An ordinary artist shows you the things everybody can see. The egotistical artist shows you the things only he can see. But the great artist shows you things nobody ever saw before.
- Pablo Picasso
Failing is not a problem.
Not trying is a problem.
- Jay Maisel
 

 

Saturday, December 17, 2005

Puppetfilm (Darkstrider.net)

Posted by Charley Parker at 7:42 am

Puppetfilm
In spite of all of the recent interest in stop-motion animation, notably Wallace & Grommit, Tim Butron’s animations, the original King Kong and, of course, the grand-master Ray Harryhausen, most people, myself included, have been unaware of an entire genre of stop-motion from Eastern Europe called Puppetfilm. Puppetfilm doesn’t refer to puppets in the Jim Hensen/Howdy Doody sense, but to the miniature figures used in the painstaking stop-motion animation process.

Mike Brent, an amateur independent animator from Illinois, has created a site devoted to the appreciation of this remarkable branch of animation. His site contains a good introduction to the genre and its masters and features a fascinating gallery of clips. (Shown above, clockwise from top left: Jiri Trnka, Noro Drziak, Jiri Barta, Jan Bubenicek.) The eastern European sensibility is strongly evident. The animated images are dark, surreal, intricate and vividly imagined.

The site also contains links, resources and information about the artform and related topics, as well as some of Brent’s own work, which is, of course, very influenced by his love for these films.

Posted in: Animation   |  

3 comments for Puppetfilm (Darkstrider.net) »

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  1. Comment by Shelley Noble
    Thursday, June 1, 2006 @ 3:50 pm

    This is a nice write up. Mike’s site is a boon to the genre, as is he.

  2. Comment by Mike Brent
    Friday, June 2, 2006 @ 1:08 am

    Hey, glad to see the Puppetlove preading far and wide! Thanks for letting me konw about this Shelley, and thanks for the writeup Charley! Hmmmm… Charley Parker…….

    Nah - couldn’t be.

  3. Comment by Charley Parker
    Sunday, June 4, 2006 @ 12:13 pm

    Shelly, thanks for your comment. Mike, thanks for maintaining a great resource for an underappreciated art form.

    BTW, no, I can’t play saxophone…

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Updated 11/11/08
Double Lives: American Painters as Illustrators, 1850-1950
Sept 6 - Nov 23, 2008
Brandywine River Museum, DE
The Totoro Forest Project
Sep 20, 2008 - Feb 8, 2009
Cartoon Art Museum San Francisco, CA
A Light TOuch: Exploring Humor in Drawing
Sep 23 - Dec 7, 2008
The Getty Center, CA
New Acquisitions
Oct 7 - Dec 31, 2008
Society of Illustrators, NY
Drawings and Prints: Selections from the Permanent Collection
Oct 20, 2008 - Jan 11, 2009
Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY
Giles: One of the Family
Nov 5, 2008 - Feb 15, 2009
The Cartoon Museum, London, UK
Over the Top: American Posters from World War I
Nov 8, 2008 - Jan 25, 2009
Norman Rockwell Museum, MA
Leonardo da Vinci: Drawings from the Biblioteca Reale in Turin
Nov 15, 2008 - Jan 4, 2009
Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco, CA
Frank E. Schoonover: An Artist for All Seasons
Nov 22, 2008 - Jan 11, 2009
Delaware Art Museum, DE


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