Showing posts with label albert hurter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label albert hurter. Show all posts

Friday, September 9, 2011

Everybody Loves Gustaf...or do they?

Of all the drawings, sketches and artwork to spring from the production of Walt Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, there's probably none more recognizable as those pieces created by Gustaf Tenggren. Right smack in the heart of the Golden Age, Gustaf was there, one of the chosen few to be employed at the top animation studio of the day. Yet, his time at Disney wasn't necessarily all fairytales and happy endings.

Tenggren was born November 3, 1896 in Magda, Sweden. When his father moved to the United States to find work, Gustaf was left in the care of his grandfather, Teng Tenggren, a painter and woodcarver. The arts were encouraged and in 1913, at the age of seventeen, Gustaf won a scholarship to the Valand School of Fine Arts.


Children's Books... 

By 1918, he had married (his first wife, Anna Peterson) and was being paid to create illustrations for a Swedish folklore and fairy tales compilation called Bland Tomtar och Troll (Among Gnomes and Trolls). Over the next decade, he would continue to contribute artwork to this annual, even though in 1920, he (and Anna) would immigrate to America to pursue his career as a illustrator.

Lars Emanuelsson, Tenggren biographer and creator of gustaftenggren.com, shared (via Didier Ghez's excellent Disney History site) this illustration produced by Gustaf for the 1924 Bland Tomtar och Troll.

Dark Forest Scene. Bland Tomtar och Troll, 1924.

As Emanuelsson points out in regards to the similarities of the above image to that of the later Snow White Dark Forest scene, "I think it's pretty obvious where the inspiration came from."

Dark Forest Scene. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, 1937.


Tenggren settled first in Cleveland where he lived for a couple years. This photo below (also from Lars Emanuelsson via Didier Ghez's Disney History) shows Gustaf around age 25 playing chess with an unidentified man.

Photo of Tenggren (left) in Cleveland, circa 1920-22.


Gustaf relocated to New York City where things really started to take off career-wise. He found work as a successful illustrator of children's books as well as in some commercial advertisement jobs for magazines.

Book Plate from Sven the Wise and Svea the Kind, 1932. Image via BPIB.


The early 1930s saw Tenggren re-married (to Mollie Froberg) and living a rural farm life in upstate New York. By 1935, however, they'd moved back to the city where Gustaf was about to accept what would be for many, the job of a lifetime.

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Disney Studio (1936-1939)...

Tenggren was steeped in the German and Norwegian folk tales (and their illustrators) from the 1800s. His work also showed similarities to fellow Swedish painter and illustrator John Bauer (Gustaf's predecessor at the Bland Tomtar och Troll annual), and both were influenced by English book illustrator Arthur Rackham. It so happens that this was the style--this old European storybook feel--that Walt Disney was looking to infuse into his first feature.

Gustaf accepted the position of an Art Director on Snow White and moved to California. He took his place as a Disney Studio inspirational and concept artist, alongside the likes of Albert Hurter, Ferdinand Horvath, and Joe Grant. These guys were the dream team. Their job was to create artwork that would inform the animators and layout artists on how the characters, scenes and/or backgrounds should look.

As Lars Emanuelsson states on his website, Tenggren's drawings and paintings...
...had a major influence on some central scenes, such as the interiors of the dwarfs’ cottage, the queen’s laboratory, and the scenes in the woods where Snow White flees from the hunter.

Gustaf's Snow White artwork made such an impression that it was--and still is--used time and again in countless promotional items, posters, book illustrations and merchandise. The cast portrait, the Witch at her cauldron, Snow White and Prince on horseback--see all these and more in the one sheet and 40x60 movie posters, the British F.O.H. cards and North American lobby cards, the Valentine and Sons postcards, Cynthia Rylant's 2009 book, the vintage Roma tea tin and even the Disneyland dark ride.




More images from his elegant and distinctive concept art portfolio...

Prince Arrives. Image via John Canemaker's 1996 Before the Animation Begins, p. 44.

At Wishing Well. Original artwork. Image from collector Pete Merolo via Disney History.

Dark Forest. Image via John Canemaker's 1996 Before the Animation Begins, p. 44.

Forest Rough Layout. Image via Snow White...An Art in Its Making, 1994, p. 77.

Dwarfs March Home. Original Mixed Media on Board. Image via Heritage Auctions.

Dwarfs Arrive Home. Original Ink and Watercolor. Image via Heritage Auctions.

Dwarfs on Stairs. Faux-woodcut line drawing. Image via John Canemaker's 1996 Before the Animation Begins, p. 38.

Queen and Magic Mirror. Original Ink and Watercolor. Image via Heritage Auctions.

Poison Apple. Image via Cynthia Rylant's 2009 Snow White..., p. 24.

Happy Ending. Image via Cynthia Rylant's 2009 Snow White..., p. 29.

It is sometimes mistakenly thought that Gustaf did not receive any screen credit for his contributions to Snow White. Yet, he is indeed listed as one of the Art Directors at the start of the film. Both Albert Hurter and Joe Grant were mentioned as Character Designers. It was Ferdinand Horvath that, sadly, was left off the list.

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In between feature projects, Tenggren contributed to the Silly Symphonies, specifically Hiawatha, The Ugly Duckling, and the Academy Award-winning The Old Mill.

Concept Art Painting for The Old Mill.

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Gustaf's greatest influence upon the Disney canon is in Pinocchio where his mark is seen throughout the film, in the design of the buildings and streets, the sign posts and lamps, and in the characters themselves.

Village Street Inspirational Sketch. Image via Disneywiki.

Blue Fairy Inspirational Sketch. Image via Disneywiki.


Tenggren Concept Art. Video posted by AdamLore.

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His last Disney project was Bambi. Tenggren would head out to Yosemite National Park where he'd set up his easel and paint some most spectacular renderings of the forest...too spectacular as it turns out. Years later, Frank Thomas was quoted as saying...
He did some amazing pictures. They were different than anything anyone else was doing. And they were impossible to use.
Before the Animation Begins, Canemaker, p41.
The paintings were so detailed that they took three days each to create. The movie would have taken forever to complete. So Walt moved the look of the film in a different direction.

Bambi Forest Scene. Attributed most likely to Tenggren. Image via Michael Sporn's Splog.

Tenggren working on Bambi, circa 1938.


Much has been said about the conflicts and controversies surrounding Gustaf Tenggren and his relatively short tenure at the Disney Studio. He was not liked by many of his animator colleagues. They complained of his aloofness and apparent arrogance. Yet, others said he was cooperative, just not sociable. This need by Gustaf to be left alone is not so reprehensible, but then there was the drink.

He had an real alcohol problem which at times may have resulted in muddled thinking and behavior. He was also known to be a philanderer from which a bit of a scandal developed. Animator Milt Kahl about blew a fuse when he learned that his underage niece (working a summer job at the studio) had gone camping alone with Tenggren on one of his Bambi excursions to Yosemite.

It may have been this last incident, or a combinations of factors, but something motivated Gustaf Tenggren to leave his employment with Disney in January of 1939. There must have been hard feelings within the studio ranks. A year later, when Pinocchio was finally released, Tenggren's name was nowhere to be found on the picture that he'd contributed so much to.

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The Tenggren Books and Golden Books...

Gustaf was not idle in his post-Disney years. Just the opposite. He began to develop his own trademark line called The Tenggren Books. The first in the series was The Tenggren Mother Goose, published in 1940.















He also struck up his long-running relationship with Golden Books. For the next 20 years, he would illustrate a whopping 25 titles. This included the most printed of all, The Poky Little Puppy, first published in 1942.













Gustaf had one last encounter with his Disney (and even Snow White) past when in 1956 he illustrated the cover of The Saturday Evening Post. The My Dad Walt Disney piece attributed to Diane Disney Miller appeared in the November 17th issue.

Saturday Evening Post, 1956. Image via Before the Animation Begins, p. 48.


Gustaf and Mollie moved to Maine where he continued to work on his artwork almost until his death from lung cancer in April of 1970. His collection of paintings and illustrations were later donated by his wife to the University of Minnesota.

The conflict of egos experienced between Gustaf and his colleagues was not an isolated incident at the Disney Studio. Stories of controversy between other artists exist as well. It was a time of tremendous advancement in the world of animation. It was also the Great Depression. The stress of keeping the studio financially afloat was a real concern. The pressure to produce was intense. Yet through it all, illustrious were the results. No matter how the other animators--even the staunchest of adversaries--may have felt about him personally, they couldn't deny their admiration for Gustaf Tenggren's artistic contributions to the Golden Age.

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Further Tenggren reading from:

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Albert Hurter - He Drew As He Pleased

Front Cover He Drew As He Pleased. Image via Cohen Books and Collectibles

Albert Hurter, Walt Disney's first inspirational sketch artist, worked at the studio for a decade (1931-41) and played a key role in creating the "look" for many of the Golden Age films including Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Sadly, he passed away in 1942. In his will, Hurter requested that Disney associate Ted Sears be employed "to assist in the collection and arrangement" of over 700 of Hurter's drawings for the printing of a book on his work. Sears did indeed compile the artwork and approximately six years later He Drew As He Pleased was published by Simon and Schuster (1948) with over 90 pages of illustrations.

It was commonly thought that the Disney Studio created the book as a tribute to one of its great artists. In the forward, Walt honors Hurter with the following tribute...
Albert Hurter was a master creator of fantasy. In his whimsical imagination all things were possible. The sketches in this book testify not only to his rare sense of humor but also to his genuine ability as an artist.
Yet, it was John Canemaker in his book, Before the Animation Begins, that brought to light the fact that it was actually Hurter himself who set aside the $5000 in his will for the completion and publication of the book. Albert was...
...in reality deeply proud of the unique art he made at Disney and was aware of its impact. And he wanted to be remembered for it.
From John Canemaker's Before the Animation Begins, p.24-25.
Today, He Drew As He Pleased is a hard title to come by. Some online booksellers offer it for sale, but the price for such a treasure is not cheap. Lucky for us, a few animation buffs have taken the time to post pages from the book. So now 63 years after it was first published and nearly 69 years after his death, here's a glimpse into Albert Hurter's Sketchbook.

Front Cover


Title Page


Albert Hurter photograph page. Image scan via Michael Sporn Animation Splog.

[CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE]



The book was designed such that as you flipped though the pages--on the left would be (usually, but not always) a short blurb. On the right leaf would be the illustrations.

"For Albert there were no inanimate objects"


"Eyeball folk"


"Even melons came to life" (left)


"Preliminary sketch...Snow White and the Queen's Huntsman"


"The Prince"


"The Witch . . . Hansel and Gretel"; "A page of devils..."


"When 'The Reluctant Dragon' was in preparation, these medieval studies appeared...each from memory. Albert never resorted to 'scrap'..."


"A pet character of Albert's who never quite reached the screen"; "Some of his last sketches. Not even hospital life could dampen his imagination"


"Between serious thoughts Albert succeeded in elevating the practice of doodling until it approached a fine art"


All illustrations and book text copyright 1948 Walt Disney Productions.;

These and many more pages from Albert's book can be seen at Joel Brinkerhoff. And for higher resolution images, see the post at On Animation.

Monday, February 28, 2011

Albert Hurter - Walt Disney's First Inspirational Sketch Artist

Albert Hurter, a soft-spoken, solitary man, was the acknowledged "expert" at the Disney Studio. Let's say you needed an opinion on the direction your drawing was going, he would be the guy who could tell you--and without mincing his words either. Unlike most other animators of the era, Albert was formally schooled in art history and the techniques of drawing. According to Disney Story Department head Ted Sears...
Walt was the first cartoon producer to appreciate the special talents of the individual artist and allow him to concentrate upon the thing he did best. Since Albert's outstanding ability lay in humorous exaggeration and the humanizing of inanimate objects, he was soon released from animating and set to work drawing inspirational sketches. Each time a new subject was planned, Albert was consulted and given free rein to allow his imagination wander, creating strange animals, plants, scenery, or costumes that might serve as models for the forthcoming production.

Veteran Disney storyman Ted Sears on Albert Hurter. From the introduction to He Drew As He Pleased, 1948.

Albert Hurter. Image via John Canemaker's Paper Dreams, p74.

Albert Hurter was respected for his drawing skills, his knowledge of art, and his fanciful imagination. Yet, to the general public, little else was known about the man before 1996. This was the year that Hyperion published historian John Canemaker's excellent book, Before The Animation Begins. And more is recounted in his second volume on Disney animation, the 1999 Paper Dreams.


What we learn from Canemaker's research is that Albert's life story is really comprised of four distinct stages.

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His Youth and Training: 1883-1916

Hurter was born on May 11, 1883 in Zurich, Switzerland. His father, Albert Sr., was a Swiss mechanic, and his mother, Maria Schmid, was of German nationality. Two younger brothers came along, the father started a new teaching career as a drawing instructor in mechanical engineering, and the family moved to a nicer home.

Influenced by his father, Hurter became interested in art and drawing, and as a teenager studied architecture. He also started his lifelong hobby of collecting stamps. It was during this time that he was diagnosed with rheumatic heart disease...
It is possible to hypothesize that some (if not all) of Hurter's odd behavior and solitary lifestyle can be attributed to medical problems.
John Canemaker, Before The Animation Begins, p18.
In 1903 Albert moved to Berlin where he would study art for the next seven years. In 1910 he would return home, but the details of this period are unclear. What is known is that two years later in 1912, Albert Sr. had passed away, and by 1916 Albert Jr. was living and working in America.

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The Barre-Bower Animation Studio: 1916-1918

More than once in Albert Hurter's animation career did he find himself in the right place at the right time. There were other early pioneers of animated films, but the Barre-Bower Studio located in the Bronx in New York City, was the first to set up an assembly-line style of production so as to create not just one, but a series of shorts. This was the birth of the animation "industry", and our man was about to land himself a job.

An early Raoul Barre animation predating the arrival of Albert Hurter.
Video posted by the US Library of Congress.

Albert was hired by Barre-Bower just as they were underway on a new series of Mutt and Jeff shorts. With his superior drawing skills and his extension knowledge of art, it wasn't long before he was considered the studio's top animator. Co-worker Richard Huemer, who shared the same workbench with him, recounted one particular difficult assignment of a flag billowing in the wind...
Instead of taking the easy way out, say, using three or four drawings crudely flapping repeatedly back and forth, Hurter "looked out a window, saw a flag, and wonder of wonders, he actually copied the movement. Studied it and copied it! Something which nobody had done before...And when the scene came out we just thought, "This is the end! The living end! This is the greatest!" Before The Animation Begins, p18.
Hurter only spent two years at Barre-Bower, and his sudden and unexpected departure left his co-workers scratching their heads. He was working on a World War I cartoon where the German Kaiser set a trap by using dummy figures to represent President Wilson and other Allied leaders. In the scene Mutt and Jeff discover the plot and knock the heads off the phony duplicates. After seeing his work, Albert's associates jokingly teased him, saying things like he might get in trouble with the government, and "will you be able to convince the police that you are not an enemy German alien?"

This tomfoolery on the part of Albert's co-workers may have had the opposite effect of what they intended. Several days later, Hurter, with bags packed, bumped into the studio boss I. Klein at Grand Central Station. Hurter said he sat up all night thinking about it. "I am going to California now."

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The Lost Years: 1918-1931

Hurter wandered into designing "fashions, furniture, stained-glass windows and...advertising art," and traveled toward Mexico and the Southwest. He never married, and in the late 1920s was living in the old Hotel Westminster in a seedy section of downtown Los Angeles, illustrating a printing company's direct mail advertising, and occasionally "turning his hand to bits of animation for Hollywood producers."

Ted Sears, the head of Disney's fledgling story department, knew Hurter from Barre-Bower and it's likely he [that brought him] to Disney.
John Canemaker, Before The Animation Begins, p10.

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The Disney Studio: 1931-1942

June 1st, 1931. Albert Hurter is hired as an animator by Walt Disney. And once again, our man Hurter finds himself in the right spot at the right moment in time--the rise of the Golden Era of animation and employed at the top establishment! The Disney Studio is about to transform forever how the world looks at animated films and Albert will be one of the reasons why.

1939 close-up. Image via Before The Animation Begins, p50.

He was no spring chicken. At 48, Hurter was twice the age of most of the other animators. They thought of him as an old man. In addition, Disney wasn't interested in the primitive Mutt and Jeff style of animation that Albert once did. Characters must now radiate with personality. So just what saved the day for our aging Swiss immigrant? It was Walt's ability to recognize people's strengths. With Hurter's imaginative and exaggerated drawing style, his technical skill, and his knowledge of European art history, it wasn't long before Walt Disney assigned him to Ted Sears and the Story Department (which at the time consisted of just two others: Pinto Colvig and Webb Smith).

Albert was to be Disney's first inspirational sketch artist. As a potential source of ideas, his job was to design characters that the animators would then refine and bring to life. Between 1932 and 1934, the Story Department grew to a dozen, and Albert shared an office with sketch man Bob Kuwahara and Joe Grant.

By this time, Hurter was the studio authority on how things should look..."from characters and costumes to settings and scenery." He would be...
...consulted and given free rein to let his imagination wander, creating strange animals, plants, scenery or costumes that might serve as models for forthcoming production...Disney had found the ideal outlet for Albert's talents. John Canemaker, Before The Animation Begins, p10.
Just a few of the shorts he influenced include Babes in the Woods, Building a Building, Three Little Pigs, The China Shop, The Goddess of Spring, and Music Land.

[CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE]

Goddess of Spring sketch. Image via Paper Dreams, p78.


Music Land. Image via Before The Animation Begins, p12.


Unlike the characters that populated most of the Disney shorts, a more realistic design was wanted for the Snow White feature. Albert would become the "go-to" guy for this as Disney made him the authority on the "look" of the film. All designs--from characters to scenery--had to be approved by Hurter.

Albert was not alone. Inspirational sketch artists Gustaf Tenggren and Ferdinand Hovarth would also have a tremendous influence on the film's Old World polish. And Joe Grant would create the design for the Old Witch. Nonetheless, Hurter's "mark is on every major sequence from the comic to the melodramatic."

Joe Grant remembered his mentor...
It wasn't necessary to explain anything to him, cause its what  he gave to you rather than what you gave to him. The exchange was all on his side. Before The Animation Begins, p21.


An early model sheet featuring the three principal characters.
Image via Michael Barrier's Hollywood Cartoons, p126.


Dark Forest. Image courtesy of Walt Disney Family Foundation via MousePlanet.


Dwarf Cottage. Image via Michael Barrier.com.


Preliminary study of dwarfs at mine, 1935. Image via ComicArtFans.


Dwarfs marching home. Image via Paper Dreams, p75.


Sneezy's sneeze control suggestions. Image via Before The Animation..., p13.


Suggestion on how Snow White might kiss grumpy on head. Image via Before The Animation..., p14.


Sleepy. Image via DisneyWiki.


Ideas for how the dwarfs give chase. Image via Before The Animation..., p14.


Dwarfs watch Witch fall to her death. Image via Before The Animation..., p17.


Ideas for dwarf grieving. Image via Before The Animation..., p17.


One of the early concerns of Walt Disney's (and others) was whether or not the audience would believe in the realism of the "cartoon" characters. Would they actually feel for Snow White when she lay in her sleeping death? Albert created several drawings depicting the dwarfs grieving over the princess, the one below making it into the final film almost as he had originally sketched it.


Hurter's moving "sleeping death" rendering. Image via Before The Animation..., p16.
All sketch images © Disney.


Albert's employment at Disney lasted a decade. In this time he helped raise the artistic standards of the studio to a degree never before seen in animation. As with Snow White, he was given creative authority of Pinocchio. He contributed to the design of numerous characters in Fantasia. the atmosphere and props in Dumbo, and concepts for The Reluctant Dragon. Some of Albert's sketch ideas would even be used in films whose production would not begin until long after his death...Peter Pan and Lady and the Tramp.

It was 1941 when one day he came to work and his arm went numb, "more or less paralyzed." He entered Cedar Lodge Sanitarium in LA where he would spend the next 14 months receiving treatment. He continued to draw while at his new confines, and Walt and others from the studio would visit him.

Albert was always a heavy smoker. His colleagues never saw him without a cigar in his hand. It's possible that this contributed to his condition. Hurter never left the hospital and died of rheumatic heart disease on March 28th, 1942.

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The Publication of His Book: 1942

Six years after his death, hundreds of Albert's drawings would be compiled into a book entitled, He Drew As He Pleased.  More on this in next post.

Book images via SaturdaysToys.

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Further Study: