History of animation
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Contents |
[edit] The Earliest form of Animation
The first examples of trying to capture motion into a drawing can already be found in paleolithic cave paintings, where animals are depicted with multiple legs in superimposed positions, clearly attempting to depict a sense of motion.
Shadow Puppetry was also an animation ancestor, e.g. the Indonesian animated shadow puppet called Wayang around 900 a.d.
[edit] Film animation
1890s, Thomas Edison's Kinetoscope was invented. The history of film animation begins with the earliest days of silent films and continues through the present day.
The first animated film was created by Charles-Émile Reynaud, inventor of the praxinoscope, an animation system using loops of 12 pictures. On October 28, 1892 at Musée Grévin in Paris, France he exhibited animations consisting of loops of about 500 frames, using his théatre optique system - similar in principle to a modern film projector.
The first animation on standard picture film was Humorous Phases of Funny Faces by J. Stuart Blackton in the year 1906. It features a cartoonist drawing faces on a chalkboard, and the faces coming to life.
Fantasmagorie, by the French director Émile Cohl (also called Émile Courtet), is also noteworthy; it was projected for the first time on August 17, 1908 at 'Théâtre du Gymnase', in Paris. Émile Courtet later went to Fort Lee, New Jersey near New York City in 1912, where he worked for French studio Éclair and spread its technique in the US.
The first puppet-animated film was The Beautiful Lukanida (1910) by the Russian-born ethnically-Polish Director Wladyslaw Starewicz (Ladislas Starevich).
The first animated feature film was El Apóstol, made in 1917 by Quirino Cristiani from Argentina. He also directed two other animated feature films, including 1931's Peludopolis, the first to use synchronized sound. None of them, however, survive to the present day; the earliest-surviving animated feature, which used colour-tinted scenes, is the silhouette-animated Adventures of Prince Achmed (1926) from German Lotte Reiniger and French/Hungarian Berthold Bartosch. Walt Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, often considered to be the first animated feature when in fact at least eight were previously released, was the nevertheless first to use Technicolor and the first to become successful within the English-speaking world.
[edit] Europe
- Animation before film in 20th century.
[edit] History of Czech animation
- Puppet animation, Jiří Trnka, the Poetic animation school
- Catalogue of Czech animation
- Czech animation homepage
[edit] History of French animation
- 1908-1925, Work of Émile Cohl:
The first animated cartoon (1908), and most animation techniques: morphing (1909), puppet animation and color animated cartoon (1910), pixilation (1911), first animated series (Le chien Flambeau, 1917).
[edit] History of Italian animation
- The 1970 Italian animated cartoon art and industry (La Linea (cartoon), Caliméro...)
[edit] History of Russian animation
- 1910-1913 Ladislas Starevich creates puppet animations
- 1935 First animated feature film in USSR, The New Gulliver
- 1935 Soyuzmultfilm Studio is created, will go on to fund many thousands of short animated films, mostly for kids
- late 1930s to 1950s - enforced Socialist Realism in cartoons (with a few exceptions).
- 1953 Puppet animation division re-founded at Soyuzmultfilm (it was closed shortly after The New Gulliver was released)
- 1962 Fyodor Khitruk's short film History of a Crime introduces new aesthetic to Soviet animation
- 1969 First episode of popular series Nu, Pogodi!
- 1972 First Cheburashka short is made
- 1979 Yuriy Norshteyn releases Tale of Tales, since then voted twice by a large panel of international critics as the best animated film ever made.
- 1989 Studio Pilot, the first private animation studio in the USSR, is founded
- 1990s government subsidies shrink dramatically, while the number of studios grows. Soyuzmultfilm is beset by corruption and banditism, slowly loses its dominant place among Russian studios.
[edit] History of animation in Croatia (in former Yugoslavia)
- The Zagreb school, cf. Zagreb Film
- The Čakovec school, cf. Škola Animiranog Filma Čakovec
[edit] North and South America
[edit] History of Argentinian animation
- World's first two feature-length animated films and first film with sound by Quirino Cristiani[1];Quirio Cristiani's page (Spanish)
[edit] History of Canadian animation
- Early Work
- Contributions of the National Film Board of Canada's animation department
- Early commercial productions
- Contributions of Canadian voice actor recordings
- The 1980s- rise of the major indigenous industry
[edit] History of Cuban animation
- ¡Vampiros en la Habana!
- Festival Internacional del Nuevo Cine Latinoamericano
[edit] History of United States Animation
History of animation in the United States |
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The Silent Era |
The Golden Age |
The TV Era |
The Renaissance |
- Beginning of industrial production of animated cartoon.
Because the history of Hollywood animation as an art form has undergone many changes in its hundred-year history, Wikipedia presents four separate chapters in the development of its animation:
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- The beginnings of theatrical, the earliest animated cartoons in the era of silent film, ranging from the works of Winsor McCay through Koko the Clown and Felix the Cat
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- The Bray Studios was the first and foremost cartoon studio, housed in New York City. Many aspiring cartoonists started their careers at Bray, including Paul Terry of "Mighty Mouse" fame, Max Fleischer of "Betty Boop" fame, as well as Walter Lantz of "Woody Woodpecker" fame. The cartoon studio operated from circa 1915 until 1928. Some of the first cartoon stars from the Bray studios were Farmer Alfalfa (by Paul Terry) and Bobby Bumps (by Earl Hurd).
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- The dominance of Walt Disney throughout the 1930s
- The rise of Warner Bros. and MGM
- The departure from realism, and UPA
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- The emergence of TV animated series from Hanna-Barbera Productions
- The decline of theatrical cartoons and feature films
- Saturday morning cartoons
- The attempts at reviving animated features through the 1960s
- The rise of adult animation in the early 1970s
- The onslaught of commercial cartoons in the 1980s
- Modern animation of the United States (1980s through present)
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- Who Framed Roger Rabbit and the return of Disney
- Steven Spielberg's collaborations with Warner Bros.
- A flood of newer, bolder animation studios
- The Simpsons marks the resurgence of adult-oriented animation.
- The mainstream popularization of anime
- The rise of computer animation
- The decline of Saturday morning cartoons, the rise of Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network
- In 2005, Disney closes all facilities for hand-drawn traditional animation, concentrating on computer animation for their feature films
- Cartoon Network's late-night animation block Adult Swim becomes immensely popular and leads to a resurgence in short, adult animation.
[edit] Asia
- Shadow animation around Asia (VIe century)
[edit] History of Chinese Animation
- Wan brothers since 1926 and the first Asian feature animated cartoon film, Princess Iron Fan (1941) inspired from Journey to the West, made during the Japanese occupation.
[edit] History of Japanese Animation (Anime)
- The first Japanese Animation
Found recently in Kyoto, the film depicts a boy wearing a sailor uniform performing a salute. The film dates back to around the year 1900 and is on 35mm Celluloid, comprised of 50 frames put together with paste
- Pre-Tezuka Experiments
- Mushi Productions and Toei Animation
- Osamu Tezuka's Astroboy (1963)
- Isao Takahata's Hols: Prince of the Sun (1968), helped by Hayao Miyazaki and Yoichi Kotabe.
- The 1970s
- Rise of the Giant Robot fall of Japanese film industry
- The Golden Age of Anime
- Space Opera
- Rise of Otaku subculture
- Start of Studio Ghibli
- Ambitious productions ending with Akira (1988)
- The 1990s and 2000s
- Decline of domestic industry combined with international growth
- The impact of Neon Genesis Evangelion series and the Post-Evangelion trend.
- Critical Acclaim in the west and the Rise of Moé series domestically.
[edit] See also
[edit] Media
- Humorous Phases of Funny Faces (file info)
- The 1906 cartoon Humorous Phases of Funny Faces by J. Stuart Blackton, regarded to be the first animated film. (14.9 MB, ogg/Theora format).
- Problems seeing the videos? See media help.