Tomislav Mikulić - A Computer Graphics Pioneer This site only

 

 

 

    
   The "Elips" drawn in 1971.
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NEWS

2017 DEC 12
Gallery and Shop Visit my Gallery and Shop. I made some rare original plotter drawings available to art collectors of Early Computer Graphics.

2017 AUG 10 - SEP 9
Vintage computer animation The Eyes animation sponsored by Kingston Arts, Australia

FREE books - Gallery
I am in a process of publishing my artwork in a set of books. You can download for free the first four that are finished so far.

2016 MAY 13, Zagreb, Croatia
40th Anniversary 40th Anniversary
First Croatian Computer Animated Film

2012 SEP 28, Melbourne Vic, AUS
ART CLOCK Art clock - Not easy to tell the time. Remember good old punched paper?

2011 NOV 18, Melbourne Vic, AUS
Tom Mikulic City of Melbourne Winner of "Urban Forest" art and design competition

2011 JAN 18, Bremen GER
Kunsthalle Bremen Drawing of Dr. Herbert W. Franke and T. Mikulić, a contribution to celebration of renovated Kunsthalle in Bremen. Video (4 min.)


EVENTS

2006 JUN 16, Zagreb, CRO
Tom Mikulic ASIFA festival of animated films Retrospective of animation at the World Festival of Animated Film in Zagreb, sponsored by ASIFA.

1996 AUG 4, New Orleans LA, USA
Autodesk SIGGRAPH 1996 Included in Autodesk Inc. showreel at SIGGRAPH 1996.


BIOGRAPHY AND DETAILS

2009 SEP 6, Melbourne Vic, AUS
Calcomp 565 - IBM 1130 Download a brochure "Supplement" including many illustrations (PDF, 5MB)

 

Tomislav Mikulić (Born in 1953 in Croatia) is a Croatian-Australian artist, and a pioneer of computer graphics and computer animation.

He learned the computer programming language Fortran at a high school in Zagreb in 1970. A year later, he enrolled to study at the Faculty of Electrical Engineering at the University of Zagreb (ETF) where he was offered a position as an Assistant at the Laboratory for Computer Programming. Having generous access to the University's IBM 1130 computer, he spent most of his spare time making graphics with the IBM 1627 drum plotter. He made his first computer graphics in 1971.

In 1972, he enrolled to study the traditional techniques of graphics at the Academy of Fine Arts in Zagreb. At the same time as developing hand drawing skills, he produced a number of computer graphics which he started to exhibit. That earned him a place in the avant-garde art movement "New Tendencies" with nine computer graphics included in the "Tendencies 5" exhibition in 1973. In 1976, he had his first solo exhibition in Gallery Nova in Zagreb and screened the first computer animated film in the country (then Yugoslavia). He wrote the computer programs by himself (in Fortran, Assembler and Basic computer languages) and developed a morphing algorithm. He graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts in Zagreb in 1977 in the class of professor Albert Kinert.

He made the first ever animated opener of the famous "Eurovision" logo in 1979. He made a 6 min short animated video Ples ("The dance") with dancer (Zagorka Zivkovic) performing in a virtual, computer animated space. "Ples" was selected in the official competition program of the World Festival of Animation in Ottawa 1980.

He was offered the position of Head of TV Design Department at the national television network TV Zagreb in 1980. He accepted it and established the Electronic graphics Department. He led a team of 18 artists developing visual components for the program and for corporate branding for next 12 years. His animated opener for the Winter Olympic Games in Sarajevo '84 won an international contest in 1983. He also made animated openers for major international events, e.g. Eurovision Song Contest in 1990, European Championships in Athletics in 1990, European Championships in Basketball in 1989, European Championships in Swimming in 1981, among others.

He moved to Melbourne, Australia and established his own studio for animation and graphic design, "High Resolution Design Studio," in 1992. His animation was selected by Autodesk, Inc. and included in their showreel at SIGGRAPH '96. In the same year, he was one of three nominated animators for the Australian Effects and Animation Festival annual award, the most prestigious Australian award for animation.

In 1998, he joined the team working on virtual graphics at Australian television network Channel 7. He developed graphics for the Virtual Sports system including the popular "Yellow line" for the swimming competitions at the Olympic Games in Sydney 2000.

In 2002, he joined a team (CELTS) producing interactive material to support learning and teaching at Monash University, the largest university in Australia. He became an Adobe certified expert in the Flash program for animation in 2006.

He won the "Urban Forest" Art and Design contest held by City of Melbourne in 2011, exactly 40 years after he made his first computer graphics.

A detailed biography, bibliography and list of exhibitions can be found in the document: Supplement (PDF, 5MB, 2009).

1971: Plotter drawing "Elips"Tom Mikulic Calcomp 565

1976: Programming animationTom Mikulic Tektronix 4012 MMC

1984: Winter Olympic Games Sarajevo '84Tom Mikulic Olympic Games sarajevo 1984

2000: Olympic Games Sydney 2000Tom Mikulic Olympics Sydney 2000

Add a Branch

New Tendencies Net 2

Add a Branch.
2011, 297 x 420 mm, Digital print

Melbourne, AUS
Winner of the Melbourne's "Urban Forest" art and design competition.

Rotation
1973, 1900 x 305 mm, Ink on paper

Karlsruhe, GER
Exhibition in ZKM in 2008 about "New Tendencies" art movement.

Net 2 (Mreža II)
1973, 305 x 349 mm, Silkscreen

London, UK
The artwork in collection of Victoria and Albert Museum.

September 2012