Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Happy Birthday Ken Harris, the Bugs Bunny animator "who could do it all"
Ken Harris was born on July 31st 1898. Were he still alive, today would be his 115th birthday. I met him when I was just a kid, and he was already a very old man, but still doing some of the very best work of his career. It was the mid-1970s, and Ken had come over from LA to London to work with my father at his Soho Square studio.
Monday, July 29, 2013
The Art of Holly Williams
Holly Williams is a fine art painter and animation artist. She grew up in London and Los Angeles, studied at Otis in LA and later at San Francisco State. Today she lives in Highland Park in East LA, painting, raising a family, and working on commercial animation productions. In an interview with FLIP she talks about the challenges of balancing fine art, family and commercial work.
Sunday, July 28, 2013
Drunken Animation
Getting drunk in the presence of an animator may be something you will regret. Case in point: Adam Patch a San Francisco based animator who
recorded his wife telling a joke while she was drunk on wine. He animated Two Chips to her vocal track, a very funny animated answer to Drunk History.
Saturday, July 27, 2013
Dreaming of Deckchairs in London's Parks this summer
Deckchair Dreams 2013 |
Thursday, July 25, 2013
Animation Training - Theory or Practice?
What price this piece of paper? |
In practice though, what most students sign up for (or imagine they are signing up for) is proper training in the latest technical skills. Specifically, most students want training that, at the end of three years of study, will get them a job.
So which is better? Theory or Practice? Animation professionals David Davis and Sterling Sheehy face off in the debate.
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Degrees of Talent
On occasion, I get e-mails from young adults looking for entry positions in animation. They see my company listed somewhere and, unaware that my studio is just me and my wife, they send resumes and links to their reels. But I'm not hiring. I don't plan to expand. So if you're an art student or recent graduate - don't write. I have no job for you.
When I get these e-mails, I check them out as long as they don't seem like spam. Sometimes, their work is good. Sometimes it is just dreadful. I got one such e-mail just this week, from a young woman who wrote, "I am a recently graduated Animation major from the Maryland Institute Collage of the Arts".
Stop right there. You may be an art major, but you really should know how to spell "college" by the time you graduate such.
Stop right there. You may be an art major, but you really should know how to spell "college" by the time you graduate such.
Sunday, July 21, 2013
From Pencils to Pixels - Alan Yentob tells the story of how animation went digital
Saturday, July 20, 2013
Producer Carolyn Bates Talks Shop
Carolyn: "Here's a pic of me and BG painter, Cathy Patrick, 1973. on Emergency+4. Don Jurwich had taped a xerox of 'The Yellow Kid' over my desk - typical 70's un-PC. The extreme right side pencil sharpener and phone are Walt Peregoy's." |
Carolyn: Walt Peregoy hired me as an apprentice BG painter At Fred Calvert Productions on Emergency +4 the day I graduated high school. He regaled the BG team with expletive laced stories of his days at Disney and Hanna-Barbera. He admired creative passion and spoke ardently of the beauty in nature. I learned a ton and made friends with a number of folk, many of whom I'd get to work with later: Corny Cole, Libby Simon, Paul Shively, Freddie Hellmich and Amby Paliwoda.
Opening titles to Fred Calvert's Emergency +4, Carolyn's first gig.
You can almost hear Walt Peregoy bitching.
Wednesday, July 17, 2013
Remembering Pres
Pres at DreamWorks. Photo: Tim Hodge |
Monday, July 15, 2013
The SKaB or How I Got Involved in a Community Project
Cheeky, yes. But they were right. They are the next generation of the town's citizens and this is what they do for recreation. And while the township had parks with swings and ballfields, there was no skate park, at least not until a small group of citizens, including my wife Donna and I, took up the cause.
Friday, July 12, 2013
Steve-O's Tiki Lounge
Two years ago, Donna and I bought a house, our dream house on a lake. It's built on a berm, making the basement rec room level with the lower end of the yard on the lake side - perfect for entertaining. At first sight, Donna said, "We should make this a tiki room."
Months went by before this idea went from the wish list to the planning stages. I started out by re-reading an old FLIP article about Alan Smart's tiki room. He took a room much like mine, with white walls and grey carpet, and completely transformed the space. I contacted Alan, who gave me a few links for places to go to for materials. I also did a lot of Google image browsing on tiki rooms.
Thursday, July 11, 2013
Christoffer Andersen reports from the front lines of Despicable Me 2
Christoffer Andersen studied animation at The Animation Workshop in Denmark. He recently landed an internship with Illumination Entertainment on Despicable Me 2, now in release in theatres worldwide. FLIP asked Christoffer to talk about how he engineered such a wonderful opportunity to kick-start his career in animation.
Wednesday, July 10, 2013
Seuss for Sale!
You can stumble onto the coolest things in New York City. Like the Dr. Seuss art sale at Pop Gallery. None of it is original artwork, but there are a lot of very cool prints. Some prints are from his personal artwork, some are blown up book illustrations. Some have roughs paired with final art. And then there's the Seuss taxidermy animals, faithfully reproduced from the originals. There's also a six foot tall, bronze Lorax (only $34K!).
Monday, July 8, 2013
Pedro Cabeleira on the challenges of forging a career in animation
Sunday, July 7, 2013
Speaking of Public Art.....Who Needs It?
Public art, Las Vegas. Can-oe believe it? |
In a May 23rd article in The Press of Atlantic City, New Jersey State Senator Jim Whelan "took aim at the estimated $12 million behind the art initiatives during his opening remarks Wednesday at the East Coast Gaming Congress. Whelan, D-Atlantic , said he’s frustrated to see dollars being spent on the arts when financing to advance the city is becoming more scarce.
“The question is: Is anybody asking for art? I don’t think so,” Whelan said."
Saturday, July 6, 2013
Gromit Unleashed - Giant painted cartoon dogs at large in Bristol
Giant cartoon dogs on the streets this summer |
Wednesday, July 3, 2013
Universal Security and Why I Love Kristen Wiig
Donna at he DM2 premiere yellow carpet, under close scrutiny from security. |
Donna has heard my stories of Hollywood life, and was keen on experiencing a big time Hollywood movie premiere, walking the red carpet, meeting movie stars and being on the list to an exclusive event. She was thrilled to get the official invitation in the mail.
A month before the event, Donna said, "Do you think we'll meet Steve Carell?"
A week before the event, Donna said, "I hope we meet Steve Carell,"
The day before the event, Donna said, "We're going to meet Steve Carell!"
Tuesday, July 2, 2013
FLIP on FLIP - Steve reveals the secrets of Despicable Me 2
Steve Moore is not just the founder of FLIP, the web's finest animation blog (well, we think so), but also an Oscar-nominated director and a highly accomplished story board artist. Most recently he finished work on the just-released Despicable Me 2. In this exclusive interview, Steve reveals the secrets behind this most successful independent animated film franchise.
Monday, July 1, 2013
Margaret Williams, co-author of The Thief and The Cobbler, reviews Kevin Schreck's Persistence of Vision
Artwork from The Thief and the Cobbler by Errol Le Cain |
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