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Wednesday, November 27, 2024 |
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Rare vintage character model maquettes steal spotlight at Heritage Auctions |
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Early Captain Hook Animator's Maquette.
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DALLAS, TX.- The names and faces are as familiar and beloved as any characters that can be found anywhere. From Donald Duck and Goofy to Aladdins Genie or The Little Mermaids Ariel, from Peter Pan and Tinker Bell to Buzz Lightyear and of course, the immortal Mickey and Minnie Mouse Disney characters are beloved around the globe.
Those legendary characters are created in part through the use of Disney maquettes, the sculpted models that allow animators to view a character from all angles. These rare works of art never were meant to be anything more than three-dimensional tools used by the Disney animation department, each stamped Return to Character Model Dept. Predicted to be cast aside after the completion of each film, maquettes instead became coveted pieces of film making art. Animators sometimes took them home or received them as gifts after films that enjoyed significant success, or Walt Disney, himself, sometimes gave some to important guests and friends.
In their 1981 book Disney Animation: The Illusion of Life, longtime animators Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnston, who worked for Disney from the 1930s to the 1970s, also noted how highly coveted the maquettes were back then. Some became permanent decorations in the offices of top personnel, they wrote. The rest had a way of disappearing, especially as we neared the end of a picture.
These figures are not just key parts of the film making process; they also are beautiful, each an art of work in its own right, often sculpted by one or more of the gifted Disney artists. They are three-dimensional art that led to the creation of spectacular two-dimensional art.
The Disney Character Model Department was established in 1937, and it added a third dimension to the process of traditional animation, Heritage Auctions Animation Art Cataloger Christin Muller said. The department only lasted until 1941, when financial constraints of World War II forced it to shut down, making maquettes some of the rarest studio artifacts in the Disney animation process. Some of those offered in this sale were restored by legendary studio maquette painter Helen Nerbovig McIntosh, who was the lead of the maquette painting team in the Disney Ink and Paint Department, as well as head of Disneys Courvoisier Art program. Their history makes their importance and significance difficult to overstate.
Once an afterthought in the film making process, maquettes now are a must-have among serious Disney collectors. A trove of 53, the largest collection ever brought to an auction, are among the offerings in Heritage Auctions Animation Art Signature® event February 4-7. This extraordinary selection spans more than 80 years of treasured Disney characters, and includes some of the rarest artifacts of the studios animation process. Among the renowned characters offered in figurine form are Pluto, Pinocchio and Pinocchios Animation Art:Maquette, Pinocchio Pinocchio Animator's Maque...Jiminy Cricket, Peter Pans Early Captain Hook, Lady and the Tramps Early Development Siamese Cat, Dumbos Timothy Q. Mouse and Dumbo, and of course Mickey Mouse as The Brave Little Tailor.
More recent prizes in the selection include but are not limited to Beauty and the Beasts Lumière, Beauty and the Beasts Gaston, Aladdins Jafar and Iago, The Lion Kings Ed the Hyena and Finding Nemos Dory, signed by Ellen DeGeneres who lent her voice to the character.
With traditional films, fans can collect costumes or props, Heritage Auctions Vice President and Animation & Anime Art Director Jim Lentz said. That is not possible, of course, with animated films. But Disney films are beloved in part because of how realistically the characters are drawn, which would have been impossible without maquettes like these. This is a rare opportunity to acquire an important piece of the process of creating some of the most popular films ever made.
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