Eastern European experimental animation, fine art aesthetics and the digital age.
Date
2016
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
The study is an exploration of Eastern European animation as it relates to experimental animation
practice – in particular as it relates to fine art aesthetics. The research further aims to investigate the
validity of this tradition within the context of digital cinema technology. In this regard the
investigation focuses on the experimental animated films of Eastern European animators Yuri
Norstein and Aleksandr Petrov. The study will importantly also include an analysis of the candidate's
practice-based research as it relates to the digital platform, fine art aesthetics and to the candidate's
eastern European heritage. As this study is practice-based and comprises a textual and practice
component, the research questions relate to both practice and theory. However as both components
are related, the research questions relate to both areas of study:
As the study considers how digital cinema technology and creative applications can emulate and
facilitate the processes and aesthetics of traditional, hand-crafted animation, the research
question which arises from the dominance of digital technology within the genre of animation, is
whether traditional animation methods have become obsolete. The study aims to address this
question through an in-depth exploration of the experimental, hand-crafted animation techniques
of Norstein and Petrov. This research question is also a significant aim in the practice-based
component of this study and is explored textually and in the candidate’s two film projects.
Description
Master of Art in Fine Art. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg 2016.