Layout Artist

Role

Arranges scenes, spaces, objects, cameras, or action for structure and composition.

Description

A Layout Artist arranges scenes: placing characters, objects, cameras, and action so that space, timing, and composition serve the story. The role comes from film and animation, where layout translates boards into staged three-dimensional scenes before final animation.

In immersive work, layout becomes staging for a viewer who chooses where to look. The layout artist plans sightlines, distances, and spatial relationships so key action reads from wherever the participant is likely to be, and so scenes flow without cuts to hide the seams.

Discipline-Specific Description

Layout typically happens early, blocking scenes with rough geometry and placeholder animation so directors can judge staging before expensive work begins. In real-time projects the layout pass often becomes the skeleton the final scene is built on.

Scope Note

Usually includes scene blocking, staging and composition passes, camera or viewer position planning, rough timing, spatial continuity between scenes, and handoff of approved layouts to animation and environment teams.

Boundary Note

Layout decides where things happen; it does not finish them. Environment Artists build the final spaces, animators the final performances. The role overlaps with the Level Artist in real-time work, but layout centers narrative staging where level art centers navigable space.

Collaboration Note

Works with directors, cinematographers or directors of photography, environment artists, animators, narrative designers, and editors who inherit the staging decisions.

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