@article{Goldstein:1999:INR,
number = {1},
volume = {33},
month = feb,
optissn = {0097-8930},
author = {Dan Goldstein},
optannote = {Dan Goldstein argues that intentional non-photorealistic
rendering is a technology whose time has come.},
optstatus = {url},
url = {http://web.archive.org/web/20050312133920/http://www.siggraph.org/publications/newsletter/v33n1/contributions/Goldstein.html},
localfile = {papers/Goldstein.1999.INR.pdf},
abstract = {Non-photorealistic rendering (NPR) is a subject that has been
generating quite a bit of interest in the computer graphics
community lately. This is partly because any advance in the area
is so rapidly picked up by authors who create actual content. The
term NPR covers any computer-generated imagery explicitly rendered
using techniques designed not to mimic physical reality. Most
frequently, NPR rendering is performed by a program that takes
images or three-dimensional geometry as input and creates a new
output image within the bounds of a given artistic style. },
title = {{I}ntentional {N}on-{P}hotorealistic {R}endering},
doi = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/563666.563689},
journal = j-COMP-GRAPHICS,
pages = {62--63},
year = {1999},
}
|