope finds water in super-hot exoplanet’s atmosphere

Dark Sky Utah: A complete guide to astro-travel in America’s darkest state

As one of the preeminent filmmakers of our generation, screenwriter/director James Cameron has taken us into the nightmare world of killer cyborgs in “Terminator,” on a bug hunt to LV-426 in “Aliens,” aboard the doomed ocean liner for “Titanic” and to the exotic planet of Pandora in “Avatar.”

But few people are aware of his incredible artistic aptitudes on display in decades of concept art, pre-production sketches, storyboards, and technical blueprints created for his Hollywood film projects, both produced and unproduced. Now a deluxe new coffee table book by Insight Editions collects nearly fifty years of Cameron’s artwork dating back to his high school days in Ontario, Canada.

“Tech Noir: The Art of James Cameron” (2021) is a jaw-dropping 392-page volume weighing nearly seven pounds, packed with never-seen pieces drawn from the visionary creator’s personal archives and curated by Cameron himself with insightful comments for each work.

James Cameron. (Image credit: © ROLEX-Robert Ascroft)

It’s a unique exploration of the filmmaker’s daydreams and developmental process expressed using pencils, pens, and paints prior to any casting choices or cameras rolling. Beginning in the 1960s, Cameron was obsessed with monsters, aliens, and spaceships that crammed the pages of notepads and sketchbooks. Launching into the film industry in the 1970s after his family moved to Southern California, Cameron made money crafting movie one-sheets and wild conceptual art for Roger Corman B-movies that would further hone his abilities.

“Tech Noir” collects a fantastic range of Cameron’s private and commercial art where seeds of his blockbusters and unrealized projects were sown, from amateur monster contests and ambitious space operas, to the evolution of classic hits like “Terminator,” “Aliens” and “Avatar.”

Space.com spoke with Cameron from his studio in Wellington, New Zealand where he’s putting the final touches on “Avatar 2” to hear how art became the catalyst to a career of limitless imagination. 

Space.com: Art for your never-realized “Xenogenesis” space opera project in the early ‘80s is featured heavily in the book. Why was that such a pivotal part of your creative development and do you ever have dreams of resurrecting it in some form? 

James Cameron: Well, I just read the script recently and it’s actually not that bad a story. There’s some good ideas in it. It’s fairly well-trodden ground now forty years later. Nothing that other people haven’t done in pieces, I don’t think. But you could see I was fascinated by space travel and the huge physical challenge of traveling to other star systems. 

I studied physics and astronomy in college and I appreciated how difficult it would be and how a lot of spacecraft designs in movies were pretty whimsical. So I came up with this idea for a starship that had the engine section far away because of the radiation and so on. I could just go down that nerdy rabbit hole in figuring out the tech, and I think I’ve maintained that as a motif throughout my science fiction body of work. 

My example I use is the LEM, the Lunar Module. We had all these movies that showed rocket ships that were pointy and had fins at the bottom. And that’s how they landed and went to other planets. When we finally went to the moon, we went in the most improbable-looking device that was never anticipated by a couple of decades of Hollywood designers. But if you understand why it was that way it makes completely logical engineering sense. So I thought in my science fiction shows I’m going to start with the engineering and let that drive the design, and then that’s what we’ll build. 

While I’m not really proceeding with “Xenogenesis,” the way in which I formulated my working process is still what I apply today, unless I’m doing something completely fanciful. I give myself a lot of permission in “Avatar” and just remind people, “Hey, it’s a world with floating mountains, we can give ourselves permission to do some improbable things.” 

Although even there I had a rationale for the floating mountains, that Unobtanium was a Type 2 superconductor and the Meissner Effect flux pinning would hold them up off the ground if there was a magnetic field of sufficient force. Still, for the average viewer, it’s a world with floating mountains. If that doesn’t give you permission to do anything you want, I don’t know what does.

Image 1 of 5

James Cameron's new book "Tech Noir" offers a glimpse from his personal collection and archives.

A sneak peek at Tech Noir: The Art of James Cameron in book stores now. (Image credit: Insight Editions)
Image 2 of 5

James Cameron's new book "Tech Noir" offers a glimpse from his personal collection and archives.

A sneak peek at Tech Noir: The Art of James Cameron in book stores now. (Image credit: Insight Editions)
Image 3 of 5

James Cameron's new book "Tech Noir" offers a glimpse from his personal collection and archives.

A sneak peek at Tech Noir: The Art of James Cameron in book stores now. (Image credit: Insight Editions)
Image 4 of 5

James Cameron's new book "Tech Noir" offers a glimpse from his personal collection and archives.

A sneak peek at Tech Noir: The Art of James Cameron in book stores now. (Image credit: Insight Editions)
Image 5 of 5

James Cameron's new book "Tech Noir" offers a glimpse from his personal collection and archives.

A sneak peek at Tech Noir: The Art of James Cameron in book stores now. (Image credit: Insight Editions)

Space.com: “The Abyss” is often a neglected Cameron classic that was a pioneering film in so many ways. What can you tell us about concept art created for it and will there be a high-definition 4K transfer at some point? 

Cameron: Yeah, we finished the transfer and I wanted to do it myself because Mikael [Salomon] did such a beautiful job with the cinematography on that film. It is truly, truly gorgeous cinematography. That was before I started to assert myself in terms of lighting and asking the cinematographer to do certain things. I’d compose with the camera and choose the lenses, but I left the lighting to him. He did a remarkable job on that movie that I appreciate better now than I did even as we were making it. 

I’d also like to point out that he took one look at the first day’s dailies of the underwater lighting and he went out and learned to scuba dive. He came in the following Monday morning, the worst diver in the world, but he reinvented underwater lighting. He went for indirect lighting and he got everybody doing things that were not just outside their comfort zone, they’d never even thought of it. Suddenly the underwater shots start to live up to the surface photography.

So I just recently finished the high-def transfer a couple of months ago so presumably there’ll be Blu-rays and it will stream with a proper transfer from now on. I appreciate what you said about the film. It didn’t make much money in its day, but it does seem to be well-liked over time. The designers were basically Ron Cobb on the one hand, and Steve Burg on the other, who was lead designer of the NTIs, the non-terrestrial intelligence, the look of their city and bodies and faces. Steve was a guy that I worked with on “Terminator 2”  after that. He was quite young at the time and fairly new to design. 

Whereas Ron Cobb was quite well seasoned. He’d done “Blade Runner” and “Alien” and worked with me on “Aliens.” Ron did all the lived-in tech of the underwater oil rig. I’m sure there were people that saw the film and thought that we just went and filmed on one of those underwater oil rigs that they have. Which they don’t! But it looked real enough that you believed it was a real facility. It looked like the real deal if there ever was such a thing.  

Steve of course got to be completely fanciful and use very flourishy design language. I used the same motif I did on “Aliens,” which is to cast seasoned artists to do different design cultures. So there’s the human technology culture and then there was the alien culture.

Space.com: You mentioned in “Tech Noir” how instrumental Jack “King” Kirby was to you as a young artist. What role did comics play growing up in Canada and Orange County, California?

Cameron: For me specifically it was Marvel Comics, and this was I think really the Golden Age of creation for Marvel. This was the period that Spider-Man emerged and The Hulk emerged and X-Men were new on the scene at that point. And I’m talking about when I was 14, 15, 16 in the late Sixties. 

I loved comic books, it was a great way to learn to draw. There was an artist that drew some of the early Spider-Man comics named Steve Ditko. And he did these amazing hands, just beautifully sculpted. And there were other artists that seemed to specialize in different things, like gestural movement. I just thought the Marvel artists for the most part were doing the interesting stuff. Jack Kirby of course was so multi-talented. He did alien machinery that was … I mean where does that even come from? 

So I was inspired by all that. This is at a time when science fiction in television and movies was still in the stone age in terms of that kind of broad gestural design. So you had to look to fantasy art and there was no internet. You’d see it in magazine cover paintings. Frank Frazetta and artists like Kelly Freas. That’s why I always loved the science fiction paperbacks, because they had the good art. Today you can go online and spend days, weeks, years, looking at all the fantasy art that’s out there. But there was very little of it around at that time. So you studied every one and you learned from it. 

You can see a Kirby influence in my drawings. You can see when I’m intentionally trying to channel Frazetta with the muscle guys and gestural movement with battle axes and swords. I know all my reference points there because there was only a handful of really world-class artists. Today there’s such a proliferation of them. It’s quite amazing how fantasy and science fiction art, both fan art and people who do it professionally, has just exploded.

“Tech Noir: The Art of James Cameron” is available now.

Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom or on Facebook. 

(News Source :Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Times Of Nation staff and is published from a www.space.com feed.)

Read Also: Latest News | Current Affairs News | Today News | English News | World News Today

TimesofNation.com offer news and information like: English newspaper today | today English news | English news live | times India | today news in English in India | breaking news in India today | India TV news today & Hindustan News.

You can Read on TimesofNation.com latest news today, breaking news headlines, Top news. Discover national and international news on economy, politics, defence, sports, world news & other relatively current affair’s news.

Tags: ArtBookCameroncinematicexclusiveJameslavishNoirrecountstechyears
Plugin Install : Subscribe Push Notification need OneSignal plugin to be installed.
TimesOfNation

TimesOfNation

Related Posts

James Webb Space Telescope finds water in super-hot exoplanet’s atmosphere

James Webb Space Telescope finds water in super-hot exoplanet’s atmosphere

by TimesOfNation
June 1, 2023
1

James Webb Space Telescope finds water in super-hot exoplanet's atmosphere: Times Of Nation The James Webb Space Telescope has found...

James Webb telescope discovers gargantuan geyser on Saturn’s moon, blasting water hundreds of miles into space

James Webb telescope discovers gargantuan geyser on Saturn’s moon, blasting water hundreds of miles into space

by TimesOfNation
May 28, 2023
4

James Webb telescope discovers gargantuan geyser on Saturn's moon, blasting water hundreds of miles into space: Times Of Nation An...

Princess Leia’s original ‘Star Wars’ ceremonial dress could fetch  million at auction (exclusive)

Princess Leia’s original ‘Star Wars’ ceremonial dress could fetch $2 million at auction (exclusive)

by TimesOfNation
May 28, 2023
3

Princess Leia's original 'Star Wars' ceremonial dress could fetch $2 million at auction (exclusive): Times Of Nation Authentic screen-used "Star...

40 years ago, a comet came out of the blue in a surprise Earth flyby. Here’s what we know now.

40 years ago, a comet came out of the blue in a surprise Earth flyby. Here’s what we know now.

by TimesOfNation
May 27, 2023
2

40 years ago, a comet came out of the blue in a surprise Earth flyby. Here's what we know now.:...

The universe looks amazing in new photos from the James Webb Space Telescope and famed X-ray observatory

The universe looks amazing in new photos from the James Webb Space Telescope and famed X-ray observatory

by TimesOfNation
May 26, 2023
4

The universe looks amazing in new photos from the James Webb Space Telescope and famed X-ray observatory: Times Of Nation...

The brightest supernova in years could help astronomers forecast future star explosions

The brightest supernova in years could help astronomers forecast future star explosions

by TimesOfNation
May 26, 2023
4

The brightest supernova in years could help astronomers forecast future star explosions: Times Of Nation A new supernova has turned...

Next Post
Madhya Pradesh: Give us alms to grease officer’s palm, say Vendors

Madhya Pradesh: Give us alms to grease officer’s palm, say Vendors

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

I agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

Recommended

NASA moon program aims for a daring commercial landing on the far side in 2025

NASA moon program aims for a daring commercial landing on the far side in 2025

10 months ago
4
Beetle Bikes Bring a Smile to Children at Angel Home NGO

Beetle Bikes Bring a Smile to Children at Angel Home NGO

1 year ago
17

Popular News

  • Petrol, diesel sales soar in May

    Petrol, diesel sales soar in May

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Stamp Duty: Govt scraps 15-yr cap for women homebuyers who seek 1% rebate

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • A leader like Hardik Pandya is a boon: Sai Sudharsan | Cricket News – Times of India

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Gold, silver trade lower on June 1; Check prices in Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai, Kolkata

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Hubble captures starry tentacles of faraway ‘jellyfish galaxy’ in stunning detail (photo)

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

About

Times Of Nation

timesofnation.com is a dedicated news website for core sciences, technology, medical research and health news along with current affairs coverage from India. the timesofnation.com website is one of the fast growing online communities for science-minded people....Read more

Category

  • Business News
  • Environment
  • Genetics
  • India
  • Outer space
  • Physics
  • Wildlife

Site Links

  • Corrections Policy
  • Fact Checking Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy

Contact Us

Email us to send your suggestions
editor[@]timesofnation.com
Send articles and news to editor[@]timesofnation.com
For other enquiries: admin[@]timesofnation.com
If you find any content violating the editorial code of conduct mail to editor[@]timesofnation.com.

  • Corrections Policy
  • Fact Checking Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy

© 2021 Times of Nation. All rights reserved.

ankara escort çankaya escort çankaya escort escort bayan çankaya istanbul rus escort eryaman escort ankara escort kızılay escort istanbul escort ankara escort ankara escort escort ankara istanbul rus Escort atasehir Escort beylikduzu Escort Ankara Escort malatya Escort kuşadası Escort gaziantep Escort izmir Escort
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Genetics
  • Environment
  • Wildlife
  • Outer space
  • Physics

© 2021 Times of Nation. All rights reserved.

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.