torre-pioneeringyears-2015.pdf (722.45 kB)
The pioneering years of Australian animation (1900–1930): from animated sketches to animation empire
This article describes the very earliest beginnings of Australian animation, detailing the events, processes, and the people who pioneered this medium from approximately 1900 to 1930. It examines these early achievements, which range from the first ‘animated lightning sketches’ to the rise and subsequent demise of a major animation studio. Much of this article focuses on the innovative work of Harry Julius (1885–1938) who is generally regarded as the chief pioneer of animation in Australia. However, as this article reveals, there were others who experimented with animation before Julius, and there were a number of artists and animators who worked alongside him in those early decades. Together, Julius and team built the very successful Sydney-based studio, Cartoon Filmads, which developed into what could only be described as an ‘animation empire’ with a robust national and international reach. This article details some of the authors’ extensive research surrounding these previously overlooked cinematic efforts, and carefully analyses these in terms of content, production, audience reception and international context.
History
Journal
Senses of cinemaIssue
77Pagination
1 - 1Publisher
Senses of CinemaLocation
Melbourne, Vic.Link to full text
ISSN
1443-4059Language
engPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal; C Journal articleCopyright notice
2015, Senses of CinemaUsage metrics
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