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    Home » Saul Bass, Ray Harryhausen, Gene Roddenberry Among VES Hall of Fame Inductees

    Saul Bass, Ray Harryhausen, Gene Roddenberry Among VES Hall of Fame Inductees

    By SHOOTWednesday, August 15, 2018Updated:Tuesday, May 14, 2024No Comments4773 Views
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    The late VFX pioneer Ray Harryhausen will be inducted into the VES Hall of Fame.
    LOS ANGELES --

    The Visual Effects Society (VES) has named the 2018 inductees into the VES Hall of Fame, the newest Lifetime and Honorary members and this year’s recipient of the VES Founders Award. The names of this year’s VES Fellows will be announced later. The honorees and Hall of Fame inductees will be recognized at a special reception in October. 

    VFX archivist and longtime Board member Gene Kozicki was named recipient of the 2018 VES Founders Award. The Society designated venerated visual effects innovator Jonathan Erland, VES with a Lifetime VES Membership while Jules Roman, CEO of Tippett Studio, will receive an Honorary VES Membership. This year’s VES Hall of Fame honorees include: L.B. Abbott, Richard “Doc” Baily, Saul Bass, Ray Harryhausen, Derek Meddings, Eileen Moran, and Gene Roddenberry. 

    “Our VES honorees represent a group of exceptional artists, innovators and professionals who have had a profound impact on the field of visual effects,” said Mike Chambers, VES Board chair. “We are proud to recognize those who helped shape our shared legacy and continue to inspire future generations of VFX practitioners.”

    Founders Award Recipient: Gene Kozicki for his sustained contributions to the art, science or business of visual effects and meritorious service to the Society. Kozicki has served as a member of the Board of Directors and L.A. Section Board of Managers and was the co-founder of the VES Festival for many years, as well as moderator of numerous VES panels. As chair of the VES Archives Committee, he helped secure portions of personal archives of Robert Abel, Richard Edlund and others and was instrumental in organizing the VES archives and helping to secure funding to digitize many of our assets. As a VFX historian, Kozicki is active in the archiving of information, imagery and artifacts from the visual effects industry and regularly consults with the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences and the American Cinematheque on retrospectives and conservation.

    Kozicki’s career has spanned almost three decades, from working with Robert and Dennis Skotak, who were tasked with blowing up Los Angeles for Terminator 2: Judgment Day. He joined VIFX in 1994 and then worked with Rhythm & Hues for more than a decade. He has worked on various Star Trek series and films including Titanic, The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe, and Power Rangers.

    Lifetime Member: Jonathan Erland, VES, for meritorious service to the Society and the global industry. As chairman of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Visual Effects Award Steering Committee, Erland was instrumental in establishing Visual Effects as a Branch of the Academy. He served 11 years on the Academy’s Board of Governors and 25 years on the Executive Committee of the Visual Effects Branch and the Scientific and Engineering Awards Committee. 

    Erland was a founder of the Visual Effects Society, the recipient of the inaugural VES Founders Award, and was among the first to receive the VES Fellows distinction. He also received the Academy’s Scientific and Engineering Award and the Gordon E. Sawyer Award in recognition of his career of technological contributions that have brought credit to the industry.

    Honorary Member: Jules Roman for her exemplary contributions to the entertainment industry and for furthering the interests and values of visual effects practitioners. Roman is co-founder and CEO of Tippett Studio. In this role, she has continually strived to push the creative and technical edge of the visual effects industry, from early, high-profile stop-motion design to lauded animation work on films Solo: A Star Wars Story, Jurassic World, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2: Star Wars: The Force Awakens, The Twilight Saga and Ted.

    Roman is recognized as a pragmatic leader in the field of animation and visual effects. She has been nimble in the face of runaway production overseas, maintaining her Berkeley-based studio by diversifying offerings for themed entertainment, TV commercials, mobile and VR content, and international productions.

    VES Hall of Fame honorees include:

    L.B. Abbott (1908-1985). Lenwood Ballard Abbott, ASC, was an award-winning special effects expert, cinematographer and cameraman. He won four Academy Special Achievement Awards for Visual Effects for Doctor Doolittle, Tora! Tora! Tora!, The Poseidon Adventure and Logan’s Run. Abbott was head of the Special Effects Department at 20th Century Fox from 1957-1970.

    Richard “Doc” Baily (1953-2006). Baily was a visual effects pioneer, digital animator and creator of the abstract image construction software Spore. Doc is best known for the breathtaking visuals he created to represent the sentient planet in Steven Soderbergh’s film Solaris, which were generated at extremely high resolution. His filmography also includes Blade, Fight Club and The Cell.

    Saul Bass (1920-1996). Bass was a renowned graphic designer, VFX consultant and Academy Award-winning filmmaker. During his 40-year career, Bass worked for some of Hollywood’s most prominent filmmakers including Hitchcock, Preminger, Kubrick and Scorsese. He is best known for designing some of the most iconic film posters and title sequences in film history, including Vertigo, North By Northwest, Psycho, Spartacus, West Side Story, and Goodfellas.
     
    Ray Harryhausen (1920-2013). Harryhausen was a pioneering multiple-award-winning visual effects creator, writer and producer who created a form of stop-motion model animation known as Dynamation. His most memorable highlights include: working with his mentor Willis H. O’Brien on Academy Award winner Mighty Joe Young; his first color film, The 7th Voyage of Sinbad, and Jason and the Argonauts, which featured a legendary sword fight with skeleton warriors. He received the Academy’s Gordon E. Sawyer Award for technological contributions that brought credit to the industry.

    Derek Meddings (1931-1995). Meddings was a special and visual effects supervisor who worked in television and film, most notably for the James Bond and Superman film series. Meddings was awarded a shared Special Achievement Academy Award for special effects on Superman and shared the BAFTA Michael Balcon Award. He was also Oscar-nominated for Moonraker and BAFTA-nominated for Batman and Goldeneye.

    Eileen Moran (1952-2012). Moran was a multiple VES Award-winning visual effects producer known for her groundbreaking CG commercial work at Digital Domain and her feature work as an executive producer at Weta Digital. Moran won her first VES Award for Outstanding Visual Effects for her work on King Kong. She led the Weta Digital effects team on VES Award-winner Avatar. She also received a VES nomination for The Adventures Of Tin-Tin: The Secret Of The Unicorn.

    Gene Roddenberry (1921-1991). Roddenberry was an award-winning writer and producer, best known for creating the Star Trek franchise. He was the first TV writer with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and was inducted into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame and the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Hall of Fame. Roddenberry and Star Trek have been cited as inspiration for other science fiction franchises, with George Lucas crediting the series for enabling Star Wars to be produced.

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    Category:News
    Tags:VESVisual Effects Society



    “One Battle After Another” Wins 6 Oscars, Including For Best Picture and Director

    Sunday, March 15, 2026
    Paul Thomas Anderson, left center, Sara Murphy, right center, and the team from "One Battle After Another" accept the award for best picture during the Oscars on Sunday, March 15, 2026, at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)

    Paul Thomas Anderson’s “One Battle After Another” was crowned best picture at the 98th Academy Awards, handing Hollywood’s top honor to a comic, multi-generational American saga of political resistance. The ceremony Sunday, which also saw Michael B. Jordan win best actor and “Sinners” cinematographer Autumn Durald Arkapaw make Oscar history as the first female director of photography to win the award, was a long-in-coming coronation for Anderson, a San Fernando Valley native who made his first short at age 18 and has been one of America’s most lionized filmmakers for decades. Before Sunday, Anderson had never won an Oscar. But “One Battle After Another,” the favorite coming in, won six Oscars, including best director and best adapted screenplay for Anderson, the Oscars’ first trophy for best casting and best supporting actor for an absent Sean Penn. “I wrote this movie for my kids to say sorry for the housekeeping mess that we left in this world — we’re handing off to them,” said Anderson while accepting the screenplay trophy. “But also with the encouragement that they will be the generation that hopefully brings us some common sense and decency.” “Sinners,” which came in with a record 16 nominations, also landed some big and even historic wins. Coogler, the widely loved filmmaker, won the first Oscar in an unblemished career that started out with Jordan in 2013’s “Fruitvale Station.” Arkapaw, only the fourth female cinematographer ever nominated, won the award in a long-in-coming triumph for women behind the camera. “I really want all the women in room to stand up,” said Arkapaw. “Because I don’t feel like I get here without you guys.” And Jordan, one of Hollywood’s most liked leading men, won... Read More

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