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Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Illustration: Artzybasheff's Machinalia

This post is just the tip of the iceberg... see reason number 6 on our The Top Ten Reasons To Support The A-HAA for links to more great posts about golden age illustration.

Artzybasheff Machinalia
In his introduction to the section titled "Machinalia" in his book As I See, Boris Artzybasheff says, "I am thrilled by machinery's force, precision and willingness to work at any task, no matter how arduous or monotonous it may be. I would rather watch a thousand ton dredge dig a canal than see it done by a thousand spent slaves lashed into submission. I like machines."

Artzybasheff Machinalia
Making of Steel: Charging the Open Hearth

Artzybasheff Machinalia
Tapping a Heat of Steel

Artzybasheff Machinalia
Filling Ingot Molds

Artzybasheff Machinalia
The Soaking Pit

Artzybasheff Machinalia
The Blooming Pit

Artzybasheff Machinalia
The Rod Mill

Artzybasheff Machinalia
Hydraulic Press

Artzybasheff Machinalia
Stranding of Wire Rope

Artzybasheff Machinalia
Weaving of Fence Fabric

Artzybasheff Machinalia
Wire Drawing Machines

Artzybasheff Machinalia
Spring Forming Presses

Artzybasheff Machinalia
Wire Cloth Looms

Artzybasheff Machinalia
Navy's Mark III Calculator

Artzybasheff Machinalia
Executive of the Future

Recently, I was asked by a visitor to the Archive what relevance half century old cartoons and magazine illustrations have to the current animation scene. Well, this question is best answered with an example... Look at these amazing designs by Boris Artzybasheff originally published in the 1950s, and look at this clip from Fleischer's Lost & Foundry.. It doesn't take a great deal of imagination to be able to picture what a sequence in a current CGI film would look like if it had designs like Artzybasheff's and animation like the Fleischers'.

Popeye in "Lost & Foundry" (Fleischer/1937)
(Quicktime 7 / 10 megs)

PLEASE NOTE The text and media files on the ASIFA-Hollywood Animation Archive Blog are not to be duplicated, redistributed or hosted on other websites without the prior written permission of the Board of Directors of ASIFA-Hollywood.

If you enjoyed this post, see... Mid 30s Colliers Illustrations, Mid 30s Advertisements, Wartime Colliers, Late 40s Colliers, Lawson Wood: The Monkey Artist, Casey Strikes Out In Coronet, Bugs Bunny in Coronet Magazine December 1945, Milton Caniff in Coronet Magazine, Dispatch From Disney's Part One and Part Two, John Held Jr, Ward Kimball in Escapade, Complete Guide To Cartooning On Magazine Cartoons Part One and Part Two, and Rube Goldberg's Side Show.

Stephen Worth
Director
ASIFA-Hollywood
Animation Archive

5.28.08
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8 Comments:

At 7:53 AM, Blogger Andy Norton said...

Interesting to see an illustrator still keeps the form of the machine and makes a character out of it.
Boris Artzybasheff is certainly one imaginative illustrator.

 
At 9:09 AM, Blogger Josh "Just What the Doctor Ordered" Heisie said...

This guy's a bloody genius.

 
At 2:16 PM, Blogger Ryan Kramer said...

These are fantastic!! wowza.

 
At 2:56 PM, Blogger Erika said...

Wow. My grandfather was a salesman for a huge steel company.I remember the prints of these illustrations that he kept on his office walls. I was fascinated with them as a child- the range of emotion, the way the images were so eye-catching while only being colored in shades of gray. I had forgotten about them until now. Thanks for sharing!

 
At 7:36 PM, Blogger Charlie said...

He also did a great series of ads for the Lycoming corporation in the 1950's. I've posted them on my site:
http://blog.modernmechanix.com/tag/boris-artzybasheff/

 
At 12:44 PM, Blogger Max Renn said...

Some of these images, and others by Artzybasheff, can be found in volume 9 of Fantagraphics' anthology BLAB! Great stuff.

 
At 5:55 PM, Blogger Timothy said...

WOW...the prints are indeed a marvel of characterization, and the Popeye cartoon reminded me of one I've been looking for for some time now:

It's in color (mostly blue and orange), and has much the same feel as "Small Fry" (the little fish who thinks he's tough). It shows visitors to an exhibition of the "latest technology" -- this includes a public transit train that is literally a sardine can.
If anyone knows even the name of this 'toon (let alone a link or youtube), I'd be much obliged.

 
At 7:50 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Wonderful, artistic illustrating! Such detail and repetitiveness and in shades of gray. Wow! That takes patience. Great job!

 

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