2015
DOI: 10.1177/1746847715589060
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Boiling Lines and Lightning Sketches: Process and the Animated Drawing

Abstract: Animation has often involved some degree of drawing, but 'boiling' and animated sketching are two unique forms of drawn animation that overtly foreground the process of drawing. In this article, the author looks at these two specific approaches to drawn animation, paying special attention to the history, process, and evolutionary qualities of animated sketching; he focuses on the processes and material essence of the 'boiling' image. Both of these approaches produce forms that are at once immobile and mobile a… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…A well-known example of a pre-cel walk cycle is Gertie’s gait in Gertie the Dinosaur (McCay, 1914). The film’s jittery imagery – what Torre (2015) calls early animation’s tendency towards ‘boiling lines’ – reveals that, without a means to layer drawings, each frame must be completely redrawn or traced from a previous frame. By layering transparent cels over background images, cel animation systematized and standardized the separation of foreground from background, which allowed animators to reuse animations – such as the walk cycle – as a loop.…”
Section: Origins Of the Walk Cyclementioning
confidence: 99%
“…A well-known example of a pre-cel walk cycle is Gertie’s gait in Gertie the Dinosaur (McCay, 1914). The film’s jittery imagery – what Torre (2015) calls early animation’s tendency towards ‘boiling lines’ – reveals that, without a means to layer drawings, each frame must be completely redrawn or traced from a previous frame. By layering transparent cels over background images, cel animation systematized and standardized the separation of foreground from background, which allowed animators to reuse animations – such as the walk cycle – as a loop.…”
Section: Origins Of the Walk Cyclementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Whilst Torre's process-cognitivism clearly stresses both the distributed and fragmented character of perception, foregrounding the multiple layers of processing (image, movement and colour, for instance) that are synthesised in any phenomenal outcome, it likewise expresses a number of Kantian traits. This is perhaps most noticeable in Torre's leaning towards identity and generality -indeed, it seems significant that Torre's exposition dwells for the most part upon seemingly vital, but nevertheless figurative animated form -the 'boiling lines' of William Kentridge and Bill Plympton, along with the 'living sketches' of Stuart Blackton and Lev Yilmaz (Torre, 2015;Torre, 2017). Arguably, this emphasis upon animated objects and animated characters is accompanied by a similarly quasi-Kantian conception of the self (or subject) as the owner or producer of phenomenal experience.…”
Section: Torre's Tacit Kantianismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite Deleuze’s somewhat lacklustre engagement with the animated film, a number of latter-day animation theorists have seen significant resonance between animated phenomena and a series of core Deleuzian concerns. In recent years, various attempts have been made – most notably by Schaffer (2006), Lamarre (2009, 2010), Torre (2014, 2015, 2017) and Jenkins (2016) – to construct a series of Deleuzian positions in animation theory. This reappraisal of the significance of Deleuzian thought with respect to the formulation of a theory of animation in many ways mirrors Deleuze’s own re-evaluation of the philosopher Henri Bergson’s relationship to cinema (Deleuze, 2005: 1–3).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%