Non-Photorealistic Computer Graphics Library

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Found 4 item(s) authored by "Simon Schofield" .

Article Expressive Rendering: A Review of Nonphotorealistic Techniques
John Lansdown, Simon Schofield.
IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications, Vol. 15, No. 3, pp. 29--37, May, 1995. [BibTeX]

Article Interactive Computer Rendering
Paul Richens, Simon Schofield.
Architectural Research Quarterly, Vol. 1, No. 1, 1995. [BibTeX]

In Collection Non-Photorealistic Rendering

Author(s): Stuart Green, David H. Salesin, Simon Schofield, Aaron Hertzmann, Peter C. Litwinowicz, Amy A. Gooch, Cassidy J. Curtis, Bruce Gooch.
In Collection: Siggraph 99, ACM Press, Course 17, 1999.
[BibTeX] Find this paper on Google

Abstract:
In the history of computer graphics, the area of non-photorealistic rendering (NPR) has emerged relatively recently as a subject area in its own right. Its popularity is reflected in the conference programs of the last several SIGGRAPH events, in which a session in each has been set aside to cover the areas of ’Art, Illustration and Expression’. For the research community, NPR represents a gold mine of opportunity, with recent proponents having addressed a wide range of subject matter, including various artistic styles such as pen and ink, watercolor and pencil sketch. One of the refreshing aspects of NPR is that it brings closer together the disciplines of art and science; its value is far less on the technical brilliance of the techniques but on the aesthetics of the results, and the scope to convey shape, structure and artistic expression. It is an area that requires artists and engineers to work together to solve new and challenging problems in computer graphics. The course will appeal to artists and technologists alike. In this course proposal we have brought together a number of leading researchers in the field of NPR with artists and industrialists to provide participants with an excellent grounding in this exciting subject. The panel of eight speakers will provide coverage of the various strands of NPR research and applications, including 2D, 2½D and 3D approaches. The artist's perspective on NPR will be provided, incorporating a critique of different approaches and with reference to the classic techniques of fine art. The application of NPR to areas as diverse as Hollywood movie production and desktop consumer software programs will be covered.

PhD Thesis Non-photorealistic Rendering: A Critical Examination and Proposed System
Simon Schofield.
School of Art and Design, Middlesex University, United Kingdom, May, 1994. [BibTeX]

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