History of Animation
The history of film animation begins with the earliest days of silent film and continues through the present day.
The firsts animated cartoon was from french Émile Reynaud, that created praxynoscope, animation system of 12 pictures, and films of about 500~600 pictures, projected on its own théatre optique, system near from modern film projector, at Musée Grévin in Paris, France, the october 28, 1892.
The first animated cartoon on modern picture film projector was Fantasmagorie by the French director Émile Courtet (also called Émile Cohl), projected for the first time August 17, 1908 at 'Théâtre du Gymnase', in Paris. Émile Courtet went to Fort Lee, New York near New York City in 1912, where he worked for French studio Éclair and spead its technique in the US.
The first animated feature-length film was El Apóstol (1917) from Argentine Quirino Cristiani, shown in Argentina.
Because the history of animation as an art form has undergone many changes in its hundred-year history, it is examined in detail in the History of Animation Wikipedia article.
Famous Names in Animation
Animation Studios
Styles of Animation
See also: Animated series, Anime (Japanese animation)
Techniques
External links