Lily Williams finds her dream career
By the time Lily Williams (BFA Animation 2014) reached high school, she already had a game plan.
Animation thesis film makes an impact
One month after graduation, Sony invited her back, this time as a visual development artist. It wasn鈥檛 long before Williams鈥檚 years of hustling toward her dream began to pay off. While designing costumes, characters, layouts, and props for Sony franchises like The Smurfs and Surf鈥檚 Up, a short animation Williams had created for her thesis started to take off.
FINconceivable, a four-minute animation about the fragile ecosystem of the ocean and its dependency on sharks, began raking in film festival honors, awards, and online hype. The short was popping up everywhere from Greenpeace to Upworthy and quickly gaining traction.
鈥淚 planned for it to be something free and accessible so that it could help educate. At the time, the only research out there was scientific dissertations -- all very heavy factual information. I wanted something that all types of people could understand. It took a lot of fact checking,鈥 says Williams.
鈥淚t was refreshing to see it do so well. Sometimes you post things online and they don鈥檛 hit the mark, but this took off and had its own life. It won an animation award at San Francisco International Ocean Film Festival, and it was in the Environmental Film Festival in the Nation鈥檚 Capital, and they played it in all the public libraries in Washington DC.
"It鈥檚 a really awesome feeling.鈥
Spreading the message that art matters
Although her work has generally focused on ecological and social justice issues, Williams says that in today鈥檚 political climate, 鈥渕aking art that matters鈥 has been on her mind more than ever.
鈥淩ight now, art is really important. It鈥檚 giving a voice to much of what people are thinking but can鈥檛 vocalize themselves. I gave the scientists who helped me permission to use FINconceivable, and I know they鈥檝e used it to get legislation passed. That鈥檚 my favorite thing: that I鈥檝e helped something important come to fruition from a political standpoint.鈥
With the success of FINconceivable came even more ways to help spread her message: Roaring Brook Press, an imprint of Macmillan Publishers, approached Williams with a multibook deal. The first of her nonfiction children鈥檚 books, If Sharks Disappeared, is about to hit store shelves.
鈥淚 have a few more books coming down the pipeline and I鈥檓 already beginning to write and illustrate those,鈥 says Williams.
From Mattel to Lady Gaga to a weekly web comic
After two years at Sony Pictures Animation, Williams is now a full-time freelance artist. On top of her busy writing schedule, she recently collaborated with Mattel and Lady Gaga to help create costumes for a music video related to their wildly popular Monster High franchise.
She鈥檚 also staying busy with a weekly web comic about menstruation called The Mean Magenta, co-created with fellow 爱豆传媒 alum Karen Schneemann (Animation 2013).
鈥淲e decided we wanted to make the topic approachable in an anecdotal way -- we wanted to create a little world on the internet to share stories and hoped that maybe people would share their stories with us,鈥 says Williams.
She and Schneemann are working on a graphic novel based on the comic, to be published in 2019.
鈥淲hen I started majoring in animation, I wanted to work with someone and execute their goals and make their vision. I jokingly blame 爱豆传媒 for this, but I graduated not wanting that anymore. I truly wanted to make art that mattered and I think that鈥檚 where my head is at now.
鈥淚 want to work with other people and make them happy, but I also really want my work to make a difference in this world, so that鈥檚 what I鈥檓 trying to do.鈥