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Tim Burton has reinvented Hollywood genre filmmaking over the past
three decades. With a visual style inspired by the aesthetics of
animation and silent comedy, Burton's work melds the exotic, the
horrific and the comic, manipulating expressionism and fantasy with
the skill of a graphic novelist. Published to accompany a major
career retrospective at The Museum of Modern Art, this affordable
volume considers Burton's career as an artist and filmmaker. It
narrates the evolution of his creative practices, following the
current of his visual imagination from his earliest childhood
drawings through his mature oeuvre. Illustrated with works on
paper, moving-image stills, drawn and painted concept art, puppets
and maquettes, storyboards and examples of his work as a graphic
artist for his non-film projects, this volume sheds new light on
Burton and presents previously unseen works from the artist's
personal archive.
Acclaimed American filmmaker Tim Burton (born 1958) is known for
his dark, gothic films about quirky outsiders, many of which are
both Hollywood blockbusters and cult classics. To date they have
been nominated for 16 Academy Awards and have won six. They include
"Pee-Wee"'"s Big Adventure" (1985), "Beetle Juice" (1988), "Batman"
(1989), "Edward Scissorhands" (1990), "Batman Returns" (1992), "Ed
Wood" (1994), "Sleepy Hollow," (1999), "Charlie and the Chocolate
Factory" and "Corpse Bride" (both 2005) and "Sweeney Todd: The
Demon Barber of Fleet Street" (2007), among others. "Alice in
Wonderland" is slated for 2010. Burton has collaborated extensively
with composer Danny Elfman and with actors Johnny Depp and Helena
Bonham Carter.
Identical twins Stephen and Timothy Quay are internationally
renowned moving image artists and designers who for over thirty
years have been in the avant-garde of stop-motion puppet animation.
Creating work in the tradition of Czech surrealists Jan Svankmajer
and Jiri Trnka, Russian animator Yuri Norstein and Polish animator
Walerian Borowczyk, they practice a design aesthetic influenced by
Polish graphic artists such as Jan Lenica, Roman Cieslewicz,
Franciszek Starowieyski and Henryk Tomaszewski. Since 1971, they
have produced over forty-five moving images, including features,
music videos, dance films, documentaries and signature personal
works, and have designed sets and projections for opera, drama and
concert performances. Published to accompany an exhibition at The
Museum of Modern Art - the first presentation of the Quay Brothers
work in all their fields of creative activity - this richly
illustrated publication presents their betterknown films as well as
previously unseen moving image works and a little-known body of
works on paper, including graphic design, drawings, typography and
notebooks for films.
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