Categories
25/26 1.2 Design for Animation, Narrative Structures & Film Language

Week2: Animation art and cinema

The Cultural Context: High vs. Mass Culture

  • Historical Setting: During a period of cultural anarchy, Modernists and Dadaists began questioning the traditional divisions between high culture and popular culture.
  • The Role of Animation:
    • Animation developed right in the middle of these arguments, softening the edges between high art and mass media forms.
    • It was viewed as a medium capable of crossing social and cultural divides.
  • Universal Appeal: Both elitists and mass producers praised animation for its intellectual, conceptual, and technological virtues.
  • Nature of the Medium: From the start, animation was destined to be multi-cultural and multi-functional, driven by technological changes.

Technological Innovations (1913–1915)

Two major inventions transformed animation from a solitary art form into an assembly-line production:

  • The Peg System (1913): Invented by Raoul Barre, this provided a universal registration system to keep drawings aligned.
  • Cel Animation (1915): The introduction of clear acetate (cels) allowed artists to draw moving characters on top of a static background, eliminating the need to redraw the background for every single frame.

The American Industry: Mass Production

The American animation industry was shaped by immigration, displacement, and a rejection of European culture in favor of American technology and mass communication.

Key Industry Pioneers:

  • John Randolph Bray:
    • Viewed animation as a profit-driven enterprise.
    • Pioneered organized labor and rapid production techniques (including printed backgrounds).
    • Released the first animated color film, The Debut of Thomas Cat (1920).
  • Max Fleischer:
    • A dominant figure in the American industry.
    • Introduced the character Koko the Clown in Out of the Inkwell (1915).
  • Windsor McCay:
    • Worked with a more laborious, individual process compared to the industrial models.
    • Established himself as a pioneer with Little Nemo (1910) and Sinking of the Lusitania (1918).

The Avant-Garde Movement

The avant-garde pushed against traditional artistic ideologies, influencing movements like Fauvism and Cubism.

  • Ideology: Futurism established an ideological and political stance, paving the way for Dada and Surrealism to embrace cinema as an art form.
  • Aesthetic Focus: These artists focused on the formal potential of film: line, form, movement, rhythm, color, and light.
  • Arnaldo Ginna:
    • Noted for producing possibly the first abstract painting in the West.
    • Frustrated by the lack of cameras capable of single-frame control, he drew images directly onto film stock for his work Neurasthenia (1908).

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *