Gumbasia

Gumbasia, a 3-minute, 10-second short film released on September 2, 1955, was the first clay animation produced by Art Clokey, who went on to create the classic series, Gumby and Davey and Goliath, using the same technique.[1]

Gumbasia
Gumbasia, the first stop-motion clay animation film by Art Clokey
Directed byArt Clokey
Produced byArt Clokey
Written byArt Clokey
Music by"Don-Que-Dee" by Mel Powell
CinematographyClokey Productions
Edited byArt Clokey
Distributed byClokey Inc.
Release date
September 2, 1955
Running time
3 minutes
CountryUnited States

Production

Clokey created Gumbasia while studying at the University of Southern California under the direction of Slavko Vorkapić. He used a ping-pong table in his father's garage as the surface upon which to work the clay.[2] The film was a surreal short of pulsating shapes and lumps of clay set to jazz music in a homage of Walt Disney's Fantasia.[3]

Summary

Gumbasia was created in a style Vorkapić taught called Kinesthetic Film Principles. Described as "massaging of the eye cells" this technique, based on camera movements and stop-motion editing, is responsible for much of the look and feel later seen in Gumby films.[4] When Clokey showed Gumbasia to film producer Sam Engel in 1955, Engel decided to fund a 15-minute short film that became the first Gumby episode—"Gumby Goes to the Moon".

Impact

A TV series based on the short, titled Fun in Gumbasia, was scheduled for release in mid-2017.[5]

gollark: My laptop's amazingly powerful™ intel iGPU™ can do hardware VP9 encoding *and* decoding.
gollark: Yep!
gollark: Especially with VP9 and whatnot.
gollark: Not having hardware decoding I mean.
gollark: > no i mean is it really annoying to not haveIt increases CPU use on my laptop a lot when watching videos.

References

  1. Art Clokey 1921-2010|Cartoon Brew
  2. KQED
  3. CSMonitor.com
  4. "Art Clokey, article at KQED". Archived from the original on 2009-03-07. Retrieved 2008-10-26.
  5. "Gumbasia (available in two video formats)". Archived from the original on 2009-12-30. Retrieved 2008-10-26.
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