Nikola Tesla Satellite Award

The Nikola Tesla Award is an honorary Satellite Award bestowed by the International Press Academy to recognize the "pioneers of filmmaking technology industry".[1] It was first presented on January 12, 2003, at the 7th Annual Golden Satellite Awards ceremony to George Lucas. Hive Lighting and its company co-founders Robert Rutherford and Jon Edward Miller are the latest recipient.

The trophy awarded to the honorees is a bust of inventor Nikola Tesla cast in bronze, on a marble base, inscribed for the recipient. It was designed by Sarajevan sculptor Dragan Radenović.[2]

Honorees

YearRecipientReason
2002George LucasFor a lifetime of visionary filmmaking achievement and his privately held company, Lucasfilm, continues to expand frontiers in the cinematic arts[1]
2003James CameronFor his stand-out effects and 3D lens innovations[1]
2004Jerry LewisFor introducing video-assist and video playback techniques, which have become industry standards[1]
2005Stan WinstonFor his special effects contributions to cinema[1]
2006Richard DonnerFor creating special effects on the 1978 film Superman that pre-dated contemporary computer-generated images[1]
2007Dennis MurenFor his visual effects in films, especially with computer digital rendering and compositing[1]
2008Rick BakerFor his innovative make-up, prosthetics, and creature effects in films[1]
2009Roger DeakinsFor his creative cinematography in films[1]
2010Robert A. HarrisFor his work as film preservationist and historian[1]
2011Douglas TrumbullFor his film inventions and entrepreneurial work[3]
2012Walter MurchFor award-winning sound design and editing in films[4]
2013Garrett BrownFor visionary achievement in filmmaking technology[5]
2014Industrial Light & MagicFor setting the standard for visual effects and creating some of the most stunning images in the history of film.[1]
2015Robert Rutherford and Jonathan Miller (Hive Lighting)For their energy efficient, full-spectrum, flicker-free plasma lighting systems.[1]
2016John TollFor setting a new bar in the future of digital filmmaking.[6]
2017Robert LegatoFor his deft atmospheric command of visual effects.[7]
gollark: Only memetically.
gollark: National security reasons and [REDACTED] compliance protocols.
gollark: utilizeparsercombinators
gollark: Well, if you fixed the warnings it warned you of, the unreæchable patterns would be more obvious.
gollark: Those seem like sensible warnings. Although I believe you can stick an attribute in to disable ones you don't need.

References

  1. "Nikola Tesla Award". International Press Academy. Retrieved December 2, 2015.
  2. "International Press Academy Awards". International Press Academy. Retrieved December 28, 2012.
  3. "VFX Pioneer Douglas Trumbull Honored with IPA's 2011 Tesla Award". International Press Academy. November 21, 2011. Retrieved December 28, 2012.
  4. Johnson, Quendrith (November 13, 2012). "Terence Stamp, Paul Williams, Walter Murch, X-Men's Bruce Davison Shine Among 17th Satellite Award Honorees". International Press Academy. Retrieved December 28, 2012.
  5. Kilday, Gregg (February 23, 2014). "Satellite Awards: '12 Years a Slave' Wins Best Motion Picture". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved December 3, 2014.
  6. "IPA honors John Toll with the Tesla Award". International Press Academy. Retrieved December 22, 2016.
  7. "IPA Reveals Noms for 22nd Satellite™ Awards, Plus Robert Legato for Tesla Award & Greta Gerwig as Auteur Recipient". International Press Academy. Retrieved December 1, 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.