Home » Movies and Video Articles » Snow White Cels Top This Week's LiveAuctionTalk.com
Snow White Cels Top This Week's LiveAuctionTalk.com
Rosemary McKittrick is a storyteller. Her website offers anything and everything about the world of collecting. Visit the site. Sign up for a free weekly subscription.
SANTA FE, NM, October 02, 2011 /Movies and Video PR News/ -- The movie "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" was the world's first full-length animated feature. If you're young at heart the movie is as fresh and touching today as when it was released in 1937.
That's what makes it a classic.
Walt Disney took a chance on the film. He knew on some level it was possible to create animated characters that had the same range of feelings as real people. He was also sure animation could be artistically pleasing at the same time.
Cartoon as art form was Walt's go for with Snow White. The age-old tale of good over evil never seems to lose its luster.
"Animation can explain whatever the mind of man can conceive. This facility makes it the most versatile and explicit means of communication yet devised for quick mass appreciation," Walt said.
In the spring of 1935 Disney hired 300 artists to give it a shot. They studied and watched films constantly. Animation had a lot to learn from other disciplines and technical mastery meant everything to Walt.
"We want to imagine it (the film) as rich as we can without splashing color all over the place," he said.
In the end the movie Snow White was a tightly constructed story with strong, believable characters, good music and a happy ending.
With Snow White animation became art form.
On March 14-15, Profiles in History in Calabasas, Calif., featured a selection of original Snow White cels for sale in its Hollywood auction.
A hand painted cel of the Evil Queen holding the heart box; 1959; 8 ¼ inches by 10 ¾ inches; sold for $23,600.
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Rosemary has provided auction coverage and analysis on thousands-and-thousands of antiques and collectibles sold since the column started 16-years ago. She includes auction sale results to give readers a feel for what their treasures are worth because the power of auctions is simple.
When the bidding stops and the hammer falls, the value of an item is set. The buyer, not the seller, sets the price, and this simple distinction cuts through all the chitchat about what art, antiques and collectibles are really worth. The emphasis is on today's values, not yesterday's wishful thinking.
Each week another new article is posted featuring a particular area of collecting.
• Every article showcases an auction item and how it fits into the big picture.
• A compelling, historical context is provided for the treasures people collect.
• Collecting tips are offered.
• Current "prices realized" are listed.
Rosemary is the co-author of The Official Price Guide to Fine Art published by Random House and received her training in the trenches working as a professional appraiser and weekly columnist.
Contact:
Rosemary McKittrick
info@LiveAuctionTalk.com
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