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Norman McLaren

 
Biography: Norman McLaren

Canadian filmmaker Norman McLaren (1914 - 1987) revolutionized his field with his hand - drawn and hand - painted animated films. He also pioneered the use of pixilation - a filming technique that creates a stop - motion effect - which he used in his Academy Award - winning film "Neighbors".McLaren created many of his projects for the National Film Board of Canada, where he was employed for more than 40 years.

McLaren was born on April 11, 1914, in Stirling, Scotland, the youngest of three children born to William McLaren, an interior designer, and his wife Jean (Smith) McLaren. In addition to his father, many of McLaren's other relatives on his father's side were house painters and interior designers, while his mother's family were farmers. McLaren's first introduction to animation came at the age of seven, when he first viewed Felix the Cat and Mickey Mouse cartoons, as well as Walt Disney's "Silly Symphony" series. McLaren did not become interested in film until he was a teenager, however, and grew intrigued by the work of Russian filmmakers Vsevolod Pudovkin and Sergei Eisenstein.

McLaren entered the Glasgow School of Art in 1932 with the intention of studying interior design. He began making films during his first year at the college and so impressed the local newspapers with his work that he was called the "young genius of the Glasgow School of Art." Soon, he shifted his attention to animation. McLaren saved himself the expense of buying a camera and new film by purchasing a worn - out 35mm commercial film, soaking off the emulsion of the images in his bathtub, and painting new color images directly onto the celluloid to create animation. "The less money there is, the more imagination there has to be," he later remarked, as quoted in his obituary in the Los Angeles Times. The technique had another advantage, McLaren once noted, as recounted in a 1993 issue of Americas: "If I don't like what I've done, I can wipe it out with a damp cloth and begin again." He continued to paint and draw directly on film for the duration of his long career. "Handmade cinema is like watching thought, if thought could be seen," he once said, as quoted in Americas.

Experimented in Student Films

McLaren's next project was Seven till Five, a silent, black - and - white film shot on 16mm documenting the activities at the art school between the hours of 7 a.m. and 5 p.m. His next two films were created in 1935. Camera Makes Whoopee, featuring a school dance orchestra with self - propelled instruments, utilized pixilation, a stop - action filming technique that exaggerates the movements of the subject. The technique gained widespread recognition in the 1980s, when it was used in musician Peter Gabriel's music video "Sledgehammer." Color Cocktail, another hand - painted work, followed. This film earned McLaren an award at the Scottish Amateur Film Festival, which was presented to him by John Grierson, a celebrated British documentarian who judged the festival. In 1926, McLaren and Helen Biggar produced Hell Unlimited, a critique of arms trading, utilizing both camera less animation and photography of diagrams, animated maps, and puppets. McLaren also traveled to Spain to serve as a cameraman on Defense of Madrid, a documentary on the Spanish Civil War created to raise money for international aid. In addition, while in school he produced a series of advertising films for a local meat store which were shown in the company's window display.

McLaren found regular employment in the film industry in 1936 when Grierson, who headed the British General Post Office Film Unit, offered him a job. The film unit's staff was known for producing highly regarded experimental work, and McLaren trained with filmmakers Alberto Cavalcanti and Evelyn Cherry. At this time, he began to experiment with animated sound, creating percussive elements on a film's audio strip using pen and ink. McLaren's first film for the post office was a ten - minute, black - and - white documentary on the printing of the London telephone directory shot in 35mm and titled Book Bargain. The film was followed by News for the Navy, a documentary for the military branch. Many a Pickle, which featured animated furniture and used pixilation, promoted the post office's savings bank. A five - and - a - half minute film promoting airmail, Love on the Wing featured hand painted images of a lock and key, fork and spoon, and moth and flame, dancing through a landscape inspired by the surrealist paintings of Yves Tanguy. According to Americas, the British postmaster suppressed the film, declaring it "too Freudian," and it was not viewed widely until later years when it became popular among fans of underground film. McLaren left the post office in 1939 and briefly worked for the Film Center, a London company that made industrial films. His only project there was The Obedient Flame, an animated and pixilated piece on gas cooking.

The political consciousness McLaren exhibited in art school continued to develop along with his career and he leaned first toward communism, then socialism, and eventually, pacifism. As World War II approached, he feared he would be required to produce war propaganda films in London so he moved to the United States. Upon his arrival in New York, he first painted murals for wealthy homeowners and directed a New Year's greetings film for NBC. Soon, he was commissioned by the Guggenheim Museum to create a series of abstract shorts for $100 apiece. With no money for soundtracks, McLaren furthered his exploration of "synthetic sound." He first worked on perfecting the method he had developed at the post office, whereby he drew dots and dashes on an audio strip. Later, he photographed sequential index cards marked with specific sound patterns, which he then printed directly onto the audio strip.

McLaren used his developing technique in almost all his Guggenheim films, and even produced one sound - only piece, Rumba, which featured only the sound forms painted directly on the film as visual effects. McLaren also contributed several hand painted animated films, including Color Rhapsodie, Dots, Loops, and Stars and Stripes, in which the elements of the American flag dance. Boogie Doodle also featured hand painted animation, alongside a boogie woogie soundtrack by Albert Ammons. In addition, McLaren collaborated with filmmaker Mary Ellen Bute on Spook Sport, an animated interpretation of composer Camille Saint - Saëns' Dance Macabre. The animation technique exhibited in the Guggenheim films was painstaking, requiring more than 4,000 separate, tiny sketches just to complete a three - minute production. McLaren earned the admiration of some of the most prominent figures in film and art for his pioneering work. According to Americas, esteemed French director François Truffaut once called a four - minute McLaren piece "an absolutely unique work bearing no resemblance to anything achieved in sixty years of cinema history."

Joined National Film Board

In 1941, McLaren was again recruited by Grierson, this time to head the animation department at the newly created Canadian National Film Board in Ottawa, Ontario. McLaren was first enlisted to create war propaganda, despite his best efforts to avoid such work, and he applied trademark innovation to shorts on such topics as war gossip and the benefits of purchasing war bonds. His film on the latter, titled Hen Hop, featured a chaotic mass of line - drawn chicken scratch movements. McLaren spent several days in a chicken coop to set himself in the right frame of mind to draw the piece. According to Americas, when Pablo Picasso viewed the film, the famous painter remarked, "Finally, something new in the art of drawing."

McLaren next produced a series of short pieces set to French - Canadian folk songs. C'est l'aviron utilized traveling zoom photography, a special effect that created a sense of headfirst movement through space. McLaren had developed the technique in the 1930s and it was later used by director Stanley Kubrick in 2001: A Space Odyssey. The next film, La poulette grise, used a "chain of mixes" technique that involved shooting a still pastel image frame by frame, adding to or subtracting from the drawing in each shot. La Merle depicts a white paper cutout blackbird that loses his features then has them oddly rearranged. After McLaren completed the series, he worked with Evelyn Lambart, a collaborator on several of his films, to produce Begone Dull Care, an abstract piece set to the music of jazz pianist Oscar Peterson. McLaren and Lambart took turns painting long test strips of clean film then spliced together sections that best accompanied the soundtrack.

McLaren revisited his political concerns in the pixilated film Neighbors, conceived after he returned from a 1949 visit to China with the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. There, McLaren taught animation to children and also saw communism in action, which he recognized to be much less insidious than it was portrayed to be in the west. Neighbors employed actors in a tale of two neighbors who raise a dispute over a flower growing on a mutual property line to the level of war and, ultimately, destruction. In 1952, McLaren received an Academy Award for the film, which remains his best known work. McLaren believed Neighbors was his most significant work. "If all my films were to be destroyed except one, I would want that one to be Neighbors because I feel it has a permanent message about human nature," he told the Los Angeles Times in 1981. In 1955, McLaren was awarded the Palm D'or at the Cannes Film Festival for another short, Blinkity Blank.

Turned Focus to Dance

In the 1960s, McLaren turned his focus to dance, an art form for which he also felt a great affinity, given its emphasis on movement. "Animation is not the art of drawings that move but rather the art of movements that are drawn," McLaren once remarked, as quoted in Americas. "What happens between each frame is more important than what happens on each frame. The basic substance of the cinema is movement - at its lowest physical level, the movement of lightwaves and soundwaves . . . it is the motion that speak to us." Pas de Deux, produced in 1967, and Ballet Adagio, produced in 1972, both incorporate step printing, a production technique that creates a strobe - like effect. While intended as instructional tools for dancers, the films are also highly regarded for their artistic merits.

McLaren revisited the theme of ballet in his final film, Narcissus, which he completed in 1983. The 20 - minute film, McLaren's longest, offers a balletic interpretation of the tragic myth portraying its title character's destruction through self - love. The special effects are subdued in comparison to McLaren's earlier work, allowing a studied focus on the film's subjects. "Narcissus has the idyllic mood and spare movement of Nijinsky's Afternoon of a Faun rather than the epic quality of Martha Graham's Greek myths. Like all of McLaren's dance films, it points the way to a new, collaborative art," wrote Christine Temin in the Boston Globe.

McLaren retired from the Film Board in 1984. Long in poor health, he died of a heart attack in Montreal, Quebec, on January 26, 1987. Following his death, the International Animated Film Association - Canada established an annual award in McLaren's honor and in 1989, the Film Board renamed its main building the Norman McLaren Building. In 1991 the Film Board issued a video collection of McLaren's 40 - year body of work under its auspices in recognition of its 50th anniversary.

Books

Richard, Valliere T., Norman McLaren, Manipulator of Movement, University of Delaware Press, 1982.

Periodicals

Americas, September/October, 1993.

Boston Globe, March 5, 1984.

Los Angeles Times, January 28, 1987; February 8, 1987.

Online

National Film Board of Canada, http://www.nfb.ca/e/highlights/norman - mclaren.html (November 16, 2004).

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Director: Norman McLaren
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  • Born: Apr 11, 1914 in Stirling, Scotland, UK
  • Died: Jan 27, 1987 in Quebec, Canada
  • Occupation: Director, Actor
  • Active: '40s-'70s
  • Major Genres: Avant-garde / Experimental
  • Career Highlights: Blinkity Blank, Begone Dull Care, Pas de deux and the Dance of Time
  • First Major Screen Credit: Scherzo (1939)

Biography

Innovative and distinguished animator Norman McLaren has made a number of award-winning animated films and is credited for perfecting Len Lye's technique of painting images to be animated directly on the film stock. McLaren was also a founding member of the Canadian National Film Board. Born in Stirling, Scotland, McLaren was still a student at the Glasgow School of Art and only 19 years old when he began making his first live-action short films. He was 21 when he made his first animated film and entered it in an amateur film festival. Filmmaker John Grierson saw McLaren's film and convinced the youth to begin working for Grierson's GPO film unit in 1936. Three years later, McLaren moved to the U.S. and perfected his technique for drawing on film. In 1941, McLaren accepted an invitation from Grierson and became a member of the newly created National Film Board of Canada and two years later was running the organization's animated film department where he was given total artistic freedom and plenty of Canadian grant money. The result was many internationally acclaimed films, including the Oscar-winning Neighbors (1957). In 1984, McLaren was presented with a special Genie Award to honor his many achievements. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Norman McLaren
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Norman McLaren

Norman McLaren drawing directly on film (1944)
Born April 11, 1914(1914-04-11)
Stirling
Died January 27, 1987 (aged 72)
Montreal
Occupation Animator
Years active 1933-1987

Norman McLaren, CC, CQ (11 April 1914 – 27 January 1987) was a Scottish-born Canadian animator and film director known for his work for the National Film Board of Canada (NFB).

Contents

Early life

McLaren was born in Stirling, Scotland and studied set design at the Glasgow School of Art. His early experiments with film and animation included actually scratching and painting the film stock itself, as he did not have ready access to a camera. His earliest extant film, Seven Till Five (1933), a "day in the life of an art school" was influenced by Eisenstein and displays a strongly formalist attitude.

McLaren's next film, Camera Makes Whoopee (1935), was a more elaborate take on the themes explored in Seven Till Five, inspired by his acquisition of a Ciné-Kodak camera, which enabled him to execute a number of 'trick' shots. McLaren used pixilation effects, superimpositions and animation not only to display the staging of an art school ball, but also to tap into the aesthetic sensations supposedly produced by this event.

Professional career

After finishing his studies in Glasgow and making a few films in London, McLaren moved to New York City in 1939, just as World War II was about to begin in Europe.

At the invitation of John Grierson, he moved to Canada in 1941 to work for the National Film Board, to open an animation studio and to train Canadian animators. During his work for the NFB, McLaren created his most famous film, Neighbours (1952), which has won various awards around the world, including the Canadian Film Award and the Academy Award. Besides the brilliant combination of visuals and sound, the film has a very strong social message against violence and war. In addition to film, McLaren worked with UNESCO in the 1950s and 1960s on programs to teach film and animation techniques in China and India. His five part "Animated Motion" shorts, produced in the late 1970s, are an excellent example of instruction on the basics of film animation.

Personal life

McLaren was gay. His longtime companion was Guy Glover, whom he met at the ballet in London in 1937. The two were together until McLaren’s death.[1]

In spite of the allegations of his monogamy and faithfulness, it appears McLaren's mind may have been elsewhere. It seems that he wrote a series of letters to Willard Maas. In those letters it appears that Norman may have used many metaphors and double entendre to express, as well as share mutual secrets of concerning both of their being homosexuals.[citation needed] It is unknown as to if there was any physical relationship between McLaren and Maas or if this correspondence was merely a purely platonic mutual admiration.

Awards and achievements

McLaren is remembered for his experiments with image and sound as he developed a number of groundbreaking techniques for combining and synchronizing animation with music.

The National Film Board honoured McLaren's genius by naming its Montreal head office building the Norman McLaren Building. The Montreal borough of Saint-Laurent, which is home to the NFB, has also honoured McLaren by naming a borough district after him.

Lifetime achievement awards

In 1968 he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada and promoted to Companion in 1973. In 1982, he was the first anglophone to receive the Prix Albert-Tessier, given to persons for an outstanding career in Québec cinema.

2006 retrospective

In 2006, the Film Board marked the 65th anniversary of NFB animation with an international retrospective of McLaren's restored classics and a new DVD box set of his complete works.

2009

In 2009, McLaren's works were added to UNESCO's Memory of the World Programme, listing the most significant documentary heritage collections in the world, joining such works as the Gutenberg Bible and The Wizard of Oz.[2]

Awards for McLaren's films

Academy Awards (USA)
Annie Awards (USA)
BAFTA Awards (England)
Canadian Film Awards (Canada)
  • (1949) Special Award for Dots
  • (1950) Special Award for Begone Dull Care
  • (1952) Special Award for Around is Around
  • (1952) Special Award for Now is the Time
  • (1952) Special Award for After the Storm
  • (1953) Special Award for A Phantasy
  • (1953) Special Award for Neighbours
  • (1958) Arts and Experimental for A Chairy Tale
  • (1962) Arts and Experimental for Lines Horizontal
  • (1965) Arts and Experimental for Canon
  • (1968) Special Award for Pas de Deux
Columbus International Film and Video Festival (USA)
Dance on Camera Festival (USA)
  • (1984) Gold Star Award for Narcissus
Festival international de cinéma de court métrage (France)
  • (1985) Special Mention for Narcissus
Festival international du film romantique
  • (1985) First Prize - Madame de Stael Prize, (France, May 1985) for Narcissus
Genie Awards (Canada)
Golden Sheaf Awards / Short Film and Video Festival (Canada)
  • (1984) Golden Sheaf Award - Best Experimental Film for Narcissus, Short Film and Video Festival (Canada, October-November 1984)
International Film Festival (India)
  • (1984) Golden Peacock for the Best Short Film of the Festival for Narcissus
Itinerant - American Film and Video Festival (USA)
  • (1984) Honorable Mention - Visual Essays for Narcissus

Award nominations

Academy Awards (USA)
BAFTA Awards (UK)
  • 1960 BAFTA Film Award Best Animated Film for Short and Suite (Shared with Evelyn Lambart)

See also

References

  1. ^ McWilliams, Donald (1990). Creative Process: Norman McLaren. 
  2. ^ Boswell, Randy (July 31, 2009). "Montreal filmmaker honoured by UN". Montreal Gazette (Canwest). http://www.montrealgazette.com/entertainment/movie-guide/Montreal+filmmaker+honoured/1848841/story.html. Retrieved 2009-08-04. 
  3. ^ "NFB - Collection - Pas de deux". http://www.nfb.ca/trouverunfilm/fichefilm.php?id=10470&v=h&lg=en&exp=11192. 

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Director. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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