The LED Volume at the Martin Scorsese Virtual Production Center, courtesy of Lux Machina
The center was made possible by a significant donation, announced in 2021, from the Hobson/Lucas Family Foundations by Mellody Hobson, co-CEO of Ariel Investments, and filmmaker George Lucas. In addition, the gift funds the Martin Scorsese Institute of Global Cinematic Arts, Tisch’s Department of Cinema Studies, and scholarships. It is the largest gift in the history of the Tisch School of the Arts.
“We are thrilled to be able to honor our dear friend Martin Scorsese. Through this gift in his name, the Scorsese Institute of Global Cinematic Arts deservedly highlights his legacy as a quintessential American filmmaker and will inspire generations of diverse, talented students. Through time-honored scholarship and hands-on instruction on the state-of-the-art digital technology at the Institute, artistic vision will come to life where storytelling meets innovation,” shared Mellody Hobson and George Lucas in a joint statement.
Rosanne C. Limoncelli, sr. director of filmmaking technologies at NYU Tisch, the internal driving force for the project, explained, “The reason I really wanted to do this program is that I kept hearing from designers, directors, and cinematographers that there are not enough people with experience in Virtual Production that we can hire. We aim to help bridge that gap and introduce new talent into the industry.”
The school offers a new 36-credit Master of Professional Studies degree in Virtual Production with a cutting-edge curriculum for filmmakers to learn how to use Virtual Production as a toolset in their storytelling process. The 45,586 square-foot facility lives on the top floor of Building 8 at Industry City, a 35-acre innovation campus on the Brooklyn waterfront. The Center features two double-height, column-free stages, two television studios, industry-standard broadcast and control rooms, dressing/make-up rooms, a lounge and bistro, scene workshops, offices, postproduction labs, finishing suites, and training spaces.
As the lead systems integrator, AbelCine led the entire facility’s production and broadcast systems build and worked with partner Lux Machina on the virtual production integration.
AbelCine also outfitted the facility with ARRI ALEXA 35 cameras, ZEISS Supreme Prime lenses, and an integrated lighting grid featuring ARRI SkyPanels for the virtual production stage.
“At AbelCine, we pride ourselves on supporting the next generation of creatives, which is why we’re so excited to have NYU Tisch located within the vibrant Industry City campus,” said Pete Abel, CEO and co-founder of AbelCine. “Not only will NYU students now have a leading-edge production facility in which to learn, but they will do so alongside the more than 90 media companies on the IC campus. This will spark immeasurable collaborative and creative opportunities for the students. We’re grateful to be involved in this project from the outset and to witness firsthand the kernel of an idea blossoming into the amazing and unique educational facility that has been unveiled.”
The Virtual Production Stage is a 180° LED volume measuring 26’ deep x 41’ wide x 17’ high on a 3,500-square-foot soundstage with innovative mobile workstations. As part of the high-end technical specification, ROE Visual Black Pearl 2V2 panels were selected utilizing the Megapixel Helios LED processing platform. Lux Machina’s custom-developed ARCA media servers power the stage. They are optimized for Virtual Production and can switch between multiple content rendering platforms, including pre-installed Pixera licenses. The NYU Center has also been outfitted with Vicon’s Shōgun entertainment market software and 40 Vicon cameras: the combination of the two provides a state-of-the-art motion capture system for virtual production.
The LED Volume at the Martin Scorsese Virtual Production Center, courtesy of Lux Machina
Lux Machina has long been considered one of the leading innovators and proponents of Virtual Production. Co-founder and EVP of operations and finance at Lux Machina, Zach Alexander, commented on the recent expansion of business into the educational environment, “In terms of the ‘why now?’ and ‘why universities?’, I would expand on Rosanne’s statement and note that while many of these aspects of Virtual Production have been around for quite some time, they’re developing extremely quickly and we’re at the point where we have outpaced the available resources on a very practical level. We need to educate the next round of professionals in the industry-standard technologies and workflows that are used daily on film, television, and live productions worldwide.”
Britainne Pedersen, sr. producer, elaborated on the approach, stating, “The importance of education in Virtual Production is that we allow students to access a body of knowledge and a skill set that Lux Machina has been developing over the last 12 years. Students don’t have to start at zero. They can join us where we are now, we can level up the industry, and build the next version of this technology together.”
NYU alumnus Sang-Jin Bae counts Limoncelli as a mentor and has been hired as the director of the Martin Scorsese Virtual Production Center. Sang has taught for 26 years and worked commercially on long-form TV series and episodic animation.
Limoncelli commented on her vision for the facility’s future: “We’re looking to partner and collaborate to put world-leading Virtual Production on the map on the East Coast, establishing a strong community where our beautiful visual artist graduates and the wider commercial industry can mutually benefit.”
The facility officially opened with an initial class of 24 students from all over the world.
Lux Machina Camera Tracking Specialist, India Vadher-Lowe courtesy of Lux Machina
About NYU Tisch School of the Arts
For over 50 years, the NYU Tisch School of the Arts has drawn on the vast artistic and cultural resources of New York City and New York University to create an extraordinary training ground for the individual artist and scholar of the arts. Today, students learn their craft in a spirited, risk-taking environment that combines the professional training of a conservatory with the liberal arts education of a premier global university with campuses in New York, Abu Dhabi, Shanghai and 11 academic centers around the world. Learn more at www.tisch.nyu.edu.
About AbelCine
AbelCine is an equipment and service provider to cinematic content creators across the broadcast, production, and media industries. The company’s services, designed to support customers through every stage of the production cycle, include equipment sales and rental, training and consultation, tech services and integration, production services, and assurance programs. To learn more about AbelCine please visit www.abelcine.com.
About Lux Machina
Lux Machina Consulting develops and engineers leading-edge technical video solutions for live events, broadcast, permanent installations, TV and film; specializing in Virtual Production, in-camera visual effects, display technologies and creative screens control. Together we help guide a project from ideation to implementation, tailoring a solution that fits the individual project needs and budget constraints. www.luxmc.com