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Posts Tagged ‘Retro’

“I Am Eating Candy”

by Bunk Five Hawks X ( 91 Comments › )
Filed under Art, Education, OOT, Open thread at August 22nd, 2013 - 10:00 pm

I Am Eating Candy

Although the book is over sixty years old, Viktor Lowenfeld described the childhood stages of perception, via drawing and painting, and included a section on the blind and deaf.

“I Am Eating Candy” is the title of a clay sculpture by an 11 year old blind and deaf girl who attended The Perkins Institution for the Blind in the late 1940s. It’s from a book entitled “Creative and Mental Growth – A Textbook on Art Education,” by Viktor Lowenfeld, Pennsylvania State College, published by The Macmillan Company, New York, 1950. Here’s the full plate:
Blind Deaf SculptureLowenfeld was very perceptive and astute in using art to measure the mental progress of young ‘uns. His descriptions of the early stages of perception, via childhood artwork, is very interesting – beginning with erratic or circular scribbles indicating movement, to drawing faces without bodies, to heads with arms and feet, etc. In drawings and paintings, the most important features are often grossly exaggerated in size, huge hands for example. Cool stuff.

Speaking of grossly exaggerated cool stuff, it’s time for
The Overnight Open Thread.

The Calico Dragon (1935)

by Bunk Five Hawks X ( 179 Comments › )
Filed under Art, History, Humor, Media, Music, OOT, Open thread at August 17th, 2013 - 9:00 pm

In the early days of animation, many companies were competing for movie theater bookings as a box-office draw, just as comic strips sold newspapers. Both were aimed at an adult audience.

The Calico Dragon is not spectacular until you consider that early film animation was a brute-force endeavor. At 12-16 frames per second, a five minute short could require 4,800 cells, sketched, inked and painted by hand, sandwiched under glass one at a time over the adjusted moving background, and each cell photographed by a motion picture camera capable of shooting one frame at a time. Then they had to develop and edit the film, add an etched soundtrack AND make duplicates of the master to distribute. Talk about labor-intensive artistry. Were it not profitable, no sane human would have bothered with it.

Harman-Ising figured out a way to animate fabric patterns, not just for the backgrounds, but for the moving figures.

I don’t blame you if you don’t watch the whole thing – the cloying sappiness of it all was tiring for me, too – so jump to The Dragon Song at about 04:20. I’ll wait.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Did you spot it? Happens at about 05:25. It wasn’t blatant but the song and the subtle innuendo had to have been an inside joke to the animators.

CALICO DRAGON
[Cell image via Tralfaz.]

So with that out of the way, it’s PPPL Night on The Overnight Open Thread.

80’s Ragtime Saturday Night

by Bunk Five Hawks X ( 56 Comments › )
Filed under Art, Entertainment, Music, OOT, Open thread at April 13th, 2013 - 11:01 pm

This guy is good, and he’s had a bit of success lately. Bar’s open, beer’s flowin’ and the drawers are droppin’ on The Overnight Open Thread.

Diddy Wah Diddy

by Bunk Five Hawks X ( 22 Comments › )
Filed under Entertainment, History, Humor, Music, OOT, Open thread at April 10th, 2013 - 10:00 pm

Captain Beefheart‘s fuzz-bass-infused version of  “Diddy Wah Diddy.”
That lilting tune was written by Willie Dixon and Elias McDaniel (aka Elias Bates, aka Bo Diddley) and later covered by The Sonics, The Fabulous Thunderbirds and others. The title may be slang for a suburb of Baltimore, but here on The Blogmocracy it refers to a whompin’ stompin’ version of
The Overnight Open Thread.