The Gardener

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After an 8 hour flight home from the UK last night, I had big plans for sleeping.  But then my friend James had an extra ticket for The Tallest Man on Earth at Webster Hall.  Oh, the sacrifice.

10 The Gardener

The Tallest Man on Earth, Webster Hall - Sept. 27 2010

It was a great show and by our second shot of Jameson, he played “The Gardener.”  This is always the highlight for me, the tippy top favorite of my many favorite songs of his.

I made the trip across the big blue ocean for the 2010 Woodstock Film Festival.  Joy, James and I worked on a music video, Golem, for The Maladies and it’s screening in the Animation Program this weekend.

We were also asked to make the Festival Signal Film again.  Keep reading to find out how we made it:

There were two rules to making the film.

One – it had to be based on the 2010 poster by Portia Munson, which was created using flowers from Munson’s Catskill garden.

2010 WFFPoster munson The Gardener

2010 Woodstock Film Festival Poster by Portia Munson

Second rule – the film had to be done using pixilation.

I was still in England so Joy and James called me on video chat to discuss.  As James explained their concept, I could see Joy in the background, putting on too much makeup and wearing a funny costume.  They said they would handle the live action while I animated the flowers which I’d send to them to put to music.

We got started.  Joy and James dressed up as mime gardeners, a fairy and a rooster and took about 2,000 pictures of each other in their backyard.  I watched classic Sesame Street stop motion for inspiration and spent hours digitally cutting out 105 flowers and 1 insect from the poster.  I think I counted about 340 flowers in total but I could be wrong because I got dizzy.

You can imagine my excitement when they sent me a link to the finished movie.  Their part was so fun and well done for two animators who work almost exclusively in hand drawn and computer animation.  The live action seamlessly melts into my dancing flowers to The Tallest Man on Earth’s “The Gardener.”

We’ve been making the Woodstock Signal Films for three years now – here’s 2008 which Joy and I did together and here’s 2009, which we made with James and Arthur Metcalf.

There are going to be a few signal films in the festival this year for variety, two others were created by Aaron Hughes and Ivan Joy.  I can’t wait to see what they came up with!

Noelle

That’s a nice story, grandma.

posted by on 06.17.2010, under Animation
17:

When I was your age, we had animation on television shows like Sesame Street that are considered classics today.  They didn’t sugar coat it too much and it was entertaining enough for adults.  Here is a particularly creepy clip…

Danger Sesame Street 300x215 Thats a nice story, grandma.

This is so well done, even for how rudimentary the animation seems.  The scene transitions are clever and I always appreciate good use of mixed media.  Fine family fun, and you learn a little something too.

I can’t sit through the show today, so I won’t bother to upload a clip for contrast.  If you want to torture yourself, click here.  I need to sneak my way into a job as a shipping clerk at Sesame Street and, “accidentally” get  the CEO of the television studio to see me clowning with toy dinosaurs and be so impressed enough to schedule a dinner meeting to hear my ideas. Wait excuse me, I’m thinking of Mrs. Doubtfire.  Brilliant idea though, I think. Only in the movies … meh.

~Joy

Can you tell me how to get, how to get to Sesame Street?

posted by on 05.08.2010, under Art, Random, You're Welcome.
08:

The Yo-Yo Master and the Lost Boy.

Screen+shot+2010 05 08+at+4.43.36+PM Can you tell me how to get, how to get to Sesame Street?

When the Yo-Yo Master appears on the screen to help the little lost boy find his way home, the young viewers scream and clap in delight, enchanted.

This isn’t a group of toddlers watching Sesame Street. It’s a Wednesday night at my apartment with my roommates, floating through happy memories of simpler times and better cartoons.

This is one of my favorite old Sesame Street clips. It’s a simple lesson, but they had so much fun teaching it.
Someday I’ll have kids. It’s inevitable. When I do, they will grow up watching the Sesame Street we all grew up with. I have fun imagining the books I’ll have on their shelves too – like Gris Grimly’s children’s book collection – yeah, they definitely have to have that.
Watch Yo-Yo Master full screen here.
Noelle

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