Access All Areas November 2018 | Page 23

NOVEMBER | FEATURE An interview with Artem’s CEO Mike Kelt How did Artem get started? There are a few players in our space of special fx, but we tend to cover it all, while most companies are more specialist. When we first set up, we wanted a proper workshop space. We came from the BBC, which had a high-quality space, and if you work on jobs where people want things the following day it’s practical to have a proper workshop. Sometimes, in our line of work, the lead time is the same day and we have to make, for example, a snowflake and ship it abroad from Heathrow Airport. We used to be a third commercials, a third tv, now we do more events work, and would like to do more. Commericals’ budgets have dropped a lot overall. Some companies even shoot them on iPhones deliberately. What does the client relationship look like with Artem? One half of you is working out how to do the job, the other is listening to what they want. Most of the client’s production team might have an idea, or a drawing, but almost always we redraw it, as it will have to be a 3-dimensional product that people, or a camera, will rotate around. Even a sketch from the side and front often doesn’t work from a practical point of view. So you often lead the creative process? The Barologist Bar, a recent Leith-based bar/venue project we worked on, included us constructing a full-sized figure who was based on a real person from an old Victorian book. We don’t have a house style, but the client does. In this case, they gave us free reign and they kept an eye Giving the industry its props Access toured the weird and wonderful headquarters of Artem, a special FX company bringing Hollywood quality props to the event market on the project. We would regularly take photos and they would give feedback, and enjoyed seeing it come together. We worked on Holiday On Ice recently, which also has a house style, and we came up with a practical answer to what they want in terms of large props. When working on the Olympic Opening Ceremony, we had a lot of people making props of various sizes, but in that case it was up to the production designer to ensure consistency. Working on The Olympics Opening Ceremony was such an adrenaline rush, and we did so much in such a short space of time. People here thought I was mad. We had marquees in our yard, and everyone was working flat out. How do your touring projects work creatively? Coldplay, for example, will employ someone they know to direct the visual side of the show, they’ll know which songs will be played, then they’ll discuss concepts, and come to us to ask how the ideas can work, and if they are even possible. Take That’s bike that flew above the 23