The Best Animation Instagrams Of The Week
A look at animators on Instagram.
A look at animators on Instagram.
Mikrofilm is still encouraging staff to work at home, but those who wish to return to work can do so, with plenty of new safety measures in place.
Arthur van Merwijk started making "Morphle" by himself. Now, it's a global entertainment brand with millions of Youtube subscribers and billions of views.
The revered cinematographer discusses his little-known work for the likes of Pixar and Dreamworks in a fascinating new podcast series.
After a decade of studying and working in Europe, show creator Cheng Li is pushing to bring new ideas into Chinese series.
A look at animators on Instagram.
Joseph Wallace spent almost six years developing "Salvation Has no Name." Weeks into the shoot, he had to shut it down.
With Callipeg, artists can now leave their desks and animate wherever they want and need with professional tools, using the iPad's power to its full potential.
In a guest piece, industry executive Aaron Simpson explains how the animation industry had been preparing for this disaster for decades without even knowing it.
The late filmmaker made dozens of films based on children's books. In a 1977 documentary, he explained how to do this well.
The group aims to see 50/50 gender parity across Austin's expanding animation industry by 2025.
Layoffs have taken place in both Florida and New Zealand.
Among the Pixar veteran's choices are "The General," "Guys and Dolls," and "2001: A Space Odyssey."
A mythological feature that's also about the coronavirus. A game in which you do sit-ups underneath a dog. A short film about mescaline. These projects are pretty wild.
Hint: it helps to have yodeling.
Children's books, sitcom parodies, Lego animation: the crisis is bringing out the best in artists the world over.
Get drunk with your director, treat them like a spouse, and be ready to annoy them. This worked for Nicolas Schmerkin, at least.
Get the free ebook "Making an Animated Short."
John Lasseter is running an entire animation studio again.
The producer of the upcoming series explains why Finnish animation is going global — and what that means for the continent.