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This book examines the life of the Australian artist Harry Reade
(1927-1998) and his largely overlooked contribution to animation.
It constitutes a biography of Reade, tracing his life from his
birth to his period of involvement with animation between 1956 and
1969. It explores the forces that shaped Reade and chronicles his
experiences as a child, his early working life, the influence of
left-wing ideology on his creative development, his introduction to
animation through the small but radical Waterside Workers'
Federation Film Unit (WWFFU), and the influence he had on the
development of Cuban animation as an educational tool of the
Revolution. Key Features The text offers an alternative framework
for considering the political, social, and cultural themes that
characterised 1950s Australia and 1960s Cuba. A rare look into the
cultural heritage of labor organizations and the populist power of
animation to stimulate radical social consciousness. The book also
crosses a range of intellectual disciplines, including Animation
Studies, Art History, Cinema Studies, and the Social and Political
Histories of Australia and Cuba. Max Bannah lives on Queensland's
Sunshine Coast. Between 1976 and 2010, he worked in Brisbane as an
animator producing television commercials, short films, and cartoon
graphics. He also lectured in Animation History and Practice and
Drawing for Animation at the Queensland University of Technology
where, in 2007, he completed his Masters by Research thesis, "A
Cause for Animation: Harry Reade and the Cuban Revolution."
This book examines the life of the Australian artist Harry Reade
(1927-1998) and his largely overlooked contribution to animation.
It constitutes a biography of Reade, tracing his life from his
birth to his period of involvement with animation between 1956 and
1969. It explores the forces that shaped Reade and chronicles his
experiences as a child, his early working life, the influence of
left-wing ideology on his creative development, his introduction to
animation through the small but radical Waterside Workers'
Federation Film Unit (WWFFU), and the influence he had on the
development of Cuban animation as an educational tool of the
Revolution. Key Features The text offers an alternative framework
for considering the political, social, and cultural themes that
characterised 1950s Australia and 1960s Cuba. A rare look into the
cultural heritage of labor organizations and the populist power of
animation to stimulate radical social consciousness. The book also
crosses a range of intellectual disciplines, including Animation
Studies, Art History, Cinema Studies, and the Social and Political
Histories of Australia and Cuba. Max Bannah lives on Queensland's
Sunshine Coast. Between 1976 and 2010, he worked in Brisbane as an
animator producing television commercials, short films, and cartoon
graphics. He also lectured in Animation History and Practice and
Drawing for Animation at the Queensland University of Technology
where, in 2007, he completed his Masters by Research thesis, "A
Cause for Animation: Harry Reade and the Cuban Revolution."
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