Daisuke Tsutsumi

Daisuke “Dice” Tsutsumi (堤 大介, Tsutsumi Daisuke) (born November 6, 1974) is an animation artist and illustrator living in San Francisco, California. He is a former art director of Pixar.

Daisuke Tsutsumi
堤 大介
Born (1974-11-06) November 6, 1974
Other namesDice Tsutsumi
Alma materSchool of Visual Arts
OccupationAnimator, illustrator
EmployerBlue Sky Studios (2000-2010)
Pixar Animation Studios (2010-2014)
Spouse(s)
Mei Okuyama
(m. 2009)
FamilyKōichi Baba (father)
Emi Tsutsumi (mother)
Hayao Miyazaki (uncle)
Mika Tsutsumi (older sister)
Ryūhei Kawada (brother-in-law)

Biography

Born and raised in Tokyo, Japan, Dice moved to New York in 1993 where he enrolled at the School of Visual Arts. After graduating in 1998, he began a two-year stint as a staff illustrator at Lucas Learning Ltd. In 2000, Dice was employed as a visual development/color key artist for Blue Sky Studios where he stayed until 2010 when he joined Pixar before leaving in 2014 to start Tonko House. He is married to Mei Okuyama (奥山 芽以, Okuyama Mei), a jewelry artist and the niece of acclaimed anime director Hayao Miyazaki.[1] He co-directed The Dam Keeper which was nominated for the Oscar for short animated film.[2]

Filmography

Books

Dice has appeared in both volumes of Blue Sky Studios Out of Picture anthology, contributing the stories "Noche Y Dia" in Volume 1[3] and "The Dream of Kyosuke" in Volume 2.[4]

The Dam Keeper has been developed volume graphic novel published by First Second Books:[5]

  • The Dam Keeper (2017)[6]
  • The Dam Keeper: World Without Darkness (2018)[7]
  • The Dam Keeper: Return from the Shadows (2019)[8]

Special projects

In 2008, Dice (along with Ronnie del Carmen. Enrico Casarosa and Yukino Pang) initiated the Totoro Forest Project, a fundraising exhibition/auction to support the non-profit Totoro Forest Foundation.[9] This initiative also produced a corresponding art book reprinting the various pieces contributed and included the likes of James Jean, Charles Vess, Iain McCaig and William Joyce among others.[10]

He is also overseeing Sketchtravel (with Gerald Guerlais) which purpose is passing a real sketchbook "from one artist's hand to another like an Olympic torch in an artistic relay through 12 countries over 4 and half years", and the end result auctioned off to benefit the various chosen charities that the participating artists choose.[11]

References

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