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Gordon E.
Sawyer Oscar®
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Peter D. Parks, one of the industry's
foremost microphotographers, was voted the Gordon E. Sawyer
Award by the Board of Governors of the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences.
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Peter D. Parks, one of the industry's
foremost microphotographers, has received the Gordon E. Sawyer Award,
voted by the Board of Governors of the Academy of Motion Picture
Arts and Sciences.
The Award, an Oscar statuette, was presented at the Scientific
and Technical Awards Dinner on Saturday, February 14, 2004, at The
Ritz-Carlton Huntington Hotel in Pasadena.
Established in 1981, the Sawyer Award is "presented to an
individual in the motion picture industry whose technological
contributions have brought credit to the industry." Parks
is the 17th recipient.
A man of many talents, Parks is an engineer, biologist, scientist
and designer of visual effects. He is perhaps best known for his
ability to photograph small life forms and has been called upon
by numerous directors to provide unusual images of the microcosm.
"Peter is a true pioneer in the field of macro and microphotography,"
said Richard Edlund, chair of the Scientific and Technical Awards
Committee. "His recent work on the IMAX film 'Bugs!' has given
us the ability to see, for example, insect eggs blown up to one
million times their size - and in 3-D."
Parks was a founding partner of Oxford Scientific Films (OSF),
a company that provides high quality film footage and photographs
of a variety of organisms found in nature. He won his first Sci-Tech
Award in 1981 for the development of the OSF microcosmic zoom
device for microscopic photography.
Parks won his second Sci-Tech Award in 1986 for developing a
live aero-compositor for special effects photography.
In 1989, Parks formed Image Quest, and Image Quest 3-D soon after,
with the mission of researching and developing technologies pertinent
to large-format filming in all media, with special emphasis on
wildlife filming, special effects and 3-D.
At Image Quest, Parks designed an innovative 3-D Display System
called Monax, which allows the viewing of three-dimensional images
without special glasses.
In his position at Image Quest, Parks has contributed to and
led more than 25 marine biological film expeditions.
Portions of the Sawyer Award presentation will be broadcast during
the live 76th Academy Awards® telecast on February 29.
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