Larry Cuba, Star Wars’ Death Star CG, Arabesque, and the Dawn of Computer Animation

How do you make a computer-animated sequence of 3D wireframe visuals of fancy, Empire-built battle stations — in 1977? Very, very slowly. Our friend James at Retro Thing, aside from being a electronic-sonic inventor, is a fan of vintage visuals and was already teaching the history of computer animation in the mid 80s. (Hint: prepping that class didn’t take quite as long then as it would now.)

James explains the origins of the famous Death Star briefing room sequence:

The wizard behind the early Star Wars CG was Larry Cuba, who worked out of the Electronic Visualization Lab (EVL) at the University of Illinois. Legend has it that he was pushing the hardware so hard to create the simple wireframe images that he constantly had to adjust the air conditioning in the computer room to avoid system crashes. Cuba used a vector graphics scripting language called GRASS (GRAphics Symbiosis System), written by Tom DeFanti at Ohio State in 1974. The system he used incorporated a Vector General CRT, DEC PDP-11 minicomputer, along with various cameras and recorders.

Star Wars: Prehistoric Computer Graphics [Retro Thing, via Boing Boing Gadgets]

I have a special place in my heart for the original film Star Wars because — James will appreciate this — I initially experienced it as a kid only on sound Super 8 film, cut down to a svelte 17 minutes. (My understanding of narrative was never quite the same.)

But to me, these graphics don’t look primitive; they look elemental, much in the same way that you don’t get tired of ancient Egyptian art. (And in the timeline of computer graphics, it wouldn’t be a stretch to imagine thousands of years of art history happening in a few decades.)

The real star, though, is the film Cuba used to pitch computer graphics to George Lucas, Arabesque, made with John Whitney. If this 1975 film doesn’t inspire you as a visualist, nothing will. Correction: Evidently it wasn’t Arabesque, but the movie First Fig. Larry Cuba himself writes in comments:

Thank you for the appreciation of “Arabesque.” The film I screened for Lucas was actually my first CG film, “First Fig.”

(And you can connect the historical dots here, too: without Arabesque First Fig, no CG in Star Wars, no ILM CG, no Pixar.)

Well, George Lucas may or may not have seen Arabesque, but you can, below, and it’s still inspiring:

And for another Larry Cuba film, here’s the 1985 Calculated Movements:

For Whitney’s 1960s work, see previously:

Videos from the Dawn of Video: Mechanical Effects and Oscilloscope Games

And for more on Larry Cuba, see:

Larry’s personal site

Larry Cuba on the Star Wars “Wookipedia”

Maybe it’s time to re-write that history of computer animation.

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Create Digital Motion » Why FreeFrameGL 1.5, Open 3D Plug-in Format, Rocks Our Teenage Party World

[...] up for doing the Death Star? Larry Cuba, Star Wars’ Death Star CG, Arabesque, and the Dawn of Computer [...]

April 23, 2008 @ 8:28 am

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James

I’ve often though it would be cool for someone to release a series of abridged classic movies - 2001 in 12 minutes, a six pack of Fellini flicks crammed into an hour, and so on. The studios would never go for it, but it’d be a great way to get a brief taste of classic cinema without torturing your friends and loved ones over the course of countless evenings.

And I’m pretty sure that George Lucas’ recent Star Wars episodes could be successfully abridged into mere minutes of unconscionably stilted dialog and marching droid armies.

April 23, 2008 @ 9:44 am
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Peter Kirn

Yes, sadly, even in 12 minute versions the recent movies might be too long.

April 23, 2008 @ 1:19 pm
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Larry Cuba

The real star, though, is the film Cuba used to pitch computer graphics to George Lucas, Arabesque, made with John Whitney. If this 1975 film doesn’t inspire you as a visualist, nothing will. (And you can connect the historical dots here, too: without Arabesque, no CG in Star Wars, no ILM CG, no Pixar.)

Thank you for the appreciation of “Arabesque.” The film I screened for Lucas was actually my first CG film, “First Fig.” This misinformation could have come from the book, Droidmaker (i don’t have a copy to check), but it was quoted in an article on the Wookieepedia site which i’ve just corrected. (http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki/Larry_Cuba)

A video of “First Fig” is not online, but there is a clip from my “Calculated Movements” here: http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=wH0MXZ-T4Js
and more information on my homepage: http://www.well.com/user/cuba

April 23, 2008 @ 2:26 pm
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Tim

great post, that arabesque is remarkable. Its always good to see where movements come from, after all there is nothing new under the sun.

April 29, 2008 @ 1:39 am
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Dirkster

What’s the big deal, just put a wireframe shader on it and call it a day! :-)

June 4, 2008 @ 1:21 pm

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[...] Equipment Corp. Et la tablette graphique ?tait de marque Sumagraphics. Extrait d’un article sur Create Digital Motion: The wizard behind the early Star Wars CG was Larry Cuba, who worked out of the Electronic [...]

April 24, 2008 @ 10:51 am
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TeriellBlog

Lary Cuba und die Anfänge der Computeranimation…

Auf Createdigitalmotion ist gerade ein wunderbares Video eines der Altmeister der Computeranimation zu sehen. Lary Cuba zeigt dort wie er einen der berühmten Flugschächte des Todesstern aus “Krieg der Sterne” Filmen am Computer gebaut ha…

June 8, 2008 @ 2:21 pm
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