Owned by |
|
Headquarters |
Vancouver, B.C., Canada (GSA Media: Vancouver, B.C., Canada) |
Key people
|
Gordon Stanfield (creative head and president) |
Products | Motion pictures Television style programss |
Number of employees
|
Varies industry = Motion pictures |
Website | http://pristineentertainment.com/pr2.html |
Owned by
Gordon Stanfield
Varies
Gordon Stanfield Animation (GSA) is an animation service company based in Vancouver, British Columbia with 30 years of development, per-production and production experience. GSA was the first sub-contract animation studio in North America to provide major services on USA Network television shows.
GSA began unofficially in 1984 in Toronto as a service company for animation production on US network TV shows. Later In 1984 the sole proprietorship company was hired by Gaumont, the film company based in Paris. Their task was to provide animation services on Asterix vs Caesar. While in Paris, Gordon worked as an animator and designer with his small crew form Canada. In 1985 (after the film's success in Europe), Stanfield was hired to direct animation for the LucasFilm series Droids (already in production in Korea by Nelvana/LucasFilm). With the Droids series completed, Stanfield relocated to Vancouver and at the end of 1985 began work on a sub-contract from Ross Bagdasarian, Jr., producer of the Alvin and the Chimpmunks series.
Later in 1985, Stanfield began unit production on the Care Bears series for Nelvana/ABC. The Vancouver unit (formed by Stanfield) performed storyboarding and layout for the first Canadian TV program, Grumpy's Three Wishes, to reach number one in the US TV market. With the success of Care Bears and dozens of artists employed and brought to BC by GSA, Nevana offered GSA contracts including Babar (series and film), Beetlejuice (Fox) and Jonny Quest (Hanna-Barbera).
In 1987 work began on a sub-contract to animate Strawberry Fields (the first CGI-assisted animated feature-film production). Although the film was never completed, it began GSA's preparation for the digital future. Also that year, Sefel Pictures hired GSA to coordinate creative affairs in Hungary and Poland on several European feature films it had in development in Soviet-bloc countries. In 1988, GSA began work on the Storybook Billygoats and the first special, A Klondike Christmas. The program was picked up for development by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), and a script was produced. It was sold to Charles Allard and his television station (ITV) in Edmonton in 1989, and A Klondike Christmas went into production. Later that year the show won a Golden Apple Award in the US and went on to become a Canadian Christmas staple, airing on ITV, the Family Channel, CBC and Teletoon. In 1991, distributor Paragon International offered an advance for more episodes based on the characters; the program was also supported by ITV/WIC for broadcast, and production began on The Ice Princess, Peeny The Clown and Billygoat Bluegrass.