Subject of exhibit is Keane
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Animation fans take note -- famed Walt Disney feature animation
director Glen Keane will be at Laguna College of Art & Design from 6
to 8 p.m. Sept. 10 in honor of his current exhibit at the college,
“Glen Keane Sketchbooks,” which runs through Sept. 27.
Keane is renowned for creating Disney characters Ariel in “The
Little Mermaid”, Aladdin, Pocahontas, Tarzan and the Beast from
“Beauty and the Beast.”
Laguna College animation chair Aubry Mintz has been working on
getting a Keane exhibit at the gallery for three years. Assistant
animation professor Diana Coco-Russell facilitated with her 12 years
of animation experience at Disney, including her first film “Beauty
and the Beast” with Keane.
Mintz said artists in the animation industry often have millions
of drawings that they’ve created that never get seen.
“I called Keane’s assistant at Disney and it just so happened
Disney had a show of his sketchbook work,” Mintz said. “So it worked
out great.”
Keane as well as other legendary animators work is studied at the
college.
“You can see how he works and thinks,” Mintz said pointing at
Keane’s work. “You can see the emotion and force.”
Keane said that thanks to the encouragement of Eric Larsen, he
developed the habit of bringing a sketchbook with him wherever he
went.
Keane learned when he started working at Disney that seeing the
everyday things in the world around him is the best source of
inspiration.
“Behind any great art are observations, observations of life,”
Keane said. “Animation still has roots in real life.”
He uses the expression and attitudes he observes in real life to
create the same life like qualities in his animation.
At Disney the unwritten rule is that an artist doesn’t sign their
artwork because it is such a team effort Keane said.
“In a sense when you’re working on an animation film, you lose a
bit of individual artistic expression,” Keane said. “All I’ve ever
wanted to be is an artist, painter and a sculptor. Animation is a
combination of all arts; it’s the ultimate art form.”
Keane said the first sketchbook entry he ever did was in London
while he was working on “Beauty and the Beast.” He wanted to capture
the surroundings he was experiencing, the visceral elements taking
place at that moment in time.
“I had never been to a place like this before...this fountain and
foggy image, the London fog -- I [captured] it using charcoal,” Keane
said. “And I just signed my name to it. There was no bolt of
lightning or thunder; I just put my name on it and it was very
important. It seems like a little thing, but there was something
really freeing about that.
“It reminded me of who I am; I’m Glen Keane, an artist and this is
my art.”
He said his sketches fueled his animation from that point on.
“Animation has to be as true and real as sketchbooks are,” Keane
said.
Of the characters Keane has created, he said he can relate best to
the Beast in “Beauty and the Beast.”
“I think there’s a little bit of the beast in all of us; it was
freeing,” he said. “It was so much fun to animate him.”
Keane’s biggest influence was his father Bill Keane, the creator
of the syndicated comic, “The Family Circus.”
Keane is looking forward to returning to Laguna Beach for his
exhibit at the Laguna College.
“I started going to Laguna Beach in 1959; I spent a lot of my
childhood, growing up, spending summers there,” Keane said.
The first sketches he did that caught the eye of Disney were
created in Laguna Beach.
Keane is currently directing Disney’s first computer generated
fairytale, “Rapunzel Unbraided,” which expected to be in theaters in
2007.
Laguna College of Art and Design is at 2222 Laguna Canyon Road.
For information, call (949) 376-6000.
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