Animation education versus audiences’ expectations in the Age of AI: What skills will shape the next generation of talent in a production pipeline?
For as long as animation has existed as an art form and an industry, education has been one of its most important foundations. Every generation of animators has inherited knowledge from the artists that came before them, whether through apprenticeships, art schools, studio training programs, mentorships, or increasingly through online communities and digital learning platforms. Historically, animation education was rooted in traditional artistic disciplines. Students were expected to learn drawing, observation, perspective, anatomy, color theory, acting, storytelling, and the principles of movement before they could effectively bring characters and worlds to life. Regardless of whether an artist pursued hand-drawn animation, stop motion, visual development, or computer animation, the underlying philosophy remained largely the same: understand the fundamentals first, then learn the tools. Over time, however, technology transformed both animation production and the way artists ...