Non-Photorealistic Computer Graphics Library

[ home · search · about · links · contact · rss ] [ submit bibtex ] [ BookCite · NPR Books ]

User:

Pass:

Found 2 item(s) authored by "R. Michael Kirby" Find Author on Google.

In Book Visualization Handbook

Author(s): R. Michael Kirby, Daniel F. Keefe, David H. Laidlaw.
In Book: Charles D. Hansen and Christopher R. Johnson, Part XI: Selected Topics and Applications, Chapter 45. Painting and visualization, pp. 873--891, Academic Press, 2004.
[BibTeX] Find this paper on Google

Abstract:
Art, in particular painting, has had clear impacts on the style, techniques, and processes of scientific visualization. Artists strive to create visual forms and ideas that are evocative and convey meaning or tell a story. Over time, painters and other artists have developed sophisticated techniques, as well as a finely tuned aesthetic sense, to help accomplish their goals. As visualization researchers, we can learn from this body of work to improve our own visual representations. We can study artistic examples to learn what art works and what does not, we can study the visual design process to learn how to design better visualization artifacts, and we can study the pedagogy for training new designers and artists so we can better train visualization experts and better evaluate visualizations. The synergy between art and scientific visualization, whether manifested in collaborative teams, new painting-inspired visualization techniques, or new visualization methodologies, holds great potential for the advancement of scientific visualization and discovery.

Proceedings Visualizing Multivalued Data from 2D Incompressible Flows Using Concepts from Painting
Haralambos Marmanis, R. Michael Kirby, David H. Laidlaw.
Visualization 1999, 1999. [BibTeX]

Visitors: 191629