John Lamb (producer)

John Lamb, "Blast from the Past" art opening at Linksoul Lab, Oceanside, California, 2013

John Lamb is an American artist, animation film producer/director, and entrepreneur. From the first animated surf and skateboarding cartoons, to perhaps the first American animated, rotoscoped rock n' roll video, to an Academy Award for Scientific and Technical Achievement for invention of the Lyon Lamb Video Animation System (VAS), Lamb's work has consistently been in the public eye since the 1970s.

In the early 1970s, Lamb's animation was seen in two seminal surf movies. "The Forgotten Island of Santosha" by Larry and Roger Yates featured Lamb's first animated film "Secret Spot" (1974), while "Five Summer Stories" by McGilivray-Freeman Films (1975) featured Lamb's animated short "Rocket 88".

"Secret Spot" is said to be the world's first animated surf cartoon and introduced Lamb's trademark character "Willy Makitt." Notable for another first, "Secret Spot" features an "air" maneuver where the surfer flies out of the wave into the air and lands back on the wave to continue surfing - a trick now standard in the world surf community. "Rocket 88" also features Willie Makitt doing a "shuvit" maneuver, which would later become a standard trick among skateboarders. The "shuvit" maneuver shows WIllie Makitt kick-flipping the surfboard, causing it to spin - he then lands it to continue the ride. In 1975, Willy Makitt was licensed by Hang Ten and featured on their first fiberglass skateboards, which can be seen in this NBC newscast on the "new" skateboarding phenomenon.[1]

Most recently, Lamb and "Secret Spot" were honored by the California Surf Museum in Oceanside, CA with a permanent installation. Hand painted by Lamb, with a bigger-than-life wave scene and classic Lamb-style hot rods, tikis, palm trees and jungle scene, the iconic Willy Makitt is featured at the peak of the giant wave. The "Secret Spot" installation is an outdoor event, host to openings, premieres and surf extravaganzas of all types at the groundbreaking museum. The installation also features the work of Brett Hazzard, who created the "footprints in the sand" and breathtaking beach effect, that completes the installation's unique experience. See the mural's start and sky-bending finish on YouTube.[2]

History

With the fresh success of the Lyon Lamb Video Animation System in 1976, Lamb set out for his most ambitious animation project: "Tom Waits for No One", featuring Tom Waits singing "The One That Got Away". Using the newly invented Lyon Lamb Video Rotoscope, Lamb animated live footage of Tom Waits, creating what appears to be the first American, rotoscoped, animated rock video. Released in 1979, and largely hidden from the public eye since, the video would eventually see a second life when it went viral on YouTube almost 30 years later.

In 1980, Lamb was honored with an Academy Award for Scientific and Technical Achievement for inventing the Lyon Lamb Video Animation System (VAS) - (shared with Bruce Lyon). The VAS is a single frame video device for pre-testing animation art before it's committed to final production.[3]

With the invention of the Lyon Lamb VAS, an animation revolution began. One example, a master animator uses the VAS to make animation history and demonstrate a first human "walk cycle" for his students.[4]

Companies

Lamb is the founder several successful ventures in widely varied fields, including animation, graphic design, clothing design, licensed apparel, art installations, and most recently with his "Blast from the Past" images rendered on aluminum.

After leaving Lyon Lamb, throughout the 1980s and early '90s, John Lamb Productions merchandised and licensed Lamb's cartoon-style drawings, meeting with wide commercial success. During that same period, Lamb also did apparel design for international companies Adidas, Nike, L.A.Gear, Puma, Body Glove, Bugle Boy, Jimmy Z, Maui and Sons, Hang Ten and Bear Surfboards, among others.

In the late '90s, Lamb co-founded Bobtown Ink, with veteran Disney director Russ Mooney, producer Brian Ray and award winning director John Kafka. They produced and created many original content shows for clients such as Disney, Universal, Nickelodeon, Sun Woo, Hanna Barbara, Cartoon Network, MGM, and Sony.

Today

Presently, Lamb continues his medium bending ways with "Blast from the Past", a series of post-war California-style images of hot rods, surfboards, classic cars and beach scenes set against the backdrop of one of America's most conspicuous images: the atomic plume. Printed on the same type of material from which the Enola Gay was made, the images represent a wistfully ironic commentary of life after the A-bomb. Linksoul Lab in Oceanside, CA hosted the opening for "Blast From the Past" in November, 2013.

Animation or production

Lamb's animated works are now available via YouTube.

External links

References