Kyle Cooper

For the South African rugby union player, see Kyle Cooper (rugby player).

Kyle Cooper (Born July 1962) is an American designer of motion picture title sequences.

Cooper was born in Salem, Massachusetts, and studied interior architecture at University of Massachusetts Amherst. He then went on to study graphic design under Paul Rand at Yale University, receiving his Master of Fine Arts from there in 1988.[1] Early in his professional career, Cooper worked as a creative director at R/GA - an advertising agency with offices in New York and Los Angeles. During this period, Cooper created the title sequence for the 1995 American crime film Seven, a seminal work which received critical acclaim [2] and inspired a number of younger designers. According to Cooper, at the time he made the title sequence for Seven, main title sequences were behind of what was happening in print, music videos and commercials. He wanted to create main titles that were raising the bar creatively.[3]

In 1996, Kyle co-founded Imaginary Forces with Peter Frankfurt and Chip Houghton- one of the most successful creative agencies in Hollywood that came out of the West Coast division of R/GA. "We have spent a long time building and refining a brilliant creative and production team ... Keeping this group together as our own company is truly exciting," commented Cooper about the name change.[4] Too involved by the business-side of running a design company the size of Imaginary Forces, Cooper decided it was time for him to focus more on his creative work. He left Imaginary Forces. In 2003, Cooper founded Prologue, a creative agency in which he works in a small team while concentrating on creating title sequences.

Prologue, initially located in Malibu, moved to offices in Venice Beach, California, in 2008.

His work in the field of film title design is often compared to Saul Bass.[5] Cooper has also directed a feature film, New Port South (2001).

He received an AIGA medal in 2014.[1]

Selected film, television, and game title sequences

References

  1. 1 2 "Kyle Cooper". AIGA. Retrieved May 3, 2014.
  2. Solana, Gemma; Antonio Boneu (2008). Uncredited – Graphic Design and Opening Titles in Movies (2nd ed.). Barcelona: Index Book. ISBN 84-96309-52-5. Retrieved 28 March 2010.
  3. Wolting, Femke; Remco Vlaanderen (2010-02-12). "Stars Aligned for Se7en's Main Title". SubmarineChannel. Retrieved 2010-03-25.
  4. Weiner, Rex (1996-12-02). "Title card change: RGA/LA becomes Imaginary Forces". Variety.
  5. "Wired 12.06: The Dark Genius of Kyle Cooper". Wired.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, March 28, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.