Art Babbitt: A Class of His Own

How one artist/activist pioneered animation education.
Posted In | Magazines: AnimationWorld | Site Categories: 2D, Art, Commercials, Education and Training, Films, Illustration, People

Remember, animated film up to that time was little more than illustrated comic strips.  Disney’s were better than most, but in mid-1932, Mickey Mouse’s enduring popularity wasn’t any more guaranteed than Felix the Cat’s.  All these cartoons had characters moving across left to right. Their body movements were rubbery and banal, simply moving a joint from point A to point B.  The gags were based on empty slapstick.  The transition to personality-based humor, and the envisioning of three-dimensional space within the animation frame, happened with Don Graham.  About this, Shamus Culhane said, “After Walt, Don Graham has probably made the greatest impact of the philosophy of the medium.”[9]

Graham would arrive at the studio once a week at first.  Young, balding and dapper, he would stand by the model’s stage, pinching the stub of a smoking cigarette between his fingertips, and lecture about drawing as specifically applicable to the studious animators.  Graham presented films to the animators, much like Babbitt had done on his own, and dissected them frame-by-frame.  They found, for instance, that weight shifted and form changed when things were in motion. 

“An animation drawing showing a figure in a fast walk may fail to achieve a true sense of action,” said Graham, perhaps in a darkened room beside a small cloth movie screen, cigarette smoke wafting up his blazer sleeve, “because of the incorporation of minor details, exact delineation of local shapes, exact projection of the principal parts.  In a more truthful action drawing, many of these details would be blurred, many of the shapes modified.”  At this point, Graham may have pointed to the screen displaying a galloping horse at quarter-speed, his words spoken over the steady rattle of a projector.  “A series of carefully related drawings projected correctly in time may not give a convincing sensation of action … Only if the drawings utilized are true action drawings, drawings that convey the idea of action, can convincing action be realized ….”[10]

Walt Disney had the forethought of a genius ready to break new ground in the creative medium. By November 1933, Babbitt writes, “We’re definitely going ahead with a feature length cartoon in color – they’re planning the building for it now and the money has been appropriated.”[11]  As the years progressed, Walt sent brilliantly detailed memos to Graham suggesting ways to run the class to get even better, faster results.  Classes were now held several times a week, and including trips to the zoo, and the artists were instructed to draw with no shading whatsoever; they had to limit their rendering with pure line.[12]  Graham had models walk around the room and then leave, and instructed the artists to sketch from memory; rather than rendering stilted realism, it was more important to caricature the impression of form and movement.[13]

A further example of Walt’s support came out in cash.  In 1937, Willis Pyle was a young employee working his way up from his go-fer position.  “One time,” says Pyle, “Walt called me up to his office to tell me that I held the record for attending the most art classes of everyone at the studio, which helped me.”  Pyle’s commitment to maintain his record earned him a $2-a-week raise.[14]

Babbitt, of course, was a frequent student as well.  In one class, Graham mentioned that Peter Paul Rubens used distortion in his art.  When a student protested, Graham silently reached into his portfolio and pulled out a Rubens print of a figure.  When asked to copy the pose, the student could not without dislocating his arm[15].  Graham was a teacher able to show that fine art involves “breaking the joints,” without compromising believability.  No doubt Babbitt connected with this idea, filing it away for his groundbreaking animation on the Goof.







Comments


I thought about it and had to come back to point out that Art animated the Mushroom Dance, not Jules Engel. That is what Art would have wanted said here.

Stephen Worth (not verified) | Sat, 05/14/2011 - 10:14 | Permalink

I really appreciate this article lauding Art Babbitt's accomplishments as an animator and an educator . His methods of teaching animation (disseminated via Richard Williams and the notes of various Williams studio animators who studied under Babbitt during those years) have had a major impact on how animation principles are taught .

One thing you should correct about this article is a rather off-handed , somewhat dismissive remark about Lester Novros on page 5: "Before Babbitt joined the staff of the University of Southern California, a single animation class was taught by ex-Disney inbetweener Lester Novros. "

The phrase "ex-Disney inbetweener" is a gross understatement about Les Novros's career and doesn't do the man justice. Google for Les Novros's screen credits on IMDB or on the "History" section of his company Graphic Films .com .

Les Novros , like everyone else , including "star animators" like Art Babbitt and Fred Moore , or Frank Thomas , started at Disney serving an apprenticeship on the lower rungs of the ladder as an assistant animator , so it would be just as accurate to refer to "ex-Disney inbetweener Frank Thomas" or "ex-Terrytoons assistant Art Babbitt" , but does that sort of description accurately sum up Frank Thomas's or Art Babbitt's subsequent careers and positions in the industry ? Not at all. Novros started off as an assistant at Disney, but by 1940 was credited as an animator on Fantasia ("Night on Bald Mountain / Ave Maria" sequence) . He left Disney during the 1941 strike and established his own independent animation studio, Graphic Films, which produced hundreds of educational , documentary, and advertising films in animation and live-action over the years. Novros was a central figure in establishing the Cinema Department of the University of Southern California .

David Nethery (not verified) | Sat, 05/14/2011 - 07:56 | Permalink

Art Babbitt was a great inspiration for me. As an animator, as a teacher and most importantly on how you to live your life as an artist. He could have remained one of Walt's kiss-asses and done very well for himself. But he spoke out constantly on behalf of the low-paid and unappreciated of our field.

There are those became better animators than he, many became more rich and famous than he, but no one could deny Art Babbitt was a man who lived by his principles. I am ever thankful for his and Barbara's friendship, and all who ply the trade of animator should be thankful for all that he did for us.

Tom Sito (not verified) | Fri, 05/13/2011 - 10:12 | Permalink

I worked with Art at FilmFair at the end of his career and spent lunch hours with him every day. He was an old lion, but he was still a lion. He was very good to me.

Stephen Worth (not verified) | Thu, 05/12/2011 - 14:42 | Permalink

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