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Yevgeniy Migunov

Yevgeny Tikhonovich Migunov (Russian: Евгений Тихонович Мигунов; February 27, 1921 — January 1, 2004) was a Russian artist, cartoonist, book illustrator, animation and art director, screenwriter, inventor, educator and memoirist. He is regarded as one of the leading innovators during the Khrushchev Thaw who contributed significantly to both traditional and stop motion animation.[1]

Yevgeny Migunov
Yevgeny Migunov, self-portrait
Born
Yevgeny Tikhonovich Migunov

(1921-02-27)27 February 1921
Died1 January 2004(2004-01-01) (aged 82)
Moscow, Russia
Occupation(s)Animator, artist

Early years edit

Yevgeny and his sister Nina were born in Moscow into a family of Tikhon Grigorievich Migunov, a low-ranking official in one of the ministries, and Maria Konstantinovna Migunova. Yevgeny was diagnosed with cerebral palsy of his left leg and remained lame throughout his life, hiding it and compensating by various activities. His mother blamed obstetrician for hitting the nerve. Following her sudden death in 1928 Tikhon Migunov married her sister, Zinaida.[2][3][4]

In 1928 Migunov graduated from the P. N. Lepeshinsky Experimental School-Commune and spent a year at the art school. In 1939 he entered the newly-founded Art Faculty at VGIK as one of the four students of the first official Russian animation workshop headed by Ivan Ivanov-Vano.[4][5][6] Besides Ivanov-Vano his teachers were Fyodor Bogorodsky and Fyodor Konstantinov. He had a hard time following the programme and learned art by studying paintings by classical Russian artists. He also learned a lot from his classmate, close friend and future collaborator Anatoly Sazonov who came from an artistic family and whose talent he highly regarded. Migunov gained money by drawing miniatures for the Novodevichy Convent Museum.[3]

With the start of the Great Patriotic War in 1941 he joined the volunteer corps of the 38th rifle regiment of the 13th Rostokino division along with the fellow students, hiding his disability.[2] He was awarded the 2nd Class Order of the Patriotic War in 1987.[7] In Autumn they returned to VGIK, but with the start of the Battle of Moscow it was evacuated to Alma-Ata along with Mosfilm and Lenfilm. They continued the studies, conducted art exhibitions and developed cartoons. In 1943 Migunov defended his diploma — a Let's Laugh storyboard based on his own original screenplay in verse. The commission was headed by Sergei Eisenstein.[5][8]

Animation edit

After the war edit

On September 1943 VGIK returned to Moscow. Same year Migunov and his classmates joined Soyuzmultfilm and finished their first cartoon — Stolen Sun (considered lost today). In 1945 Migunov and Sazonov worked as art directors on the first traditionally animated Soviet feature The Lost Letter by the Brumberg sisters. In 1946 they helped Mstislav Paschenko to restore The Song of Happiness short from scratch.[5] It became the first Soyuzmultfilm work to receive an international award (a bronze medal for the best animated film and a special award "For Humaneness" at the 8th Venice International Film Festival).[9]

Migunov also developed educational and methodological programme for animation courses under Soyuzmultfilm and taught character design. The 1948 release of the short comedy film Champion with art direction by Migunov was the first ever cartoon where oil paints were used for backgrounds.[1] It also marked the start of the cold war anti-Disney campaign, being accused of "formalism" and "anthropomorphism". Migunov vindictively drew his next film Polkan and Shavka as realistic as possible, and to his surprise it became "a golden standard" for the next ten years.[10]

In 1951 the short When New Year Trees Light Up directed by Paschenko, with art direction by Migunov, was chosen as the best children's movie at the 7th Karlovy Vary International Film Festival (it competed against feature motion pictures).[1][11] Following years Migunov turned into one of the leading innovators at Soyuzmultfilm.

Khrushchev Thaw edit

In 1953 a puppet division was relaunched at Soyuzmultfilm. Next year Migunov made his directorial debut with the first post-war stop motion animated film Karandash and Klyaksa — Merry Hunters inspired by the popular Russian clown Karandash and his dog. He basically reinvented the whole production process by designing a device for shooting in statics, with a horizontally moving camera and attachable ball-jointed dolls. He also suggested to use latex for puppet faces. Together with the mechanic Semyon Etlis they organized technical base, constructed and patented all devices which have been used by directors ever since.[10][12] Migunov also wrote the screenplay and did the singing part since Mikhail Rumyantsev (Karandash) claimed he had no ear for music. The film turned very successful, and a sequel was in plans when Rumyantsev suddenly filled a complain letter, claiming he wasn't attached to do the voiceover. Migunov then left puppet animation.[12]

In 1957 he directed a traditionally animated short Familiar Pictures based on the sketches by a stand-up comedian Arkady Raikin who also made an appearance. It became the first radical shift from "realistic" animation towards magazine caricatures due to Raikin's satire which didn't fit the art direction of that time. It wasn't long until other animators followed the example, developing their own distinctive styles.[10]

Among Migunov's unreleased projects was the first Soviet satirical animated anthology series Dyatel (Woodpecker) where he implemented cutout animation, split screen and other experimental techniques; it later served as a bases for Fitil and Happy Merry-Go-Round. The screenplay for World! World! World!!! was approved in 1959, but also didn't air. According to the film historian Georgy Borodin, it was a principally new approach to auteur animation tried only years later.[4][13]

By 1960 his relationship with the studio management escalated. His last project based on two poems by Vladimir Mayakovsky led to a scandal: it was presented as a storyboard with the director's screenplay written in the margins which was against the rules. Migunov lost his temper and was immediately fired from Soyuzmultfilm.[10]

Illustrator edit

 
Misha holding a torch on a stamp

After Migunov left animation, he focused on art and illustrations. He produced filmstrips for the Diafilm studio, drew cartoons and caricatures for the Krokodil satirical magazine, as well as children's magazines Murzilka, Merry Pictures (ru), Pioneer and newspapers such as Vechernyaya Moskva, Pravda and Literaturnaya Gazeta.[4][14]

He also spent many years working at the Detskaya Literatura publishing house, illustrating children's books and fantasy novels. He used his animation experience to create a distinctive "motion blur" effect in his works. Among his major achievements are illustrations to Strugatsky Brothers' Monday Begins on Saturday and The Tale of the Troika, Aleksandr Volkov's Emerald City novels, Yevgeny Veltistov's Electronic: A Boy From a Suitcase and — most famously — Kir Bulychov's Alisa Selezneva series. Their collaboration lasted for almost 40 years, Migunov was even credited with several ideas for Bulychov's novels.[4] In 1980 Roman Kachanov invited him to work as an art director on The Mystery of the Third Planet (an adaptation of Alisa Selezneva's adventures), but Migunov rejected and later claimed that some of the cartoon characters were copies of his illustrations.[15][16]

Yevgeny was also among the designers of Misha, the Russian Bear mascot of the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow. After Victor Chizhikov finished the main sketch, Migunov prepared 21 series of images for artists, designers and advertisers. They utilized many different artistic techniques and featured Misha greeting guests, holding the Olympic torch and taking part in various sport disciplines.[17]

Last years and death edit

Since 1997 Migunov had been working on Kir Bulychov's collection of works. He prepared hundreds of illustrations and sketches, yet the project resulted in two thin books, and many drawings were left unpublished. In 1999 he survived a stroke and lost ability to draw, but remained in control of the coloring process.[4] He also left many notebooks with memoirs about his youth, the people he had encountered, theoretical notes and essays on art and animation.[18] He called them his "major life accomplishment" and expressed hope that they wouldn't be lost. To this day they've been only partly published by several film-related magazines and blogs.[13][15]

Yevgeny Migunov died on 1 January 2004 and was buried at the Miusskoe Cemetery in Moscow.[19] He was survived by his wife Nina Romanovna Karavaeva (married since 1945), also an animator at Soyuzmultfilm who left the studio along with him, and her daughter from the first marriage Elena Nikolaevna Zarubina.[12][20]

Filmography edit

  • Actress (1942) - opening sequence (uncredited)[8]
  • Stolen Sun (1943) – art director
  • The Lost Letter (1945) – art director
  • Winter Tale (1945) – art director
  • The Song of Happiness (1946) – art director
  • Merry Garden (1947) – art director
  • Quartet (1947) - art director
  • Champion (1948) - art director
  • An Elephant and an Ant (1948) – art director
  • Polkan and Shavka (1949) – art director
  • Mister Wolk (1949) – consultant (uncredited)[15]
  • When New Year Trees Light Up (1950)
  • A Grandpa and a Grandsonny (1950) - art director
  • Who's First? (1950) - art director
  • Forest Adventurers (1951) - art director
  • Magic Shop (1953) - art director
  • Karandash and Klyaksa — Merry Hunters (1954) – director, art director, screenwriter, voice
  • A Pipe and a Bear (1955) - art director
  • What Kind of Bird Is This? (1955) - director, art director, songwriter
  • Familiar Pictures (1957) - director, art director
  • To the 6th World Festival (1957) – director, art director, screenwriter
  • A Song About Friendship (1957) – art director
  • Poem of the Sea (1958) – director, art director (animated sequences)
  • Exactly at Three Fifteen... (1959) – director, art director, screenwriter
  • Oversalted (1959) – screenwriter
  • World! World! World!!! (1959) – screenwriter (unfinished)
  • S. Marshak (1960) – director (animated sequences)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Sergei Kapkov (2006). Encyclopedia of Domestic Animation, pp. 434-436
  2. ^ a b Yevgeny Migunov, Georgy Borodin. 1941: Volunteer Corps Odyssey memoirs at the Krokodil community published in the Kinograph magazine №18, May 2007 (in Russian)
  3. ^ a b Yevgeny Migunov, Georgy Borodin. About, a propos and relating to… VGIK, 1939 and other years memoirs at the Notes by Film Historian magazine № 68, 2004, p. 324 ISSN 0235-8212 (in Russian)
  4. ^ a b c d e f Andrei Scherbakov-Zhukov. Migunov who was capable of everything article from Novaya Gazeta, 3 March 2011 (in Russian)
  5. ^ a b c Ivan Ivanov-Vano (1980). Frame by Frame. — Moscow: Iskusstvo, pp. 113-134
  6. ^ The Art Faculty at the official VGIK website
  7. ^ Migunov Yevgeny Tikhonovich at the People's Deed database (in Russian)
  8. ^ a b Yevgeny Migunov, Georgy Borodin. About, apropos and relating to... Alma-Ata. College years (1941–1943) memoirs at the Notes by Film Historian magazine № 62, 2003, p. 276 ISSN 0235-8212 (in Russian)
  9. ^ Sergei Asenin (2012). The World of Animation. — Moscow: Print-on-Demand, p. 49 ISBN 978-5-458-30516-7
  10. ^ a b c d The Stars of Russian Animation. Film 4. Eugene Migunov by Irina Margolina and Eduard Nazarov, 2012 (in Russian)
  11. ^ Irina Margolina, Natalia Lozinskaya (2006). Our Animation. — Moscow: Interros, p. 88 ISBN 5-91105-007-2
  12. ^ a b c Yevgeny Migunov, Georgy Borodin. The work in puppet animation memoirs at the Notes by Film Historian magazine № 73, 2005, p. 310 ISSN 0235-8212 (in Russian)
  13. ^ a b Georgy Borodin. Yevgeny Tikhonovich Migunov. 1921-2004 article at Animator.ru (in Russian)
  14. ^ Diafilms by Yevgeny Migunov at the National Children's Digital Library (in Russian)
  15. ^ a b c Yevgeny Migunov. About and about… memoirs at the Notes by Film Historian magazine № 56, 2002, p. 305 ISSN 0235-8212 (in Russian)
  16. ^ D. Andreev. Interview with Yevgeny Migunov from the Volga Region Railwayman newspaper, 20 December 1989, p. 4 at the History of Fandom website (in Russian)
  17. ^ Georgy Borodin. Olympics at animascreen: Mishas of Yevgeny Migunov article at Animalife.ru, 13 February 2014 (in Russian)
  18. ^ Georgy Borodin, Andrei Scherbakov-Zhukov. Notes by "perjurer" article from Novaya Gazeta, 3 March 2011 (in Russian)
  19. ^ Evgeniy Migunov's tomb
  20. ^ Obituary at Animator.ru, 23 October 2005 (in Russian)

External links edit

  • Yevgeniy Migunov at IMDb
  • Yevgeny Migunov at Animator.ru
  • Books illustrated by Yevgeny Migunov 1950-2018

yevgeniy, migunov, yevgeny, tikhonovich, migunov, russian, Евгений, Тихонович, Мигунов, february, 1921, january, 2004, russian, artist, cartoonist, book, illustrator, animation, director, screenwriter, inventor, educator, memoirist, regarded, leading, innovato. Yevgeny Tikhonovich Migunov Russian Evgenij Tihonovich Migunov February 27 1921 January 1 2004 was a Russian artist cartoonist book illustrator animation and art director screenwriter inventor educator and memoirist He is regarded as one of the leading innovators during the Khrushchev Thaw who contributed significantly to both traditional and stop motion animation 1 Yevgeny MigunovYevgeny Migunov self portraitBornYevgeny Tikhonovich Migunov 1921 02 27 27 February 1921Moscow USSRDied1 January 2004 2004 01 01 aged 82 Moscow RussiaOccupation s Animator artist Contents 1 Early years 2 Animation 2 1 After the war 2 2 Khrushchev Thaw 3 Illustrator 4 Last years and death 5 Filmography 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEarly years editYevgeny and his sister Nina were born in Moscow into a family of Tikhon Grigorievich Migunov a low ranking official in one of the ministries and Maria Konstantinovna Migunova Yevgeny was diagnosed with cerebral palsy of his left leg and remained lame throughout his life hiding it and compensating by various activities His mother blamed obstetrician for hitting the nerve Following her sudden death in 1928 Tikhon Migunov married her sister Zinaida 2 3 4 In 1928 Migunov graduated from the P N Lepeshinsky Experimental School Commune and spent a year at the art school In 1939 he entered the newly founded Art Faculty at VGIK as one of the four students of the first official Russian animation workshop headed by Ivan Ivanov Vano 4 5 6 Besides Ivanov Vano his teachers were Fyodor Bogorodsky and Fyodor Konstantinov He had a hard time following the programme and learned art by studying paintings by classical Russian artists He also learned a lot from his classmate close friend and future collaborator Anatoly Sazonov who came from an artistic family and whose talent he highly regarded Migunov gained money by drawing miniatures for the Novodevichy Convent Museum 3 With the start of the Great Patriotic War in 1941 he joined the volunteer corps of the 38th rifle regiment of the 13th Rostokino division along with the fellow students hiding his disability 2 He was awarded the 2nd Class Order of the Patriotic War in 1987 7 In Autumn they returned to VGIK but with the start of the Battle of Moscow it was evacuated to Alma Ata along with Mosfilm and Lenfilm They continued the studies conducted art exhibitions and developed cartoons In 1943 Migunov defended his diploma a Let s Laugh storyboard based on his own original screenplay in verse The commission was headed by Sergei Eisenstein 5 8 Animation editAfter the war edit On September 1943 VGIK returned to Moscow Same year Migunov and his classmates joined Soyuzmultfilm and finished their first cartoon Stolen Sun considered lost today In 1945 Migunov and Sazonov worked as art directors on the first traditionally animated Soviet feature The Lost Letter by the Brumberg sisters In 1946 they helped Mstislav Paschenko to restore The Song of Happiness short from scratch 5 It became the first Soyuzmultfilm work to receive an international award a bronze medal for the best animated film and a special award For Humaneness at the 8th Venice International Film Festival 9 Migunov also developed educational and methodological programme for animation courses under Soyuzmultfilm and taught character design The 1948 release of the short comedy film Champion with art direction by Migunov was the first ever cartoon where oil paints were used for backgrounds 1 It also marked the start of the cold war anti Disney campaign being accused of formalism and anthropomorphism Migunov vindictively drew his next film Polkan and Shavka as realistic as possible and to his surprise it became a golden standard for the next ten years 10 In 1951 the short When New Year Trees Light Up directed by Paschenko with art direction by Migunov was chosen as the best children s movie at the 7th Karlovy Vary International Film Festival it competed against feature motion pictures 1 11 Following years Migunov turned into one of the leading innovators at Soyuzmultfilm Khrushchev Thaw edit In 1953 a puppet division was relaunched at Soyuzmultfilm Next year Migunov made his directorial debut with the first post war stop motion animated film Karandash and Klyaksa Merry Hunters inspired by the popular Russian clown Karandash and his dog He basically reinvented the whole production process by designing a device for shooting in statics with a horizontally moving camera and attachable ball jointed dolls He also suggested to use latex for puppet faces Together with the mechanic Semyon Etlis they organized technical base constructed and patented all devices which have been used by directors ever since 10 12 Migunov also wrote the screenplay and did the singing part since Mikhail Rumyantsev Karandash claimed he had no ear for music The film turned very successful and a sequel was in plans when Rumyantsev suddenly filled a complain letter claiming he wasn t attached to do the voiceover Migunov then left puppet animation 12 In 1957 he directed a traditionally animated short Familiar Pictures based on the sketches by a stand up comedian Arkady Raikin who also made an appearance It became the first radical shift from realistic animation towards magazine caricatures due to Raikin s satire which didn t fit the art direction of that time It wasn t long until other animators followed the example developing their own distinctive styles 10 Among Migunov s unreleased projects was the first Soviet satirical animated anthology series Dyatel Woodpecker where he implemented cutout animation split screen and other experimental techniques it later served as a bases for Fitil and Happy Merry Go Round The screenplay for World World World was approved in 1959 but also didn t air According to the film historian Georgy Borodin it was a principally new approach to auteur animation tried only years later 4 13 By 1960 his relationship with the studio management escalated His last project based on two poems by Vladimir Mayakovsky led to a scandal it was presented as a storyboard with the director s screenplay written in the margins which was against the rules Migunov lost his temper and was immediately fired from Soyuzmultfilm 10 Illustrator edit nbsp Misha holding a torch on a stamp After Migunov left animation he focused on art and illustrations He produced filmstrips for the Diafilm studio drew cartoons and caricatures for the Krokodil satirical magazine as well as children s magazines Murzilka Merry Pictures ru Pioneer and newspapers such as Vechernyaya Moskva Pravda and Literaturnaya Gazeta 4 14 He also spent many years working at the Detskaya Literatura publishing house illustrating children s books and fantasy novels He used his animation experience to create a distinctive motion blur effect in his works Among his major achievements are illustrations to Strugatsky Brothers Monday Begins on Saturday and The Tale of the Troika Aleksandr Volkov s Emerald City novels Yevgeny Veltistov s Electronic A Boy From a Suitcase and most famously Kir Bulychov s Alisa Selezneva series Their collaboration lasted for almost 40 years Migunov was even credited with several ideas for Bulychov s novels 4 In 1980 Roman Kachanov invited him to work as an art director on The Mystery of the Third Planet an adaptation of Alisa Selezneva s adventures but Migunov rejected and later claimed that some of the cartoon characters were copies of his illustrations 15 16 Yevgeny was also among the designers of Misha the Russian Bear mascot of the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow After Victor Chizhikov finished the main sketch Migunov prepared 21 series of images for artists designers and advertisers They utilized many different artistic techniques and featured Misha greeting guests holding the Olympic torch and taking part in various sport disciplines 17 Last years and death editSince 1997 Migunov had been working on Kir Bulychov s collection of works He prepared hundreds of illustrations and sketches yet the project resulted in two thin books and many drawings were left unpublished In 1999 he survived a stroke and lost ability to draw but remained in control of the coloring process 4 He also left many notebooks with memoirs about his youth the people he had encountered theoretical notes and essays on art and animation 18 He called them his major life accomplishment and expressed hope that they wouldn t be lost To this day they ve been only partly published by several film related magazines and blogs 13 15 Yevgeny Migunov died on 1 January 2004 and was buried at the Miusskoe Cemetery in Moscow 19 He was survived by his wife Nina Romanovna Karavaeva married since 1945 also an animator at Soyuzmultfilm who left the studio along with him and her daughter from the first marriage Elena Nikolaevna Zarubina 12 20 Filmography editActress 1942 opening sequence uncredited 8 Stolen Sun 1943 art director The Lost Letter 1945 art director Winter Tale 1945 art director The Song of Happiness 1946 art director Merry Garden 1947 art director Quartet 1947 art director Champion 1948 art director An Elephant and an Ant 1948 art director Polkan and Shavka 1949 art director Mister Wolk 1949 consultant uncredited 15 When New Year Trees Light Up 1950 A Grandpa and a Grandsonny 1950 art director Who s First 1950 art director Forest Adventurers 1951 art director Magic Shop 1953 art director Karandash and Klyaksa Merry Hunters 1954 director art director screenwriter voice A Pipe and a Bear 1955 art director What Kind of Bird Is This 1955 director art director songwriter Familiar Pictures 1957 director art director To the 6th World Festival 1957 director art director screenwriter A Song About Friendship 1957 art director Poem of the Sea 1958 director art director animated sequences Exactly at Three Fifteen 1959 director art director screenwriter Oversalted 1959 screenwriter World World World 1959 screenwriter unfinished S Marshak 1960 director animated sequences See also editHistory of Russian animationReferences edit a b c Sergei Kapkov 2006 Encyclopedia of Domestic Animation pp 434 436 a b Yevgeny Migunov Georgy Borodin 1941 Volunteer Corps Odyssey memoirs at the Krokodil community published in the Kinograph magazine 18 May 2007 in Russian a b Yevgeny Migunov Georgy Borodin About a propos and relating to VGIK 1939 and other years memoirs at the Notes by Film Historian magazine 68 2004 p 324 ISSN 0235 8212 in Russian a b c d e f Andrei Scherbakov Zhukov Migunov who was capable of everything article from Novaya Gazeta 3 March 2011 in Russian a b c Ivan Ivanov Vano 1980 Frame by Frame Moscow Iskusstvo pp 113 134 The Art Faculty at the official VGIK website Migunov Yevgeny Tikhonovich at the People s Deed database in Russian a b Yevgeny Migunov Georgy Borodin About apropos and relating to Alma Ata College years 1941 1943 memoirs at the Notes by Film Historian magazine 62 2003 p 276 ISSN 0235 8212 in Russian Sergei Asenin 2012 The World of Animation Moscow Print on Demand p 49 ISBN 978 5 458 30516 7 a b c d The Stars of Russian Animation Film 4 Eugene Migunov by Irina Margolina and Eduard Nazarov 2012 in Russian Irina Margolina Natalia Lozinskaya 2006 Our Animation Moscow Interros p 88 ISBN 5 91105 007 2 a b c Yevgeny Migunov Georgy Borodin The work in puppet animation memoirs at the Notes by Film Historian magazine 73 2005 p 310 ISSN 0235 8212 in Russian a b Georgy Borodin Yevgeny Tikhonovich Migunov 1921 2004 article at Animator ru in Russian Diafilms by Yevgeny Migunov at the National Children s Digital Library in Russian a b c Yevgeny Migunov About and about memoirs at the Notes by Film Historian magazine 56 2002 p 305 ISSN 0235 8212 in Russian D Andreev Interview with Yevgeny Migunov from the Volga Region Railwayman newspaper 20 December 1989 p 4 at the History of Fandom website in Russian Georgy Borodin Olympics at animascreen Mishas of Yevgeny Migunov article at Animalife ru 13 February 2014 in Russian Georgy Borodin Andrei Scherbakov Zhukov Notes by perjurer article from Novaya Gazeta 3 March 2011 in Russian Evgeniy Migunov s tomb Obituary at Animator ru 23 October 2005 in Russian External links editYevgeniy Migunov at IMDb Yevgeny Migunov at Animator ru Books illustrated by Yevgeny Migunov 1950 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yevgeniy Migunov amp oldid 1177157906, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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