Experimental Animation : Origins of a new art
by Robert Russett, Cecile Starr (Author)
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A collage composed from the energies, enthusiasms and ideas of a hearty band of film mavericks whose exploits are for the first time treated in book form. A number of motifs emerge from Russett's and Starr's collection, including the vibrant interface between film and the other arts (painting and music), the growing importance of evolving technologies and, most important, film's exciting potential as a mode of personal expression.Tags
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Excellent, excellent, excellent. If you're interested in amazing movies made by very independent individuals, duos, & small groups, this bk will tell you about some of the most fascinating people & their work. There're even some people whose work I STILL HAVEN'T RUN ACROSS ELSEWHERE! Always a good sign. Some of my personal faves are in here: Hans Richter, Len Lye, Lotte Reininger, Alexander Alexeief & Claire Parker, Norman McLaren, Paul Sharits, John Whitney, Stan VanDerBeek, & Ed Emshwiller. & the close 2nds to being personal faves are pretty top-notch too. Please do note that the bk is co-authored by Cecile Starr & Robert Russett - the pre-existing entry only had Russett listed - I changed that so hopefully Starr's role will be more show more obvious. The image I uploaded is from the hardback.
I once guest-lectured in Steve Kurtz's Intro to Film class at Carnegie-Mellon University. I made a video of the 1st minute of movies I selected as of maximal significance & quality (NO D. W. Griffith! or Leni Riefenstahl!) for every 5 yrs since the cinema began (& a little before). I screened this for what was apparently a classroom full of statues. I say statues b/c when it came time for Q&A I cdn't tell whether the students were breathing or not. They certainly weren't asking questions. I reckon I must've been a lousy teacher - giving them too much at once or sumpin'. Anyway, the students didn't ask me anything but Steve asked me why there was so much animation. READ "EXPERIMENTAL ANIMATION" & you'll undertsand why my own personal history emphasizes animation so much in general - thru animation, some of the most clever, vivid, imaginative work of all time has been made (yes - even in the eons before I was born - wch, of course, I have vivid 'racial memories' of - even from before I was even a single-cell organism)!! show less
I once guest-lectured in Steve Kurtz's Intro to Film class at Carnegie-Mellon University. I made a video of the 1st minute of movies I selected as of maximal significance & quality (NO D. W. Griffith! or Leni Riefenstahl!) for every 5 yrs since the cinema began (& a little before). I screened this for what was apparently a classroom full of statues. I say statues b/c when it came time for Q&A I cdn't tell whether the students were breathing or not. They certainly weren't asking questions. I reckon I must've been a lousy teacher - giving them too much at once or sumpin'. Anyway, the students didn't ask me anything but Steve asked me why there was so much animation. READ "EXPERIMENTAL ANIMATION" & you'll undertsand why my own personal history emphasizes animation so much in general - thru animation, some of the most clever, vivid, imaginative work of all time has been made (yes - even in the eons before I was born - wch, of course, I have vivid 'racial memories' of - even from before I was even a single-cell organism)!! show less
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- Canonical title
- Experimental Animation : Origins of a new art
- Original publication date
- 1976
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- 63
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- Reviews
- 1
- Rating
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- Languages
- English
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- Paper
- ISBNs
- 3
- ASINs
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