Little Tich

The phrase “little tich” is sometimes used to describe a diminutive person.  It began as the stage name of a famous actor of the British music hall, whose real name was Harry Relph.  He was a small person played various characters, but he found his greatest success by dancing in his “big boots”, which were 28 inch long slap shoes that allowed him to do interesting tricks.

It is very fortunate there is a film of him doing some of this dance.  It was created around 1900 as a very early effort to sync sound with film.

He was popular enough that someone produced an automaton to simulate part of his act.

Total Blackout – more scared people

The Syfy channel has a new show called “Total Blackout”, and it looks very interesting to me. I love watching scared people. But apparently the show was first created in Denmark. I like the clips from the Danish show better. These two people are the best…

Scared people are funny. New for 2012

I have been thinking about this. We laugh at these people because we know they really have nothing to be afraid of. They will be alright. The same way we know a slapstick comedian probably isn’t injured by his falls. I’ve seen photos of people caught in gunfire, and their fear isn’t funny.

Click on any of the pics to see this awesome flicker stream.

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http://www.flickr.com/photos/nightmaresfearfactory/6035859740/
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http://www.flickr.com/photos/nightmaresfearfactory/6035858660/

Surrealism

One evening I was teaching a class at the Academy of Art.  A student, Aaron Koressel I think it was, presented his latest animation.  It included a boy character and a goat.  The boy was standing in a hole, holding a box, and he was eye to eye with the goat.  That evening I happened to have a guest in the class, Phil Captain 3D McNally, now working as global stereoscopic supervisor at Dreamworks.  Phil pointed out how when the image of the boy and goat first came up, it caused him to stop and ask himself “what’s going on here?”  It’s strange scene, in a good way.  It caught his attention.  You have accomplished something when just the set up of the shot already has the viewer interested.  That in itself is a lesson.

I didn’t think of it at the time, but what Aaron had done was create a “surreal” image.  If animators should know one art movement, it should be surrealism.   Founded in the 1920’s, it encompassed visual art, writing, music and film.   It was influenced by Freud’s study of the subconscious, using free association and dream analysis.  I would define surrealist visual art as “the juxtaposition of unexpected objects, resulting in a dreamlike image.”   Surrealists felt that art could be free of aesthetic and moral preoccupations.   In other words, it doesn’t have to “mean” something.  Like unfocused thought, it can just “play”.

Often, surrealist art can be just plain funny. I imagine that the artists themselves understood this.  Whenever Salvador Dali posed for a photo, he often struck the same crazy wide eyed face.  This was not a man who took himself terribly seriously.   There is even a branch of surrealism called surreal humor.  Such humor includes absurd situations, and nonsense.   Also, non-sequitur, where statements can be made that have no logical connection to what comes before or after.   Literary examples of this pre-date the surrealist movement, for instance Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland, or Edward Lear’s “Book of Nonsense.”   One might use the word, silly.

With words like “nonsense” “absurd” and “silly” it should start to become apparent why surrealism has a place in the discussion of animation.   When artists are freed from the expectation of being logical, or sensible, it is fertile ground for imagination.