The History of Animation

  • magic lantern

    magic lantern
    The Magic Lantern is an image projector using pictures on sheets of glass. Since some sheets contain moving parts, it is considered the first example of projected animation.
    image tooken from http://www.grand-illusions.com/acatalog/Magic_Lantern.html
  • Birth of Photography

    Birth of Photography
    Animation on film was only possible because of invention of photography in 1827 by Joseph Niépce.
    Louis Daguerre, an assistant to Niépce, developed a new process for developing images in 1837 called tin-type photos, also known as Daguerre-types.
    image taken from en.wikipedia.org
  • Motion pictures in America

    Motion pictures in America
    America’s premier inventor, Thomas Alva Edison, developed a motion picture camera (the kinetograph) and a projector (the kinetoscope) in 1891.
    He filmed random events including haircuts, boxing matches, Annie Oakley, and the new Brooklyn Bridge.
    Image tooken from citizenjanefilmfestival.org.
  • GERTIE THE DINOSAUR

    GERTIE THE DINOSAUR
    Is considered the first cartoon to feature
    an appealing character.
  • Silent movie Era.

    Silent movie Era.
    In the 1920s, movie theatres popped up around the country. Sound was not added until 1927; all of the movies were silent.
    Because of the popularity of movies, there became a strong demand for animated cartoons. The first studios were based in New York.
    Most studios relocated to California to take advantage of the good weather.
    Image tooken from http://www.listal.com/list/the-evolution-charles-chaplin
  • Walt Disney

    Walt Disney
    disney relocated in south california following many motion picture studios.
    walt disney was first to use sound in "steamboat willie".
    During his life, Disney released 19 animated feature films.
    He came up with several innovated techniques for making animated movies including:
    the pencil test
    the storyboard
    the multi-plane camera image tooken from www.maryctaylor.com
  • Fleischer studios

    Fleischer studios
    Max Fleischer invented the rotoscope; a machine that allowed an artist to trace over the live action from a movie film.
    The Fleischer brothers would have success in the 1930s with Betty Boop and her spinoff character, Popeye the Sailor Man.
    image taken from http://www.skwigly.co.uk/the-rotoscope-of-max-fleischer/
  • Snow White

    Snow White
    Walt Disney releases Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, the first animated
    feature to use hand-drawn animation.
  • Golden Age Of American Animation

    Golden Age Of American Animation
    During what many consider to be the “Golden Age” of animation, theatrical cartoons became an integral part of popular culture. These years are defined by the rise of Walt Disney (Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, and Silly Symphonies), Warner Brothers, MGM, and Fleischer (Betty Boop, Popeye).
  • THE PINK PHINK

    THE PINK PHINK
    DePatie-Freleng Enterprises wins the Academy Award for Best Short Film
    for The PinkPhink (of the Pink Panther series) and continues to
    create shorts for theatrical release.
  • THE AMERICAN TELEVISION ERA

    THE AMERICAN TELEVISION ERA
    The animation industry began to adapt to the fact that television continued its rise as the
    entertainment medium of choice for American families. Studios created many cartoons for TV, using a “limited animation” style. By the mid ‘80s, with help from cable channels such as The Disney Channel and Nickolodeon, cartoons were ubiquitous on TV.
  • THE SIMPSONS

    THE SIMPSONS
    The Simpsons is an American adult animated sitcom created by Matt Groening for the Fox Broadcasting Company. It is the longest-running American sitcom, the longest-running American animated program, and in 2009 it surpassed Gunsmoke as the longest-running American scripted primetime television series.