WATCH ME MOVE : THE ANIMATION SHOW /
Watch Me Move: The Animation Show is the most extensive exhibition ever mounted to present the full range of animated imagery produced in the last 150 years. It brings together industry pioneers, independent film-makers and contemporary artists including Etienne-Jules Marey, Harry Smith, Jan Svankma...
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Format: | text |
Language: | eng |
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London ; New York : Merrell ; London : in association with Barbican [Art Gallery],
2011
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author | Hilty, Greg, editor 635515 Pardo, Alona, editor 635516 Barbican Art Gallery, editor 635517 |
author_facet | Hilty, Greg, editor 635515 Pardo, Alona, editor 635516 Barbican Art Gallery, editor 635517 |
author_sort | Hilty, Greg, editor 635515 |
collection | OCEAN |
description | Watch Me Move: The Animation Show is the most extensive exhibition ever mounted to present the full range of animated imagery produced in the last 150 years. It brings together industry pioneers, independent film-makers and contemporary artists including Etienne-Jules Marey, Harry Smith, Jan Svankmajer, William Kentridge and Nathalie Djurberg alongside the creative output of commercial studios such as Walt Disney, Aardman, Studio Ghibli and Pixar. Presenting animation as a highly influential force in the development of global visual culture, Watch Me Move: The Animation Show explores the relationship between animation and film and offers a timely insight into the genre as a cultural phenomenon. Cutting across generations and cultures, the show features over 170 works, from iconic clips to lesser-known masterpieces. Taking the viewer behind the dream-world of the finished film, it includes puppets, stage sets, storyboard drawings, wire-frame visualisations, cel and background images. The exhibition opens at Barbican Art Gallery, London, on 15 Jun 2011. |
first_indexed | 2024-03-05T16:38:03Z |
format | text |
id | KOHA-OAI-TEST:590725 |
institution | Universiti Teknologi Malaysia - OCEAN |
language | eng |
last_indexed | 2024-03-05T16:38:03Z |
publishDate | 2011 |
publisher | London ; New York : Merrell ; London : in association with Barbican [Art Gallery], |
record_format | dspace |
spelling | KOHA-OAI-TEST:5907252021-12-01T04:31:15ZWATCH ME MOVE : THE ANIMATION SHOW / Hilty, Greg, editor 635515 Pardo, Alona, editor 635516 Barbican Art Gallery, editor 635517 textLondon ; New York : Merrell ; London : in association with Barbican [Art Gallery],2011©2011engWatch Me Move: The Animation Show is the most extensive exhibition ever mounted to present the full range of animated imagery produced in the last 150 years. It brings together industry pioneers, independent film-makers and contemporary artists including Etienne-Jules Marey, Harry Smith, Jan Svankmajer, William Kentridge and Nathalie Djurberg alongside the creative output of commercial studios such as Walt Disney, Aardman, Studio Ghibli and Pixar. Presenting animation as a highly influential force in the development of global visual culture, Watch Me Move: The Animation Show explores the relationship between animation and film and offers a timely insight into the genre as a cultural phenomenon. Cutting across generations and cultures, the show features over 170 works, from iconic clips to lesser-known masterpieces. Taking the viewer behind the dream-world of the finished film, it includes puppets, stage sets, storyboard drawings, wire-frame visualisations, cel and background images. The exhibition opens at Barbican Art Gallery, London, on 15 Jun 2011.Today’s breathtaking digital animation by the likes of Pixar may have been unimaginable to such moving-image pioneers as Eadweard Muybridge and Winsor McCay, but over the course of the last century animation has become one of the most popular and prevalent visual art forms. Watch Me Move presents an extensive selection of animated imagery created over the past 100 years, from Felix the Cat, Mickey Mouse and Betty Boop to Astro Boy, South Park and Avatar, and covers a wide range of techniques, including hand-drawn, stop-motion, computer animation and more experimental forms. Organized thematically, the book explores the emergence of animation, its well-loved characters, heroes and villains, its myths and fables, dramatic narratives and alternative realities. With essays by animation experts and biographies of the leading studios and animators, Watch Me Move is the definitive guide to the dynamic world of the animated image.Includes bibliographical references and index.Object, dream and image in animation / Greg Hilty -- The toolbox of technology and technique : animation in 100 objects / Paul Wells -- Ghosts in the machine : experiencing animation / Suzanne Buchan -- Apparitions -- Characters -- Superhumans -- Fables -- Fragments -- Structures -- Visions.Watch Me Move: The Animation Show is the most extensive exhibition ever mounted to present the full range of animated imagery produced in the last 150 years. It brings together industry pioneers, independent film-makers and contemporary artists including Etienne-Jules Marey, Harry Smith, Jan Svankmajer, William Kentridge and Nathalie Djurberg alongside the creative output of commercial studios such as Walt Disney, Aardman, Studio Ghibli and Pixar. Presenting animation as a highly influential force in the development of global visual culture, Watch Me Move: The Animation Show explores the relationship between animation and film and offers a timely insight into the genre as a cultural phenomenon. Cutting across generations and cultures, the show features over 170 works, from iconic clips to lesser-known masterpieces. Taking the viewer behind the dream-world of the finished film, it includes puppets, stage sets, storyboard drawings, wire-frame visualisations, cel and background images. The exhibition opens at Barbican Art Gallery, London, on 15 Jun 2011.Today’s breathtaking digital animation by the likes of Pixar may have been unimaginable to such moving-image pioneers as Eadweard Muybridge and Winsor McCay, but over the course of the last century animation has become one of the most popular and prevalent visual art forms. Watch Me Move presents an extensive selection of animated imagery created over the past 100 years, from Felix the Cat, Mickey Mouse and Betty Boop to Astro Boy, South Park and Avatar, and covers a wide range of techniques, including hand-drawn, stop-motion, computer animation and more experimental forms. Organized thematically, the book explores the emergence of animation, its well-loved characters, heroes and villains, its myths and fables, dramatic narratives and alternative realities. With essays by animation experts and biographies of the leading studios and animators, Watch Me Move is the definitive guide to the dynamic world of the animated image.Doria Abdullah;Animated filmsAnimation (Cinematography)Animated filmsAnimated filmsAnimation (Cinematography)Animation (Cinematography)URN:ISBN:9781858945583 |
spellingShingle | Animated films Animation (Cinematography) Animated films Animated films Animation (Cinematography) Animation (Cinematography) Hilty, Greg, editor 635515 Pardo, Alona, editor 635516 Barbican Art Gallery, editor 635517 WATCH ME MOVE : THE ANIMATION SHOW / |
title | WATCH ME MOVE : THE ANIMATION SHOW / |
title_full | WATCH ME MOVE : THE ANIMATION SHOW / |
title_fullStr | WATCH ME MOVE : THE ANIMATION SHOW / |
title_full_unstemmed | WATCH ME MOVE : THE ANIMATION SHOW / |
title_short | WATCH ME MOVE : THE ANIMATION SHOW / |
title_sort | watch me move the animation show |
topic | Animated films Animation (Cinematography) Animated films Animated films Animation (Cinematography) Animation (Cinematography) |
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