david chalk
PHOTOGRAPHER / IMAGE MAKER
AN AMAZING CAMERA
 
Chalk refers to the Silicon Graphics 
visual computer as "an amazing camera 
with a million lenses. And I'm not limited 
to pointing the camera outward," he observes, 
"I can also point it inward. I'm no longer merely 
a photographer, I'm a combination of director, 
set designer and lighting engineer, with intimate 
control over actors, lighting and sets. As a photographer," 
he says, "I didn't have the patience to create still lives. 
But that's what I'm doing with the computer. Anything I can 
think of, dream of, or visualize in my mind's eye, I can create. 
And it's all so easy. A night doesn't go by that I don't spend 
five hours working on the system, and it's never a chore, it's a pleasure."
 
THE REAL-TIME ADVANTAGE
 
In addition to creating acclaimed personal works 
that are widely shown in galleries, Chalk also produces 
images for commercial and corporate clients. In deadline 
situations, he says, the real-time performance and flexibility of 
the Silicon Graphics system is a distinct competitive advantage. 
"To be able to create in this way, with the client there suggesting 
changes and me instantly making those changes, is simply wonderful. 
I can move an entire model, even in a shaded mode, in real-time and 
show a client how their image will look this way or that way; how 
their logo will appear in several different positions. That's a 
fantastic capability.
"And the system renders so fast," he continues. 
"I remember, back in the old days, working on other 
systems, doing illustrations that took 50 hours to render. 
They were nice images, but that's way too much time. The Indigo2 
workstation's multi-tasking ability makes all the difference in 
productivity. While I'm laying off an animation or doing a large 
rendering, I can still be working on another model without any 
appreciable loss of speed. There's just not a PC that can do that. 
When you're running Alias's Power Animator on Indigo2, there is no 
limitation. With other systems, at some point you're going to bang 
your head on the performance ceiling."


 
                         
