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Thanks for your patience. Fred.

Audio Interview: Ward Jenkins

Channel Frederator Blog

August 8th, 2008

Ward_portrait

artist self portrait

You can listen to the interview HERE.

I recently interviewed Oregonian illustrator, animator, and director Ward Jenkins. Ward has worked on both coasts, from Primal Screen to LAIKA House.

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In the interview, Ward talks about his approach to character design, explains a bit about his directing process, and teases us with a few details from a top secret short film project he’s working on. We also go off on a bit of a tangent, as we talk about one of our favorite animated sequences from a Brad Bird film.

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“Super Ani” for Animania, an all-HD cartoon channel

Ward has a great feel to his work. I have been following his blogging, on both his own Ward-O-Matic blog as well as Drawn!, which he contributes to.

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Fred Seibert, left, Ward Jenkins, right

Ward is a great artist, a supporter and lover of animation, and an all around good guy. On a side note, when I do these types of interviews, I call the person I’m interviewing and then record the call for the blog. The call is usually me calling to ask if they are ready, and then the interview starts. I talked to Ward about all kinds of stuff for about a half an hour before we ever started the interview. We finally decided to hit record and start it for real. I hope you enjoy this interview as much as I enjoyed doing it.

More Ward goodness…

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-Floyd Bishop

Art contest! Obama!

Fred Seibert’s Blog

August 7th, 2008

Obama art contest
You’ve all seen the famous Obey poster from last spring supporting Barak Obama’s candidacy. Maybe you’ve even caught some of the other great graphics his historic role has inspired.

Now’s your chance to join the fray.

Obey, Manifest Hope, and MoveOn.org are sponsoring a new art contest for fresh, sharp, Obama graphics. 2D and 3D art, from painting to photography to sculpture, no matter what you’re talent there’s room for you.

Enter and win, the deadline’s August 18, 2008.

Transformers Go Hollywood

Channel Frederator Blog

August 7th, 2008

This animation, from College Humor, is a great piece that shows what happened to Megatron and Optimus Prime after their movie came out. If you were a fan of the film, or the tv series, or of those other transforming robots, you’ll most likely enjoy this piece.

-Floyd Bishop

“PG Movie” Storyboard

Fanboy and Chum Chum

August 7th, 2008

Okay, I know I usually post three or four board pages, but I like this seven-page sequence with Boog and the boys. The board is by Mr Eddie Trigueros, his third. The episode was written by Mr Eric Horsted. Also, this is episode #13, putting us 25% of the way through Nick’s initial order of 52 shorts. — Eric (Homan)

RAW Art Today!

Channel Frederator Blog

August 7th, 2008

Look at the RAW Art today!

Ralph Sutter's Clint Eastwood
Ralph Sutter

Museum
Don Oskowski

no depth needs colour
Sam Walsh

Blue Lady
Sakari Singh

Colorful
The Nocturne of Vladamir Jazz

startled bellhop
George Pfromm II

MIGHTY B! Animals
Chris Battle

-angie

Oh Yeah! Is Older Than Your Underwear

Talk to the Snail

August 7th, 2008

Oh Yeah! Cartoons bumper image

Whoops. For a little more than a year, I’ve been thinking off and on how I needed to remember to blog on July 19, 2008, the tenth anniversary of the debut of Oh Yeah! Cartoons on Nickelodeon (although something tells me there may’ve been a sneak preview earlier). Typically, I forgot. For the record, the first three shorts to premiere that Saturday in 1998 were Larry Huber and Bill Burnett’s “ChalkZone”, Vincent Waller and Bill’s “What is Funny?”, and Greg Emison and Bill’s “Jelly’s Day”. A veritable Burnettapalooza. So, happy belated anniversary, OY!. I owe you something tin.

– Eric

Gutierrez The Great!

Channel Frederator Blog

August 7th, 2008

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Andrew Farago (a curator at San Francisco’s fabulous Cartoon Art Museum) interviews Jorge R. Gutierrez at the Animation World Magazine website. Jorge is an exuberant artist and Flash maverick with a unique style that brings Mexican culture (especially folk art) into the digital age. He created the Nickelodeon show El Tigre with his wife, Sandra Equihua.

(One of my favorite parts of the interview is where he recalls telling his wife that they were going to become “…the Diego Rivera and Frieda Kahlo of animation” but “without the, y’know, cheating and the trains hitting you” part.)

For more on Jorge, see the Super-Macho site, the Super-Macho blog, the El Tigre blog (new!), and Nick’s El Tigre page.

You can also watch episodes of Jorge’s earlier web series El Macho here.

Anne D. Bernstein

“Fangboy” Storyboard

Fanboy and Chum Chum

August 6th, 2008

Storyboard by Mr Howie Perry. (Click for larger images.)

– Eric (Homan)

Oh Yeah! Jon Kane!

Fred Seibert’s Blog

August 6th, 2008


Find more videos like this on Channel Frederator RAW

Jon Kane and I have worked together for a way long time, and I’m honored whenever I’m lucky enough to get his attention for one of our, ahem, efficiently priced jobs. So it was in 1998 when we were launching Oh Yeah! Cartoons and I thought it would be great to package it with a different vibe than other cartoon show. Calling Kane!

Jon’s company Optic Nerve was one of the leading commercial production shops in New York. Jon conceived the spots, [Read more…]

My Inspiration Totoro

Channel Frederator Blog

August 6th, 2008

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There’s a worthy charity/animation event coming up this fall: The Totoro Forest Project. Over 200 pieces of artwork (many by folks from the cartoon community) will be exhibited and auctioned to raise funds to support the Totoro Forest Foundation. Japanese animator Hayao Miyazaki was one of the original contributors to the foundation, which seeks to protect an urban forest, called Sayama Hills, located just outside of Tokyo. The area is known to be the inspiration for his feature film Tonari no Totoro (My Neighbor Totoro).

This is the official Totoro Forest Foundation website. And go here to learn more about the charity event and view an online gallery of Totoro-inspired images. The project will also publish a tie-in book and selected artwork will be exhibited at the Cartoon Art Museum in San Francisco from September 20-December 7.

The auction is set for September 6 at the Pixar Animation Studio Campus from 5-9 PM. Tickets will go on sale soon. Naturally, this promises to be a swanky time for a good cause.

(The sample show image below is by concept artist Erwin Madrid. See the work-in-progress on his blog.)

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Anne D. Bernstein