December 17th, 2010

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Biography: Joe Barbera

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
Born: New York City, March 16, 1911
Death: Los Angeles, December 18, 2006

Occupation/Title

Animator, Director, Producer, Studio Head

Bio Summary

Most people know him from the famous Hanna-Barbera studios cartoons, such as “The Flintstones” and “Scooby-Doo”, but there was much more to the man’s career.

Early Life/Family

Joseph Barbera was born in the Little Italy section of Manhattan, to Sicilian parents. (Wikipedia)

Education/Training

Career Outline

Published in Collier’s magazine in 1928, and off-and-on while working for the Bankers’ Trust Company in New YorkComments On Style

Influences

Personality

“He was Fred Flintstone: loyal, loving family man; a self-image as a working stiff despite all evidence to the contrary; Average Joe. Except that he was nothing close to being average.” (InsidePulse.com)

Anecdotes

“If you ever want to explore the cliche of “opposites attract”, you could definitely start with Joe Barbera and Bill Hanna. Hanna was the embodiment of what would eventually become the California surfer boy, blond, and tan. Joe looked like a Thirties version of Tony Soprano, dark with the typically wide Italian face. Hanna was refined, Barbera still had the patina of crudeness that Brooklyn, to this day, layers on its inhabitants. Hanna was shy, Barbera gregarious. Hanna was on the fast track at MGM, his loyalty to Harman and Ising paying off as he was allowed to direct a few shorts starting in 1936; Barbera was one of the New York imports, there to provide the muscle behind the scenes. But somehow they clicked. Friendship quickly led to partnership. Everyone at MGM started regarding Hanna and Barbera as a single entity.” (InsidePulse.com)
“[Barbera] could capture mood and expression in a quick sketch better than anyone I’ve ever known.” – Bill Hanna

Miscellaneous

Filmography

MGM, Tom & Jerry:

Puss Gets the Boot (1940) (uncredited) (Co-Director)
Swing Social (1940) (uncredited)
Gallopin’ Gals (1940) (Co-Director)
The Goose Goes South (1941) (Co-Director)
The Midnight Snack (1941) (C0-Director)
Officer Pooch (1941) (Co-Director)
The Night Before Christmas (1941) (uncredited) (Co-Director)
Fraidy Cat (1942) (Co-Director)
Dog Trouble (1942) (Co-Director)
Puss n’ Toots (1942) (Co-Director)
The Bowling Alley-Cat (1942) (Co-Director)
Fine Feathered Friend (1942) (Co-Director)
Sufferin’ Cats (1943) (Co-Director)
The Lonesome Mouse (1943) (Co-Director)
The Yankee Doodle Mouse (1943) (Co-Director)
War Dogs (1943) (Co-Director)
Baby Puss (1943) (Co-Director)
The Zoot Cat (1944) (Co-Director)
The Million Dollar Cat (1944) (Co-Director)
The Bodyguard (1944) (Co-Director)
Puttin’ on the Dog (1944) (Co-Director)
Mouse Trouble (1944) (Co-Director)
… aka Cat Nipped
… aka Kitty Foiled
The Mouse Comes to Dinner (1945) (C0-Director)
… aka Mouse to Dinner
Mouse in Manhattan (1945) (Co-Director)
… aka Manhattan Serenade
Tee for Two (1945) (Co-Director)
Flirty Birdy (1945) (Co-Director)
… aka Love Boids
Quiet Please! (1945) (Co-Director)
The Cat Concerto (1946) (Co-Director)
Springtime for Thomas (1946) (Co-Director)
The Milky Waif (1946) (Co-Director)
Trap Happy (1946) (Co-Director)
Solid Serenade (1946) (Co-Director)
Cat Fishin’ (1947) (Co-Director)
Part Time Pal (1947) (Co-Director)
… aka Fair Weathered Friend
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Mouse (1947) (Co-Director)
Salt Water Tabby (1947) (Co-Director)
A Mouse in the House (1947) (Co-Director)
The Invisible Mouse (1947) (Co-Director)
The Little Orphan (1948) (Co-Director)
Make Mine Freedom (1948) (Co-Director)
Kitty Foiled (1948) (Co-Director)
The Truce Hurts (1948) (Co-Director)
Old Rockin’ Chair Tom (1948) (Co-Director)
Professor Tom (1948) (Co-Director)
Mouse Cleaning (1948) (Co-Director)
Polka-Dot Puss (1949) (Co-Director)
Hatch Up Your Troubles (1949) (Co-Director)
Heavenly Puss (1949) (Co-Director)
The Cat and the Mermouse (1949) (Co-Director)
Love That Pup (1949) (Co-Director)
Jerry’s Diary (1949) (Co-Director)
Tennis Chumps (1949) (Co-Director)
Jerry’s Cousin (1950) (C0-Director)
… aka City Cousin
… aka Muscles Mouse
Little Quacker (1950) (Co-Director)
Saturday Evening Puss (1950) (Co-Director)
… aka Party Cat
Texas Tom (1950)(Co-Director)
Jerry and the Lion (1950) (Co-Director)
… aka Hold That Lion
Safety Second (1950) (Co-Director)
… aka F’r Safety Sake
Tom and Jerry in the Hollywood Bowl (1950) (Co-Director)
The Framed Cat (1950) (Co-Director)
Cue Ball Cat (1950) (Co-Director)
The Two Mouseketeers (1951) (Co-Director)
Casanova Cat (1951) (Co-Director)
Jerry and the Goldfish (1951) (Co-Director)
Sleepy-Time Tom (1951) (Co-Director)
His Mouse Friday (1951) (Co-Director)
Slicked-up Pup (1951) (Co-Director)
Nit-Witty Kitty (1951) (Co-Director)
Cat Napping (1951) (Co-Director)
Johann Mouse (1952) (Co-Director)
The Flying Cat (1952) (Co-Director)
The Duck Doctor (1952) (Co-Director)
Smitten Kitten (1952) (Co-Director)
Triplet Trouble (1952) (Co-Director)
Little Runaway (1952) (Co-Director)
Fit to Be Tied (1952) (Co-Director)
Push-Button Kitty (1952) (Co-Director)
Cruise Cat (1952) (Co-Director)
The Dog House (1952) (Co-Director)
The Missing Mouse (1953) (C0-Director)
Jerry and Jumbo (1953) (Co-Director)
That’s My Pup! (1953) (Co-Director)
Just Ducky (1953) (Co-Director)
Two Little Indians (1953) (Co-Director)
Life with Tom (1953) (Co-Director)
Puppy Tale (1954) (Co-Director)
Posse Cat (1954) (Co-Director)
Hic-cup Pup (1954) (Co-Director)
… aka Tyke Takes a Nap
Little School Mouse (1954) (Co-Director)
Baby Butch (1954) (Co-Director)
Mice Follies (1954) (Co-Director)
Neapolitan Mouse (1954) (Co-Director)
Downhearted Duckling (1954) (Co-Director)
Pet Peeve (1954) (Co-Director)
Touché, Pussy Cat! (1954) (Co-Director)
Southbound Duckling (1955) (Co-Director)
Pup on a Picnic (1955) (Co-Director)
Mouse for Sale (1955) (Co-Director)
Designs on Jerry (1955) (Co-Director)
Tom and Chérie (1955) (Co-Director)
Smarty Cat (1955) (Co-Director)
Pecos Pest (1955) (Co-Director)
That’s My Mommy (1955) (Co-Director)
Good Will to Men (1955) (Co-Director)
The Flying Sorceress (1956) (Co-Director)
The Egg and Jerry (1956) (Co-Director)
Busy Buddies (1956) (Co-Director)
Muscle Beach Tom (1956) (Co-Director)
Down Beat Bear (1956) (Co-Director)
Blue Cat Blues (1956) (Co-Director)
Barbecue Brawl (1956) (Co-Director)
Tops with Pops (1957) (Co-Director)
Give and Tyke (1957) (Co-Director)
Timid Tabby (1957) (Co-Director)
Feedin’ the Kiddie (1957) (Co-Director)
Scat Cats (1957) (Co-Director)
Mucho Mouse (1957) (Co-Director)
Tom’s Photo Finish (1957) (Co-Director)
Happy Go Ducky (1958) (Co-Director)
… aka One Quack Mind
Royal Cat Nap (1958) (Co-Director)
The Vanishing Duck (1958) (Co-Director)
Robin Hoodwinked (1958) (Co-Director)
Tot Watchers (1958) (Co-Director)

Hanna-Barbera

“Pixie and Dixie and Mr. Jinks” (1958) Tv Series (Co-Director)
“Quick Draw McGraw” (1959) Tv Series (Co-Director)
Wolf Hounded (1959) (Co-Director)
Little Bo Bopped (1959) (Co-Director)
Tale of a Wolf (1960) (Co-Director)
Life with Loopy (1960) (Co-Director)
Creepy Time Pal (1960) (Co-Director)
Snoopy Loopy (1960) (Co-Director)
The Do-Good Wolf (1960) (Co-Director)
Here, Kiddie, Kiddie (1960) (Co-Director)
No Biz Like Shoe Biz (1960) (Co-Director)
“The Flintstones” (1 episode, 1960) (Co-Director)
– The Flintstone Flyer (1960) TV Episode (Co-Director)
Count Down Clown (1961) (Co-Director)
“The Yogi Bear Show” (1961) TV Series (Co-Director)
Happy Go Loopy (1961) (Co-Director)
Two Faced Wolf (1961) (Co-Director)
This Is My Ducky Day (1961) (Co-Director)
Fee Fie Foes (1961) (Co-Director)
Zoo Is Company (1961) (Co-Director)
Child Sock-Cology (1961) (Co-Director)
Catch Meow (1961) (Co-Director)
Kooky Loopy (1961) (Co-Director)
Loopy’s Hare-do (1961) (Co-Director)
“Top Cat” (1961) TV Series (Co-Director)
… aka Boss Cat (UK) (Co-Director)
Bungle Uncle (1962) (Co-Director)
Common Scents (1962) (Co-Director)
Bunnies Abundant (1962) (Co-Director)
Beef for and After (1962) (Co-Director)
Swash Buckled (1962) (Co-Director)
Bearly Able (1962) (Co-Director)
“Wally Gator” (1962) TV Series (Co-Director) (uncredited)
“The New Hanna-Barbera Cartoon Series” (1962) TV Series (Co-Director)
Slippery Slippers (1962) (Co-Director)
Chicken Fraca-See (1962) (Co-Director)
Rancid Ransom (1962) (Co-Director)
“The Jetsons” (4 episodes, 1962) (Co-Director)
– Elroy’s TV Show (1962) TV Episode (Co-Director)
– The Good Little Scouts (1962) TV Episode (Co-Director)
– Jetsons Nite Out (1962) TV Episode (Co-Director)
– A Date with Jet Screamer (1962) TV Episode (Co-Director)
Just a Wolf at Heart (1963) (Co-Director)
Chicken Hearted Wolf (1963) (Co-Director)
Whatcha Watchin’ (1963) (Co-Director)
A Fallible Fable (1963) (Co-Director)
Sheep Stealers Anonymous (1963) (Co-Director)
Wolf in Sheep Dog’s Clothing (1963) (Co-Director)
Not in Nottingham (1963) (Co-Director)
Drum-Sticked (1963) (Co-Director)
Bear Up! (1963) (Co-Director)
Crook Who Cried Wolf (1963) (Co-Director)
Habit Rabbit (1963) (Co-Director)
Raggedy Rug (1964) (Co-Director)
“The Magilla Gorilla Show” (1964) TV Series (Co-Director)
Elephantastic (1964) (Co-Director)
Bear Hug (1964) (Co-Director)
Hey There, It’s Yogi Bear (1964) (Co-Director)
“Peter Potamus and His Magic Flying Balloon” (1964) TV Series (Co-Director)
Trouble Bruin (1964) (Co-Director)
Bear Knuckles (1964) (Co-Director)
Habit Troubles (1964) (Co-Director)
“Precious Pupp” (1965) TV Series (Co-Director)
“The Hillbilly Bears” (1965) TV Series (Co-Director)
Horse Shoo (1965) (Co-Director)
“Jonny Quest” (8 episodes, 1964- 1965) (Co-Director)
… aka The Adventures of Jonny Quest
– Attack of the Tree People (1965) TV Episode (Co-Director)
– The Robot Spy (1964) TV Episode (Co-Director)
– Treasure of the Temple (1964) TV Episode (Co-Director)
– The Riddle of the Gold (1964) TV Episode (Co-Director)
– Pursuit of the Po Ho (1964) TV Episode (Co-Director)
(3 more)
Pork Chop Phooey (1965) (Co-Director)
Crow’s Fete (1965) (Co-Director)
Big Mouse Take (1965) (Co-Director)
“Tom and Jerry” (1965) TV Series (Co-Director) (uncredited)
“The Secret Squirrel Show” (1965) TV Series (Co-Director)
Matinee Mouse (1966) (original material) (Co-Director)
“A Laurel and Hardy Cartoon” (1966) TV Series (Co-Director)
… aka Larry Harmon’s Laurel & Hardy (UK: video box title) (Co-Director)
“Abbott & Costello” (1966) TV Series (Co-Director)
The Man Called Flintstone (1966) (Co-Director)
“Space Ghost” (1966) TV Series (Co-Director)
“Frankenstein, Jr. and the Impossibles” (1966) TV Series (Co-Director)
“Samson & Goliath” (1967) TV Series (Co-Director)
… aka Young Samson & Goliath (USA: new title) (Co-Director)
Shutter Bugged Cat (1967) (Co-Director)
“The Atom Ant Show” (1967) TV Series (Co-Director)
“Birdman and the Galaxy Trio” (1967) TV Series (Co-Director)
“Moby Dick and the Mighty Mightor” (1967) TV Series (Co-Director)
“The Herculoids” (1 episode) (Co-Director)
– The Gladiators of Kyanite/Temple of Trax (????) TV Episode (Co-Director)
“Fantastic 4” (5 episodes) (Co-Director)
– Danger in the Depths (????) TV Episode (Co-Director)
– Demon in the Deep (????) TV Episode (Co-Director)
– Invasion of the Super Skrulls (????) TV Episode (Co-Director)
– It Started on Yancy Street (????) TV Episode (Co-Director)
– KIaws/The Red Ghost (????) TV Episode (Co-Director)
“Shazzan” (1967) TV Series (Co-Director)
“Arabian Knights” (1968) TV Series
“Wacky Races” (1968) TV Series(Co-Director)
“The Adventures of Gulliver” (1968) TV Series (Co-Director)
“Loopy de Loop” (1969) TV Series (Co-Director)
Motormouse and Autocat” (1969) TV Series (Co-Director)
“Cattanooga Cats” (1969) TV Series (Co-Director)
“Dastardly and Muttley in Their Flying Machines” (1969) TV Series (Co-Director)
“Scooby-Doo, Where Are You!” (1969) TV Series (Co-Director)
“The Perils of Penelope Pitstop” (1969) TV Series (Co-Director)
“Love, American Style” (1969) TV Series (Co-Director)
“Where’s Huddles?” (1970) TV Series (Co-Director)
“Harlem Globe Trotters” (1970) TV Series (Co-Director)
… aka The Go-Go Globetrotters (USA: rerun title) (Co-Director)
“Josie and the Pussycats” (1970) TV Series (Co-Director)
“Lippy the Lion and Hardy Har Har” (1971) TV Series (Co-Director) (uncredited)
“The Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm Show” (1971) TV Series (Co-Director)
“The Funky Phantom” (1971) TV Series (Co-Director)
“Help!… It’s the Hair Bear Bunch!” (1971) TV Series (Co-Director)
“The New Scooby-Doo Movies” (1972) TV Series (Co-Director)
… aka Scooby-Doo Meets the Harlem Globetrotters (USA: video title) (Co-Director)
… aka Scooby-Doo’s New Comedy Movie Pictures (USA) (Co-Director)
“Sealab 2020” (1972) TV Series (Co-Director)
“The Roman Holidays” (1972) TV Series (Co-Director)
“Josie and the Pussy Cats in Outer Space” (1972) TV Series (Co-Director)
“The Amazing Chan and the Chan Clan” (1 episode, 1972) (Co-Director)
– To Catch a Pitcher (1972) TV Episode (Co-Director)
“The ABC Saturday Superstar Movie” (7 episodes, 1972-1973) (Co-Director)
… aka The New Saturday Superstar Movie (USA: second season title) (Co-Director)
– Lost in Space (1973) TV Episode (Co-Director)
– Tabitha and Adam and the Clown Family (1972) TV Episode (Co-Director)
– The Banana Splits in Hocus Pocus Park (1972) TV Episode (Co-Director)
– The Adventures of Robin Hoodnik (1972) TV Episode (Co-Director)
– Oliver and the Artful Dodger: Part 2 (1972) TV Episode (Co-Director)
(2 more)
“Fred Flintstone and Friends” (1977) TV Series (Co-Director)
Gulliver’s Travels (1979) (TV) (uncredited) (Co-Director)
Dalton en cavale, Les (1983)
… aka Dalton en balade, Les
… aka Lucky Luke – Das große Abenteuer (West Germany)
Here Are the Smurfs (1984) (TV) (Co-Director)
The Baby Smurf (1984) (TV) (Co-Director)
Jetsons: The Movie (1990) (Co-Director)
Tom and Jerry’s Greatest Chases (2000) (Video) (Co-Director)
Cartoon Crack-ups (2001) (Video) (Co-Director)
“Cartoon Alley” (2004) TV Series (original material)
The Karateguard (2005) (Co-Director)

Honors

Annie Award: Winsor McCay Award 1977

Hanna and Barbera’s 17-year partnership on the Tom & Jerry series resulted in 7 Academy Awards for Best (Cartoon) Short Subject, and 14 total nominations, more than any other character-based theatrical animated series.

Related Links

Inside Pulse
Hanna-Barbera.com
BBC News Obituary: Joe Barbera

Bibliographic References

IMDb.com
Joseph Barbera – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hanna-Barbera.com
Inside Pulse

Contributors To This Listing

the daily phosdex
Jorge Garrido
Jake Thomas
Editor: Brother Rabbit www.RalphBakshi.com

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

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Posted by Stephen Worth @ 1:20 am

December 17th, 2010

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Biography: Bill Hanna

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

Birth:14 July 1910
Death: March 22, 2001

Occupation/Title

Director, Animator, Producer, Composer, Screenwriter, Story Editor,

Bio Summary

In 1931, he began working as a story editor and assistant to Harman-Ising. Later in 1933 through 1937; he worked with Warner Brothers, as a director and story editor He later went on to work for MGM Studios in 1937 which he directed his first animated feature Blue Monday. In 1938; he teamed up with Joseph Barbera as joint directors Warner brothers. Primarily they made Tom and Jerry shorts which totaled up to over 100. From 1940 to 1955 Hanna worked as co-head, with Barbera Animation Department. until 1955-57 when he and Barbera co-founded Hanna-Barbera Productions, 3 years later (1960) they went on to produce the very first animated prime time show, The Flintstones, which aired from 1960-66. Hanna was the executive producer for Once Upon a Forest. in 1993 he directed the ABC specials I Yabba Dabba Do and Hollyrock-A-Bye Baby; executive producer, The Flintstones movie, 1994; director (his first solo directorial effort since 1941), Cartoon Network’s World Premiere Toons project of the original cartoon short Hard Luck Duck, 1995.
Early Life/Family
Hanna’s father was a construction worker. He moved the family from job to job before finally settling them in Los Angeles in 1919. soon after, William became Boy Scout. He joined the new organization quickly and remained an active participant in it through his entire life. It was here where he also started down the path of animation. when he was out working with his father one day, he learned that Warner Brothers was going to be starting an animation division. With strong natural talents and no formal training, he went looking for work. He landed himself a job and rose quickly through the studio. He was married to Violet Wogatzke, they had two children David and Bonnie.

Early Life/Family

Education/Training

William Hanna studied to become a structural engineer but had to drop out of college with the onset of the Depression. He Studied journalism and engineering

Career Outline

1931- Story editor and assistant to Harman-Ising.
1933 -1937 – Warner Brothers, as a director and story editor
1937 – MGM Studios
1940 -1955 co-head of Barbera Animation Department.
1955-Present – He co-founded Hanna-Barbera Productions,

Comments On Style

He and barbera created some of the most popular cartoons of their time some of which till show today. The impact they had was tremendous their cartoon were and still are enjoyed today.

Influences

Personality

Anecdotes

During a partnership that spanned over sixty years of film and television, Hanna and Barbera worked with over 2,000 animated characters.
Miscellaneous
Hanna and Barbera worked together for fifty years, they created of a 100 cartoons and TV specials. Tom & jerry won seven academy awards.

Miscellaneous

Filmography

1938 Blue Monday,
1945; Anchors Aweigh,
1946; Holiday in Mexico,
1949; Neptune’s Daughter,
1952; Dangerous When Wet,
1956; Invitation to Dance,
1957Ruff and Reddy
1958 Huckleberry Hound
1959 Quick Draw McGraw
1960 The Flintstones
1960 Snagglepuss
1961 The Yogi Bear Show
1961 Top Cat
1962 The Jetsons
1964 Jonny Quest
1964 Hey There, It’s Yogi Bear,
1966; A Man Called Flintstone,
1966 Alice in Wonderland
1967 Project X,
1967 Fantastic Four
1967 Jack and the Beanstalk
1969 Scooby Doo
1971 Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm
1972 The Flintstones Comedy Hour
1972 The Last of the Curlews
1973 Yogi’s Gang
1973 Superfriends
1973 Charlotte’s Web,
1974 The Runaways
1974 Cyrano
1977 The Gathering
1979 The Gathering, Part II
1978- The New Fantastic Four
1979 Caspar’s First Christmas
1979 The Popeye Valentine Special: Sweethearts at Sea
1981 The Smurfs (co-production with Sepp Int.)
1982 Pac-Man
1982 Heidi’s Song,
1982 My Smurfy Valentine
1982 Yogi Bear’s All-Star Comedy Christmas Caper 1985 Smurfily-Ever-After
1984 Going Bananas
1985 The Jetsons
1985 Funtastic World of Hanna Barbera
1986 Foofur
1986 The Flintstones’ 25th Anniversary Celebration 1989 Hagar the Horrible
1986 Pound Puppies
1986; Gobots: Battle of the Rock Lords,
1986 The Flintstone Kids
1986 Wildfire
1987 Snorks
1987 Sky Commanders
1987 Popeye and Son
1987 The Stone Fox
1990 Jetsons: The Movie,
1993 I Yabba-Dabba Do!
1993 Captain Planet
1994 The New Adventures of Captain Planet
1994 The Pagemaster,
1994. The Flintstones, (movie)

Honors

Seven Oscars,
Eight Emmy Awards Governor’s Award,
Television Arts and Sciences; Hollywood Walk of Fame Star, 1976;
Golden IKE Award,
Annie Award: Winsor McCay Award 1977
Pacific Pioneers in Broadcasting, 1983
Pioneer Award, BMI (Broadcast Music Inc.),
1987; Iris Award-NATPE Men of the Year, 1988
Licensing Industry Merchandisers’ Association Award for Lifetime Achievement, 1988
Academy of Television Arts and Sciences Governors Award, 198
Jackie Coogan Award for Outstanding Contribution to Youth through Entertainment Youth in Film,
1988; Frederic W. Ziv Award for Outstanding Achievement in Telecommunications, Broadcasting Division, College-Conservatory of Music, University of Cincinnati, 1989
Elected to Television Academy Hall of Fame, 1991

Related Links

Bibliographic References

http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/H/htmlH/hannawillia/hannawillia.htm
http://www.digitalmediafx.com/Features/williamhanna.html

Contributors To This Listing

Aaron Harris

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

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Posted by Stephen Worth @ 1:17 am

December 16th, 2010

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Biography: Heinrich Kley

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

Occupation/Title

Bio Summary

Heinrich Kley was born in 15 of April of 1863, in Karlsruhe, in Germany having studied in the Academy of Karlsruhe with Ferdinand Keller and immediately afterwards with Frithjob Smith in Munique. Its initial works had been illustrations, paintings of landscapes, scenes of interiors, pictures and nature-deceased, Between 1888 and 1894 it sent its pictures for expositions in Munique.
After 1908 decide to dedicate itself exclusively to the drawing ink. Its drawings had been published in satirical magazines and are characterized by subjects of the antiquity as well as of the modern industrial life, always marked for grotescs and erotics aspects. Its workmanships had been published in Simplissimus and Junged and had gotten immediate success.
Its drawings possess one character satirical few times equaled, the acidity of the content, the mobility of the line, and the expressivity of the composition makes of its work one of most representative of the satirical drawing, and even so he is not valid to place it in a restricted position as cartunist or caricaturist, we can in fact consider it as such.
The expressives qualities of the graphism of Kley as well as its mood in send the James to them Ensor, and even so its workmanship is almost that exclusively dedicated to the graphical arts, also we can point out it as a great pictorial master whose original solutions are of the interest of all the ones that if interest for visual arts.
In Brazil we have J. Carlos, a true master of the line and that, little recognized in the exterior the category of one of the great graphical masters of century XX can be transported, and that as Kley also it possesss interesting graphical solutions for all.
Heinrich Kley after the decade of twenty if consecrated the advertising and produces incessantly until its disappearence in 1945 (probably), its drawings possesss graphical characteristics that had been lost practically nowadays, to a large extent due to the easy linearism searched by the graphical artists.

Early Life/Family

Education/Training

Career Outline

Comments On Style

Influences

Personality

Anecdotes

Miscellaneous

Filmography

Honors

Related Links

Bibliographic References

BIO-AAA-467

Contributors To This Listing

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

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Posted by Stephen Worth @ 6:57 pm