Xinyue (Casey) Gu is an award-winning Motion Designer based in Los Angeles, working at the intersection of creative technology and narrative systems. As the sole Motion Designer at Maxon, a creative software company with users across 80+ countries, she plays a critical role in the company’s global brand communication, translating complex product ecosystems into clear visual narratives.
DESIGN
Her work directly shapes how Maxon’s tools are positioned, understood, and adopted across the global creative industry.
Motion as Narrative System
While many motion designers focus on execution, Gu operates at the level of narrative system, approaching motion not as a decorative layer, but as a system that structures perception, orchestrates emotional pacing, and translates abstract ideas into temporal experience.
With a background in marketing and formal training in Motion Media Design, her practice operates through a dual framework: the logic of audience communication and the intuition of emotional storytelling. Rather than pursuing visual novelty, she treats motion as a form of compression, distilling complex cultural, emotional, and technological narratives into concise yet resonant sequences. This results in a body of work defined not by a fixed visual style, but by structural intentionality, where timing, transformation, and transitions function as components within a larger system of meaning.

Across Advertising, Entertainment, and Creative Technology
Gu’s methodology is developed through work spanning advertising, entertainment, and creative technology, where motion operates under different constraints yet retains its structural role.
At Black Math, she contributed to public-facing campaigns including work for the Boston Government, where motion needed to balance clarity and engagement, functioning as a tool for immediate communication across broad audiences.
At Imaginary Forces, an Emmy-winning studio known for shaping the language of title design, she worked on main title sequences for global platforms such as Netflix. In this context, motion design operates at the intersection of storytelling and branding, establishing tone, pacing, and audience expectations before the shows begin. This experience informs her later work in structuring audience perception at scale.
From Narrative System to Brand Execution
At Maxon, Gu’s role extends beyond production into brand-level communication strategy. As the company’s only motion designer, she leads the development of motion-driven brand narratives that translate technical product capabilities into user-centered meaning across international markets.
Her work on the Maxon One Brand Expression Film exemplifies this integration. Rather than presenting software through functional demonstration, the project constructs a narrative system that positions Maxon as an enabler of creative agency within an evolving technological landscape. By aligning product messaging with user experience, the film connects technical functionality to practical and emotional relevance for its audience.
The project received international recognition, including features from Rebrand Gallery, Motionographer, Brands in Motion, Abduzeedo, and Inspiration Grid, reaching a combined audience of over 325K creative professionals, as well as inclusion at the National Association of Broadcasters Show and selection by Behance. These recognitions signal more than visual distinction: the project has been referenced within the design community as a model for motion-led brand communication, demonstrating how creative technology companies can shift from product-centered messaging to narrative-driven brand systems.

Independent Work as Narrative Inquiry
Gu’s independent work does not sit apart from her commercial practice. It tests the same methodology at its limits. Her project The Fruit of My Woman, based on a story by Han Kang, explores themes of marriage, identity, and quiet forms of control. Structured as an observational diary, the work traces a gradual transformation in which the protagonist loses her sense of self, becoming increasingly entangled with a plant, both nurturing it and being diminished by it.
Rather than resolving the narrative, the project sustains a state of perceptual tension. Motion operates here as a temporal structure that accumulates unease, mirroring the protagonist’s loss of agency. This reflects Gu’s broader approach: using motion not to illustrate narrative, but to construct experiential conditions through which meaning emerges.
The project received international recognition, including two Red Dot Awards selected from approximately 20k global entries, Gold at the MUSE Creative Awards from over 13k submissions. It has been permanently archived by Stash Magazine and recognized among the year’s best works. Rather than standing apart from her commercial achievements, these distinctions reinforce her position as a motion designer whose work operates across both industry and cultural contexts, validating a unified practice that bridges technological communication and narrative inquiry.

Extending Motion Beyond Projects
Beyond design production, Gu contributes to the field through public speaking and knowledge sharing. She publishes process-based content on YouTube, accumulating over 1.6 million impressions, and has been invited to speak at Half Rez, the largest motion design conference in the central United States, as well as at institutions such as Savannah College of Art and Design and the University of Houston. These invitations reflect not general visibility, but recognition that she has a distinct perspective worth presenting.
As digital media continues to evolve under the influence of artificial intelligence, Gu situates motion design within a broader conceptual shift, from tool-driven production toward system-driven thinking. Her practice asserts a clear hierarchy: intention precedes efficiency, and storytelling precedes technique. In an era of increasing automation, the challenge is no longer generating motion, but constructing meaning within it.
Across both commercial and independent work, Gu consistently uses motion to bridge technology, storytelling, and cultural meaning. Her practice moves motion design from a production tool toward a structured system for communication. By operating at this intersection, and by shaping how global creative tools are understood, she represents a distinct voice within the motion design industry.
Words by Editor Eli Porter.

















