Drawn to Life: 20 Golden Years of Disney Master Classes

Volume 2: The Walt Stanchfield Lectures
 
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Kiadó: CRC Press
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A termék adatai:

ISBN13:9781032104386
ISBN10:1032104384
Kötéstípus:Puhakötés
Terjedelem:382 oldal
Méret:276x219 mm
Súly:960 g
Nyelv:angol
Illusztrációk: 452 Illustrations, black & white; 103 Illustrations, color; 12 Halftones, black & white; 38 Halftones, color; 440 Line drawings, black & white; 65 Line drawings, color
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Drawn to Life is a two volume collection of the legendary lectures from long-time Disney animator Walt Stanchfield. For over twenty years, Walt helped breathe life into the new golden age of animation with these teachings at the Walt Disney Animation Studios and influenced such talented artists as Tim Burton, Glen Keane, and John Lasseter.

Hosszú leírás:

Drawn to Life is a two-volume collection of the legendary lectures of long-time Disney animator Walt Stanchfield. For over 20 years, Walt mentored a new generation of animators at the Walt Disney Studios and influenced such talented artists such as Tim Burton, Brad Bird, Glen Keane, and Andreas Deja. His writing and drawings have become must-have lessons for fine artists, film professionals, animators, and students looking for inspiration and essential training in drawing and the art of animation.



Written by Walt Stanchfield (1919?2000), who began work for the Walt Disney Studios in the 1950s. His work can be seen in films such as Sleeping Beauty, The Jungle Book, 101 Dalmatians, and Peter Pan.



Edited by Disney Legend and Oscar?-nominated producer Don Hahn, whose credits include the classic Beauty and the Beast, The Lion King, and Hunchback of Notre Dame.



For nearly thirty years, the artists that passed through the gates of Disney Animation, and even non-artists like myself, were influenced by the craft, skill, wisdom, writings and sketches of Walt Stanchfield.


? Roy Disney


Walt was a kind of Mark Twain for us at Disney. He always taught with humor and skill. You learned to see the world through his eyes. I remember him one day encouraging us to leap into our drawings with boldness and confidence, " Don?t be afraid to make a mistake. We all have 10,000 bad drawings in us so the sooner you get them out the better! " Sitting in Walt?s class was as much a psychology course as it was a drawing class. One couldn?t help walk away with your mind and soul a little more open than when you entered.


? Glen Keane, Walt Disney Animation Studios


Walt Stanchfield?s classes and writings were little distillations of the man: quirky, strongly stated in a genial voice, and brimming with a lifetime of sharp observations about story telling and graphic communication. Whether he drew with a ball point pen or painted with a brush dipped in his coffee cup, he got to the essence of things and was eager to share what he learned with his eager disciples, myself among them. He was grizzled and he was great and proof that there was more than one Walt at the Disney Studio that could inspire a legion of artists.


? John Musker, Walt Disney Animation Studios


Walt Stanchfield was one of Disney Animation?s national treasures. His classes and notes have inspired countless animation artists, and his approach to drawing of caricature over reality, feeling over rote accuracy, and communication over photographic reproduction gets to the heart of what great animation is all about. Huzzah to Don Hahn for putting it all together for us!


? Eric Goldberg, Walt Disney Animation Studios


During the Animation Renaissance of the 1990s, one of the Walt Disney Studio?s best kept secrets was Walt Stanchfield. Once a week after work, this aged but agile figure jumped from drawing board to drawing board, patiently teaching us the principles behind the high baroque style of Walt Disney Animation drawing. Being in a room with Walt made you feel what it must have been like to have been taught by Don Graham. Having one of your life drawings be good enough to be reproduced in one of his little homemade weekly bulletins was akin to getting a Distinguished Service medal! Senior animators vied with trainees for that distinction.


? Tom Sito, Animator/Filmmaker/Author of Drawing The Line: The Untold Story of the Animation Unions from Bosko to Bart Simpson



This exciting collection of master classes by the great teacher Walt Stanchfield is destined to become a classic on the order of Kimon Nicolaides ? exploration of the drawing process. Stanchfield (1919 ? 2000) inspired several generations of Disney animators and those of us outside the studio fortunate enough to happen upon dog-eared copies of his conversational notes, which we passed around like Leonardo?s Codex Leicester. Stanchfield beautifully communicates the essence and joy of expressing ideas through the graphic line and accumulating a visual vocabulary. Drawn to Life is a treasure trove of cogent, valuable information for students, teachers and anyone who loves to draw.


? John Canemaker, NYU professor and Academy Award ? -winning animation filmmaker


Walt Stanchfield, in his own unique way, taught so many of us about drawing, caricature, motion, acting, and animation. Most important to me was how Walt made you apply what you had observed in his life drawing class to your animation. Disney Animation is based on real life, and in that regard Walt Stanchfield?s philosophy echoed Walt Disney?s: " We cannot caricature and animate anything convincingly until we study the real thing first. "


? Andreas Deja, Walt Disney Animation Studios


Walt Stanchfield?s renewed emphasis on draftsmanship at the Disney Studios transformed the seemingly moribund art of animation. His students were part of a renaissance with The Little Mermaid and Who Framed Roger Rabbit, a renaissance that continues with films ranging from The Iron Giant to Lilo and Stitch to Wall-E.


? Charles Solomon, Animation Historian



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Tartalomjegyzék:

Foreword


Acknowledgements



Innovation


1. Review and New Approach


2. Artist/Actor


3. Don?t Be Ordinary


4. Sketcher


5. Plus or Minus


6. Mood Symbols


7. Breaking the Constraint Barrier


8. The Agony and the Ecstasy


9. Making All Parts Work Together to Shape a Gesture


10. Forces (Energy, Animation, Power, Vim, Vigor, and Vitality)


11. Pure Performance


12. Different Concepts


13. A Time for This and a Time for That


14. Look to This Day


15. Entertainment


16. Follow-Up Department


17. Entertainment II


18. Playing to the Balcony



Drawing


19. A Sack of Flour


20. Pantomime (Drawing) Preparation


21. That Darned Neck


22. Crayolas?


23. Hands (Those Darned?)


24. Plight of a Gesture


25. Concepts for Drawing


26. Drawing Appropriate Gestures for Your Characters


27. Drawings Ain?t Just Drawing


28. The Importance of Sketching


29. Getting Emotionally Involved


30. Gesture Further Pursued


31. Caricature


32. Perspective


33. Have Something to Say and Keep It Simple


34. Keeping Flexibility in Your Drawing


35. Seeing and Drawing the Figure in Space


36. Don?t Let the Facts Get in the Way of a Good Drawing


37. Hey, Look at Me ? Look at Me!


38. Learn From the Mistakes of Others


39. Quest and Fulfillment


40. Getting Adjusted to New Production


41. More Animal Talk


42. In Further Praise of Quick Sketching


43. Impression ? Expression = Depression



Expression


44. Drawing a Clear Portrayal of Your Idea


45. Think Caricature


46. Going Into That World!


47. Understanding What You See


48. An Inspirational Journey


49. Comic Relief


50. If It Needs to Lean, Then Lean It


51. Don?t Tell, But Show!


52. Mainly Mental


53. The Shape of a Gesture


54. Dreams Impossible to Resist


55. Short Book on Drawing


56. Encompassing Reality with All Your Senses


57. Gestures, Moons, and Tangents


58. Include Your Audience


59. The Wonders of the Right and Left Hemispheres


60. Making the Rules of Perspective Come to Life


61. In Further Praise of the Rules of Perspective


62. There Is No End to Thinking Overlap


63. Space is Created


64. Words and Experience


65. Look, This Is What I Saw


66. Breaking Away


67. The Shape of the Gesture II


68. A Tribute



Afterword/Bonus Material


Credits