Talent is the buzzword for Indian animation industry
June 23rd, 2008 - 7:54 pm ICT by
IANS -
“In India, animation is considered
to be a medium for fast money and you don’t get quality exposure. The time
constraint and the low-budget for the project also hampers
the quality,” added Sharma.
Deepak Ganguly from Tata Elxsi
echoed the same saying: “Quality gets hampered by the stiff deadlines.”
However, V.K. Gupta, Sr. Pipeline
Technical Director at Big Animation, stresses more on story
telling.
He said: “In animation, story telling is the main thing. The quality parameter is
very subjective. It is the director at the end of the day who decides what
quality is needed.”
Both Ganguly and Sharma said that
quality would begin to show when budding animators join the profession, and not
just for the money.
“One should opt for animation as a
career only when one if creatively involved and not just because the money is
good,” said Ganguly.
Gupta added: “Indians are delivering
worldwide. There is a lot of quality in our work. We need to nurture the talent
that is required in the Indian animation industry.”
The animation and Visual FX segment
was pegged at Rs.13 billion in 2007, growing by 24 percent over 2006. Going by
the speed at which the industry is expanding, India will need 25,000 more
professionals by the close of next year. The industry currently has only a
little over 10,000 professionals working in this techno-creative field.
But this is no cause of alarm.
Thanks to many institutions that have come up of late to provide animation
education, there are now about 100,000 students who are undergoing training in
animation, VFX and gaming in different parts of the country. The first batch of
these will fill the gap by turning professionals by next year.
Gupta is concerned that people are
not exposed to variety and versatility is lacking because of the same.
“A lot of overseas projects are
coming to India but we need to improve on the whole for more business
opportunities,” said Ganguly.
The animation industry is poised to
touch more than USD 1.5 billion by 2009, according to an industry forecast by
Anderson Consulting.