Notes from the Underground Part One — Animation: Prozac or Kyosaku?
It seems to me that to most animators, animation students, animation teachers and animation professionals alike, a head is (supposed to be) a known entity, and "the eye works just like a camera and we all see the same thing!" (This is actually a direct quote from a former director of a relatively well-known Canadian art school. I have heard very much the same things uttered in U.S. art schools.)
This taking "the real" for granted is a rampant disease in art schools as a whole, not just in the departments that cater to the animation industry.
Come to think of it, it is a rampant disease in our society as well!
Who would dare today to go into an art school and say point-blank: "Can you please help me, I just want to try to paint things as I really see them?"
I can hear the laughter all over the school grounds if someone were to be so "naive."
Yet, this was the avowed aim of Giacometti's work, of his life. I am convinced he shared that exploration of the visible with his "spiritual grandfather" Cézanne (he actually said so himself) and with so many other artists we admire so much today (but possibly for the wrong reasons).
We admire them because we wrongly think they have invented/manufactured a style, while all they have done (actually much harder than the mere fabrication of "style") is to connect with -- and make visible -- their preverbal perception, their courageous connection with "the real," made visible through their hard work, to themselves, and to us.

"Things are not what they appear to be, nor are they otherwise." 
"Things are not what they appear to be, nor are they otherwise." 
"Things are not what they appear to be, nor are they otherwise."























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