Laurence Arcadias

Full-Time Faculty / Animation

Laurence Arcadias is an award-winning animator and professor of animation at the Maryland Institute College of Art (澳门金沙投注_任你博-官网) in Baltimore, where she previously served as department chair. Her films, including Tempest in a Bedroom (short-listed for a César Award) and the TV series Alex, which won Best Short Animation TV Show at the Annecy International Animation Film Festival, have been screened at international festivals. She has received the Lavoisier Scholarship from the French government, a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), and was Animator in Residence at Apple’s Advanced Technology Group. At 澳门金沙投注_任你博-官网, she co-created an Astro-Animation course with NASA scientists, bridging art and science, and she is currently pursuing a practice-based PhD at Liverpool John Moores University/Transart Institute, exploring the role of animation in making astronomy more accessible to public audiences.

Portfolio Pieces

The Eclipse (2024) Collaborative animation with astronomers from HEAD 2024 This short film was created just before the solar eclipse during an astro-animation workshop with professional astronomers at the American Astronomical Society’s High Energy Astrophysics Division (HEAD) meeting in 2024. Since its premiere, it has been showcased internationally at major festivals, including Annecy, + Enlarge
Black Hole Jets (2023) Still from the animation film: "The Movements of the Universe" by Laurence Arcadias This image combines astrophysical visualization with gesture-informed animation. It depicts a black hole with its accretion disk and relativistic jets, interpreted through the recorded hand motions of NASA astrophysicists during interviews. The piece is part of The Movements of the Universe (2023), a practice-based PhD project exploring the role of embodied gestures in communicating complex astronomical phenomena. + Enlarge

The Eclipse (2024)

Collaborative animation with astronomers from HEAD 2024 This short film was created just before the solar eclipse during an astro-animation workshop with professional astronomers at the American Astronomical Society’s High Energy Astrophysics Division (HEAD) meeting in 2024. Since its premiere, it has been showcased internationally at major festivals, including Annecy,

Black Hole Jets (2023)

This image combines astrophysical visualization with gesture-informed animation. It depicts a black hole with its accretion disk and relativistic jets, interpreted through the recorded hand motions of NASA astrophysicists during interviews. The piece is part of The Movements of the Universe (2023), a practice-based PhD project exploring the role of embodied gestures in communicating complex astronomical phenomena.

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