Jason Scheier
@ScheierJason
▪Production Designer at Sony Pictures Animation - Transformers ONE, Blue Eye Samurai, Darkmouth ▪Mentor and Instructor. ▪All artwork is original © No Ai ⦸
sketchbook studies. #art #drawing #jasonscheier #illustration




Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992) dir. Francis Ford Coppola
I’m team Deaks every day.
No cinematographer comes close to Roger Deakins.
Sequoia National Park, California. Humans for scale.
Raise the Red Lantern (1991) dir. Zhang Yimou
Just a reminder that the Mazda MX-81 Aria has the most incredible steering wheel I've ever seen
This month, a team endorsed by Guillermo del Toro released Mexico's first stop-motion feature. It's 2 hours of pure imagination. The film is called I Am Frankelda, and we've taken a deep look into how it came to be: ─➤animationobsessive.substack.com/p/the-film-and…
I show this scene in my class on Visual Development, still one of the best examples of story narrative driven set-dressing, and visual storytelling done through careful planning, staging, and camera work. Never gets old and still holds the crown for its mastery.
The opening to BACK TO THE FUTURE (1985) is a visual exposition master class. And a nice Harold Lloyd nod too.
This Halloween, for one week only, #ParaNorman returns to theaters in remastered 3D! Screenings will include a new CG-animated short featuring the voice talents of Finn Wolfhard and Anna Kendrick. Sign up for first access to tickets at ParaNorman.com. #FridayThe13th
Just a humble reminder that @CooleyUrFaceOff Josh Cooley's Transformers One is the most underrated masterpiece of last year.
Just a little reminder that we all need transformers one in our lives.
Throwback Thursday to when I shattered my wrist that I use to draw. Honestly, this is one of the scariest times of my life. Still affected by limited range of motion, pain, and arthritis. It’s a humbling reminder to be grateful that I can still work, and draw most importantly.



Designed by architect Sachio Otani (completed in 1966) The International Conference Center in Kyoto, Japan combines elements of Brutalist architecture with traditional Japanese aesthetics. Reality inspires Art.

