Author Archive

Friday, October 29th, 2010

Biography: Eugene “Zim” Zimmerman

Eugene Zim ZimmermanEugene Zim ZimmermanBirth/Death

Birth: May 23, 1862, France
Death: March 26, 1935, USA

Occupation/Title

Cartoonist, Educator

Bio Summary

Eugene “Zim” Zimmerman was born in 1862 in Switzerland, and his family emigrated to the United States when he was seven. As a poor immigrant, Zim witnessed the “melting pot” of American culture first hand. His depictions of ethnic minorities were pointed, but honest and well observed. Although he is pretty much forgotten today, he was very well known in his time, and his humor captured the essence of turn-of-the-century America.

Zim was the founder of the so-called “Grotesque” school of caricature, and was the first caricaturist to incorporate exaggerated cartooniness not only in the faces of his subjects, but in the bodies as well. Zim worked for Puck and Judge, the two top humor magazines of their day.

Zim was a prolific artist, with more than 40,000 illustrations published in his lifetime. He retired from Judge in 1897 and founded the American Association of Cartoonists and Caricaturists. He was also a writer and teacher. His columns ran in Cartoons magazine during the early years of the century, as did ads for his landmark correspondence course in cartooning.

Early Life/Family

Eugene was the middle child of three. His mother died due to complications of childbirth when he was only two years old. Three years later, his father and older brother emmigrated to America and worked at a bakery in Patterson New Jersey. Eugene and his little sister were taken in the care of their aunt and uncle in the French town of Thann. Eager to reunite with his father and brother, Eugene immigrated to America. In 1886, at the peak of his career, he married Mabel Alice Beard and they adopted a son, Adolph, and had a daughter of their own, Laura.

Eugene Zim Zimmerman

Education/Training

During his first years in New York, His father sent him to a French tutor. Eventually financial limitations resulted in his being sent to public school. This suited Eugene well as he didn’t identify himself as French, he wanted to become American through and through.

Career Outline

Eugene worked several odd jobs to pay for his room and board as a child. His first visual-arts related work was apprentice to traveling sign painter William Brassington. Eugine’s work was noticed by J.C Pope, a rival sign painter who hired him for $9 a week as head of his workshop’s pictorial department. At the time, Eugene methodically studied editorial cartoons, filling sketchbooks with copying exercises from magazines such as Harper’s Weekly and Puck. which specialized in political satire.

Eugene Zim Zimmerman
Eugene’s uncle sent one of his sketchbooks to the famous cartoonist Joseph Keppler at Puck. This landed Eugene an interview at the magazine’s headquarters in New York City. Eugene was hired for a period of three years, starting at $5 a week, increasing to $15 in his third year. Zimmerman worked alongside Bernhard Gillam and Frederick Opper. Gillam specialized in political cartoons, while the prolific Opper took on the comedic subjects. Zimmerman later commented, “There were more Puck artists than there was white space to fill.” Eager to make a name for himself, he streamlined his signature to “Zim”, a mark that would become famous.

Judge magazine, the Republican competitor to the Democractic Puck was experiencing hard times. Eventually it was bought by entrepreneur William Arkell. Arkell was determined to find new talent for his editorial staff in order to improve Judge’s circulation. Bernhard Gillam was enticed to jump ship, and he confided about his opportunity with the only other Republican on Puck‘s staff, Zim. They left Puck for Judge together in late 1885.

The first issue of the newly relaunched Judge magazine was a resounding success. Zim now had the freedom to select his own subject matter, and decided to feature cartoons depicting the common man- farmers and members of the ethnic groups that populated New York City’s poorer neighborhoods. Privately Gillam wasn’t happy with Zim’s choices of subject matter- he preferred to stick to political subjects. But publishers Hamilton and Arkell believed Judge wouldn’t succeed on political satire alone, They wanted to focus more on humor, and Zim’s satire of rural and urban life perfectly fit their vision for the magazine.

Eugene Zim Zimmerman
By the mid 1890s, Zim was working at his peak. At Judge, he was surrounded by the cream of the crop of cartooning: Hy Mayor, Richard Outcault, A.S. Daggy, Emil Flohri, Frank Livingston Fithian, Foerge B. Griffin . F. Victor Gillam, T. S. Sullivant Michael Angelo Woolf, Gus Dirks, and upcoming youngster named James Montgomery Flagg.

In 1901, Arkell resigned and Judge passed through several hands. Tired and discouraged with the management of the magazine, Zim eventually quit full time employment in 1923 and freelanced from his home. Due to numerous requests from his readers, he authored the book This and That About Caricature, a small “how to” book for Correspondence Institute of America. The success of the lesson book encouraged him to create his largest scale publication to date, Zim’s Correspondence School of Cartooning, Comic Art and Caricature. He also authored several small books marketed directly to his home communities of Horseheads and Elmira, New York. On the basis of these books, Paul T. Gilbert, editor of Cartoons Magazine hired him to write a column titled, “Homespun Philosophy By Zim”.

Zim dabbled in sequential comic strips, but in his later years he focused more on his comfortable surrounding in Horseheads, serving in the volunteer fire department, sponsoring a local brass band, and participating in local politics.

Eugene Zim Zimmerman

Comments On Style

Zim reflected his world through the art of caricature, every element of a scene was carefully observed and artfully exaggerated to create an image that was beyond real- a comic distillation of the larger reality. In his cartooning course, Zim charts the progress of a man’s boot, from new and shiny to beaten down and decrepit. He analyses what sort of shoes might be worn by a particular type of man, be he hobo or aristocrat. This level of observational detail extended to all aspects of his sketches, from the likeness of the facial features to the character’s clothing, to the furniture and room that surrounds him.

Influences

Personality

Eugene Zim Zimmerman

Anecdotes

In his autobiography, Eugene wrote that he imagined Keppler’s studio at Puck as an Arabian Nights palace full of medieval tapestries and armor, but was surprised to find it to be just a small, well organized office. It never occurred to him that great drawings like the ones in Puck could come from such a humble workshop. “Heaven’s Gates opened to me when I discovered that Mr. Keppler was merely a human being…”

The citizens of his home town, Horseheads were mostly unaware of how famous their resident cartoonist had been in his day. He spent a lot of time caricaturing the townsfolk, from the richest and most powerful all the way down to the town barber and blacksmith.

Eugene Zim Zimmerman

Miscellaneous

While previously editorials were carved on engraved on blocks of wood, Puck used four-color stone lithography, The artist would draw on lithographic stones with grease pencils, they were etched with acid to create the printing plates. Zim’s first work at Puck was preparing the "tone stones"- the color layers for Joseph Keppler’s centerspread cartoons.

Filmography

Honors

Related Links

Eugene “Zim” Zimmerman Online Exhibit

Bibliographic References

Zim BookZim Book

Zim’s Correspondence School of Cartooning, Comic Art & Caricature:
A brief Biography of “Eugene “Zim” Zimmerman” by Stephen Worth

Zim: The Autobiography of Eugene Zimmerman
Walter M. Barsch- Editor, Selinsgrove: Susquehanna University Press 1988

Zim: The Life Story of Eugene Zimmerman, Horseheads Cartoonist
Jan Strausser- Horseheads Historical Society 1978

Contributors To This Listing

Stephen Worth, Amir Avni
.

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Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010

EVENT: The Animation Creative League

Animation Archive Creative League

The Animation Creative League is a group of cartoonists, film makers and other like-minded creative folks who are interested in building a community to support independent animation in the Los Angeles area.

Creative League Screening Room

The Animation Creative League Clubhouse

The Creative League currently meets twice a month for networking, informal discussion, screenings, friendly critique of work in progress, and guest speakers. The topics of the meetings will cover the full spectrum of creativity- music, art, cartooning, dance, filmmaking, animation, comedy and drama. The goal is to inspire and empower independent animation creators. Because of space limitations in our screening room, as well as to facilitate open discussion, attendance at the meetings is strictly limited to just 12 people. As the group grows, we will add additional Saturday meetings during the month to accomodate more people.

Creative League Screening Room

The calendar of Creative League events is posted in the sidebar of this site to the left, and also on the Facebook group page titled “Animation Creative League”. Attendance at Creative League meetings is by invitation only. To reserve a confirmation to attend email Giancarlo Cassia for information. Space is limited. As a courtesy to the rest of the members of our group, do not request a confirmation if you do not plan to attend, and let us know immediately if your plans change so we can offer your space to another member.

If you are interested in participating in this group, please contact the group administrator, Taber Dunnipace at…

thecreativeleague@hotmail.com

…and join the Animation Creative League Facebook Group to get notifications of all calendar dates.

Thank you

Stephen Worth
Director
AnimationResources.org

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Sunday, January 3rd, 2010

Biography: The Wan Brothers

This posting is a stub. You can contribute to this entry by providing information through the comments link at the bottom of this post. Please organize your information following the main category headers below….

Birth/Death

Wan Lai-Ming- Birth: January 18, 1899 , Death:October 1997?Wan Gu-Chan- Birth:January 18, 1899, Death: November 1995?Wan Chao-Chen- Birth: 1906 Death: 1992?Wan Di-Huan- Birth:1907

Occupation/Title

an Lai-Ming: Animator, Director and writer ?Wan Gu-Chan: Animator, Director ?Wan Chao-Chen: Animator, Art Director?Wan Di-Huan: Animator, Photographer

Bio Summary

The Wan brothers were born at the turn of the century in Nanjing, China. During their early years they put on puppet shows and experimented with art within the family’s home. Ultimately, they taught themselves how to animate; though, Chao-Chen did travel to America in the 1940s to study it academically. The twins Lai-Ming and Gu-Chan stuck together the longest career-wise; eventually they became the pioneers of Chinese animation. All four brothers reunited professionally for the final film in their Uproar in Heaven series. Then after, beginning in 1965, the Cultural Revolution in China halted all animation for almost ten years. The Wan brothers, especially Lai-Ming, were recognized for their efforts in animation and art by the Chinese government in the 1980s.

Early Life/Family

Their businessman father expected them to learn a trade from books, so they could be successful in life. Their mother, however, encouraged them to cut paper into the shapes of people and birds. When they were young, they performed stories, such as Journey to the West, in puppet shows with their paper characters. In 1916, the family moved to Shanghai, and Lai-Ming soon left for a job at the Shanghai Commercial Press.

Education/Training

Wan Lai-Ming taught himself animation and started making his own animated films by 1919 after viewing American cartoons, China’s shadow puppet plays, and cinematic techniques in live action films. In the late 1940s, Wan Chao-Chen traveled to America to study animation. He returned during the early 1950s, eventually directing a puppet animation, The Little Heroes (1953).

Career Outline

Lai-Ming worked at the Shanghai Commercial Press in both the Department of Fine Arts and the Department of Activities Movie Service beginning in 1919. After his brothers finished art school, they joined him at the Commercial Press, and together they made the advertising film, Shuzhendong Chinese Typewriter (1925). This film would be the beginning of their animation career.?The brothers worked under the Great Wall Film Company beginning in 1924, where they produced the first animated short film, Uproar in the Studio. This film utilized the techniques they witnessed in American cartoons, such as Fleischer’s Out of the Inkwell, by animating a cartoon character acting on an artist’s canvas. They believed that animation should be instructive and thought provoking as well as entertaining. Eventually, they hoped to develop an animation style that was uniquely Chinese. At this time, Di-Huan left the company to pursue a career in photography and to set up his own studio. In 1933, Lai-Ming, Gu-Chan, and Chao-Chen were hired by the Mingxing Film Company to set up an animation unit in Shanghai. They worked at this studio until 1937, when the Japanese capture of Shanghai shut down the studio. After the closure, they relocated to Wuhan province where they made patriotic animation for the China Film Production Firm. By 1939, Lai-Ming and Gu-Chan were invited to set up another studio in Japanese-occupied Shanghai. There they viewed Disney’s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, which inspired them to create a similar Chinese animated feature.?Production of the full-length animation took place in their new Xinhua United Film animation department. They decided on an adaptation of a story from the long Monkey King folk tale written in the sixteenth century. The result was Princess with the Iron Fan, a 76-minute cartoon produced in sixteen months by a team of 237 artists.?During the war, the remaining brothers worked on propaganda films, which combined war songs and animation. After the war, one by one the brothers returned to the Shanghai Animated Film Studio where they became directors. By 1956, Lai-Ming finished the first color cartoon in China, Why the Crow is Black-Coated, this film would later become the first Chinese animation recognized internationally. In 1961, Lai-Ming and Gu-Chan started work on an idea Gu-Chan had had before the war. This would later become the Uproar in Heaven series, which revisited the story in Princess with the Iron Fan and told the next part of the Journey to the West novel. All four brothers reunited professionally to work on the last of the series in 1964. ?In 1965, when the Cultural Revolution began in China, all art forms were put on hold. This eventually crippled the animation industry for almost ten years.

Comments On Style

During the 1930s, the Wan brothers utilized cut-paper and cel animation for entertainment and patriotic films. They also used live action mixed with cartoon animation to imitate the Fleischer Studio’s Out of the Inkwell series. For Princess with the Iron Fan, they enhanced the quality and sped up production by relying on Rotoscoping as well as traditional animation techniques and metamorphosis.?In 1958, Gu-Chan began work on a new technique of cut-paper animation, which was showcased in Pigsy Eats Watermelon. His technique relied on ancient folk art cut-paper designs rather than the origami styles being created at the same time.?For the final film the brothers worked on together, Uproar in Heaven, the Wans utilized many new artistic styles. They created simple backgrounds with vague shapes, but ones that would maintain the unity of rich colors throughout other elements of the film. The film also used motifs from Beijing Opera, such as movement and music. When the film was released, it was considered a metaphor for the current havoc caused in bourgeois China by the Chairman Mao.

Influences

The first influences that reached China were US animated shorts from the Fleischer studio. Therefore, the Out of the Inkwell series heavily influenced the Wan brothers’ earliest shorts. Later, more US animation including Popeye and Betty Boop reached China, influencing their styles further. The Wan brothers were then deeply influenced by Disney’s feature films. Most notably, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs stirred them to begin a feature length Chinese animation.?Their films were also influences to other aspiring animators within Asia. Most notably, after viewing Princess with the Iron Fan, Tezuka Osamu was inspired to become a comics artist and later, an animator. It also prompted the Japanese Navy to commission its own animated feature film for Japan.

Personality

Anecdotes

Miscellaneous

Filmography

Shuzhendong Chinese Typewriter (1925) ?Studio in a Row (1926) their first silent animated short?A Paper Man Makes Trouble (1930) combined live-action and animation?The Prince of Blood (1932) anti-Japanese propaganda film?The Camel’s Dance (1935) China’s first sound cartoon?Patriotic films made while at Mingxing Company (1933-1937):?The Sad State of the Nation ?Aviation Saves China ?Detective Dog (1937) comedy for children?The Tortoise and the Hare (1937)?Patriotic films while at China Film Production Firm (1937-1938):?The Anti-Japanese War Special Collection ?Slogans of the Anti-Japanese War ?Songs of the Anti-Japanese War ?Princess with the Iron Fan (1941) China’s first full-length animation?The Little Heroes (1953) Chao-Chen’s puppet animation?Why the Crow is Black-Coated (1956) China’s first color animation of notable length?Pigsy Eats Watermelon (1958) Gu-Chan’s experiment with cut-paper animation?Uproar in Heaven (1961-1965) first color animation feature in China?The Golden Conch (1964) Guchan’s paper-cut animation

Honors

The brother’s film, Uproar in Heaven, won the Hundred Flowers Award in 1963 for best-animated feature. It also won the Best Film Prize at the London International Film Festival 1978.?Gu-Chan’s film, The Golden Conch, won the Lumumba Prize at the Asia-Africa International Film Festival in 1964. In the 1980s, the Wan brothers were awarded an honor by the Chinese government for their devotion to Chinese arts and filmmaking.

Related Links

Bibliographic References

“Princess Iron Fan.” Wikipedia: the Free Encyclopedia. ?http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Princess_Iron_Fan_(1941_film)

?“Biography: Wan Brothers” ASIFA-Hollywood Animation Archive. ?http://www.animationarchive.org/bio/index.html ?

“History of Chinese Animation.” Wikipedia: the Free Encyclopedia. ?http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Chinese_Animation?

Beck, Jerry. Animation Art. London: Flame Tree Publishing, 2004. 31, 53, 77, 114.

BIO-AAA-556

Contributors To This Listing

Kelly Costello

To make additions or corrections to this listing, please click on COMMENTS below…???

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