Trnka, Jiří

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'''Jiří Trnka''' (February 24, 1912 Plzeň - December 30, 1969 Prague) was [[Czech Republic|Czech]] [[puppet]] maker, [[illustrator]], motion-picture [[animator]] and film director, renowned for his puppet animations.
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{{epname|Trnka, Jiří}}
He graduated from [[Prague School of Arts and Crafts]].
 
He created a puppet theater in 1936. This group was dissolved when [[World War II]] began, and he instead designed stage sets and illustrated books for children throughout the war.
 
After the war ended, Trnka established an animation unit at the Prague film studio.
 
Trnka soon became internationally recognized as the world's greatest puppet animator in the traditional Czech method, and he won several [[film festival]] awards. One animator called him "the [[Walt Disney]] of the East". He won an award at the [[Cannes Festival]] in 1946, just one year after he began working in film. His films were mostly made for an adult audience. Beginning in 1948, the [[communist]] Czech government began to subsidize his work, although this did not seem to affect the message or style of his work. He also created animated cartoons. He wrote the scripts for most of his own films. He died of heart trouble in 1969.
 
  
==Life==
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[[category:image wanted]]
Trnka grew up in a family that produced toys
 
Český výtvarník a režisér animovaných filmů, ilustrátor, malíř a sochař. Jiří Trnka je spolu s H. Týrlovou a K. Zemanem tvůrce českého animovaného filmu. Vyrostl v rodině, kde se podomácku vyráběly hračky. V roce 1923 se seznámil s J. Skupou a začal hrát loutkové divadlo. V letech 1929-35 studoval u Jaroslava Bendy na Uměleckoprůmyslové škole v Praze. Téměř rok provozoval vlastní loutkové Dřevěné divadlo v sále Rokoka na Václavském náměstí (1936-37). V roce 1937 se poprvé setkal s loutkovým filmem, když pro režiséra reklamních filmů Karla Dodala vyrobil loutku Hurvínka. Událostí roku 1939 se na knižním trhu staly jeho ilustrace k pohádkové knize Míša Kulička. V témže roce zahájil scénografickou spolupráci s Osvobozeným divadlem (Nebe na zemi) a Národním divadlem v Praze, kde vyhrál soutěž na výpravu Smetanovy Libuše. Začátkem války začala jeho dlouholetá spolupráce s režisérem J. Frejkou (Shakespeare: Zimní pohádka a další inscenace, Plautus: Lišák Pseudolus, Klicpera: Zlý jelen). Za války se Trnka stal spolu s Adolfem Zábranským tvůrcem nového ilustračního typu pro děti, vedle dalších v roce 1941 ilustroval Karafiátovy Broučky a zároveň začala jeho dlouholetá spolupráce s Františkem Hrubínem (Říkejte si se mnou až po soubor Špalíček). Uprostřed okupace namaloval obrazový triptych Český Betlém (1943), v němž vyjádřil svou představu krásy, pokoje a míru. V roce 1945 spolu s mladými výtvarníky založil studio kresleného filmu Bratři v triku a na příštích 20 let se upsal filmu. Po reakci na válku (Pérák a SS) byl podle jeho námětu i uměleckého
 
návrhu natočen první výtvarným názorem český kreslený film Zasadil dědek řepu. V té době začala Trnkova spolupráce se scenáristou Jiřím Brdečkou. V roce 1946 založil studio loutkového filmu, kam za ním přešli i jeho budoucí hlavní spolupracovníci Karel Látal a Břetislav Pojar. V roce 1947 natočil básnickou loutkovou suitu Špalíček, která se spolu s hudbou Václava Trojana stala vystižením národní představy o životě, štěstí, pokoji a práci. V roce 1948 natočil svůj první celovečerní loutkový film Císařův slavík. V roce 1950 po třech krátkých filmech Román s basou, Árie prérie a Čertův mlýn usiloval se svými animátory v pohádce Bajaja o skutečné loutkoherectví. Po pohádce O zlaté rybce s vtipným komentářem v podání Jana Wericha dokončil v roce 1952 Staré pověsti české, v nichž v dokonalé syntéze hereckého slova, hudby, děje a stylizovaných stroze modelovaných loutek vystihl monumentalitu a velebnost starých mýtů. V roce 1954 pracoval na krátkých filmech podle Haškových Osudů dobrého vojáka Švejka s komentářem Jana Wericha. Po realizaci ploškového filmu Dva mrazíci se od roku 1956 věnoval knižní ilustraci (Pohádky tisíce a jedné noci, Andersenovy Pohádky), jež v jeho pojetí dostala rysy bohatosti a výpravnosti. Podílel se v té době i na přípravě české expozice Expo 58 v Bruselu. V roce 1958 se vrátil k loutkovému filmu a pracoval na animátorsky náročné verzi Shakespearova Snu noci svatojanské. V roce 1961 opět ilustroval (Pohádky bratří Grimmů, Staré pověsti české). V roce 1964 natočil renesančně rozmarný film Archanděl Gabriel a Paní Husa a o rok později vyvrcholila myšlenkově závažným loutkovým filmem Ruka jeho řada filosofických snímků Vášeň a Kybernetická babička, jíž varuje před manipulací člověka stroji. V posledních letech života se kromě práce pro Expo 67 v Montrealu věnoval malbě a sochařské tvorbě, ale znovu i knižní ilustraci (Werichovo Fimfárum) a sám napsal a ilustroval půvabnou knížku Zahrada (1962), která byla i zfilmována. Je nositelem asi 50 ocenění z výstav, soutěží a filmových i výtvarných přehlídek. Trnkův přínos spočívá v osvobození českého, ale i světového kresleného a loutkového filmu z amerického vlivu a v prosazení velké výtvarné náročnosti a v poetickém ladění. Na jeho práci pak osobitě navazovali jeho dlouholetý spolupracovník Stanislav Látal, Václav Bedřich, Adolf Born, Zdeněk Smetana a celá řada dalších. V roce 1967 byl jmenován profesorem Vysoké školy uměleckoprůmyslové, ale nemoc mu ztěžovala a nakonec i znemožnila uměleckou práci. (Jan Pömerl)
 
  
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'''Jiří Trnka''' (February 24, 1912 Plzeň – December 30, 1969 Prague) was a [[Czech Republic|Czech]] puppet maker, illustrator, motion-picture animator and film director, renowned for his puppet animations.
  
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Trnka graduated from the Academy of Arts, Architecture and Design in [[Prague]]. He created a puppet theater in 1936, which was dissolved at the outbreak of [[World War II]]. He then immersed himself into stage design and illustration of books for children. After the war ended, he established an animation unit at the Prague film studio and soon became internationally recognized as the world's greatest puppet animator using the traditional Czech method, and won several film festival awards. The award at the [[Cannes Film Festival]] in 1946 came merely one year after his entry into the world of motion picture.
  
Narodil se roku 1912 v Plzni, kde prožil své dětství. Z Plzně vedla Trnkova životní cesta nejen relativně záhy do Prahy, ale vlastně do celého světa, kde byl znám a oceňován jako autor animovaných, kreslených a loutkových filmů. Obdržel za ně řadu uznání a prestižních cen např. Moliérovu cenu nebo Cenu H. Ch. Andersena aj. K nejznámějším filmům patří: Bajaja, Zvířátka a Petrovští, Císařův slavík, Arie prérie, Špalíček, Staré pověsti české, Osudy dobrého vojáka Švejka a četné jiné, vždyť jich bylo na tři desítky. Jiří Trnka vystudoval pražskou Uměleckoprůmyslovou školu se zaměřením na užitou grafiku. Byl však doslova z rodu výtvarných všeumělů – vynikající kreslíř, grafik, ilustrátor, malíř i sochař, scénograf, navrhoval hračky. Svými knižními ilustracemi si získal uznání snad všech generací. Děti těšil obrázky třeba k Broučkům, veršům, pohádkám a říkankám Fr. Hrubína, k pohádkám bratří Grimmů či H. Ch. Andersena. Trochu odrostlejším neotřelým způsobem přiblížil Staré pověsti české a další tituly. Pohádky měl moc rád, byl totiž obdařen osobitým obrazným viděním světa. Nepostrádal rovněž smysl pro krásný laskavý humor, který dokázal uplatnit v celé své tvorbě. Také neotřelá poetičnost a hluboká lidskost opřená o obecné morální hodnoty byla trvale všudypřítomná v celém Trnkově díle. Patřil však k pozoruhodným osobnostem i po fyzické stránce. Mohutný, sporý, s charakteristicky utvářenou hlavou. Prý toho nikdy moc nenamluvil, spíše pečlivě vážil slova. Měl rád děti, své i ostatní, jim ostatně věnoval značnou část své tvorby. Jiří Trnka zemřel 30. prosince 1969 v Praze, ještě ne šedesátiletý. http://osobnosti.unas.cz/#Ji%F8%ED%20Trnka
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He was dubbed "the Walt Disney of the East" <ref>Edgar Dutka, July 2000, "Jiri Trnka - Walt Disney Of The East!" ''Animation World Magazine''  [http://www.awn.com/mag/issue5.04/5.04pages/dutkatrnka.php3]. Retrieved January 29, 2008. </ref>, although what he essentially did was substitute depth for lack of it, and performed mastery of technique for superficialism. Most of his motion pictures targeted the adult audience, although he loved children and illustrated numerous books for them.  
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==Walt Disney of the East==
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After the [[Communism|Communist]] takeover of Czechoslovakia in 1948, he not only found a way to live and create art in the country that repressed anything that merely hinted at subversion and ran against the official doctrines, but also secured funding and was even granted a state funeral with honors. This remarkable symbiosis with the Communist government was only possible because of the medium he embraced &ndash; puppets were deemed too innocent to undermine the ideology, and because of the universal values epitomized by his art, which even Communists found hard to suppress.
After he saw Trnka's wide screen puppet feature film ''The Midsummer Night's Dream'' at the Cannes Film Festival in 1959, English journalist labeled Trnka "Walt Disney Of The East". This is viewed by some as an exaggeration, citing the differences between the two great artists such as [[Disney]]'s focus on the children or family audience, while most of Trnka's films targeted the adult audience.  
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Trnka's works carried sublte story lines expressing the struggles of life under a [[Communism|communist]] regime, bringing a voice and method of release to his fellows. Much of this subtility passed by the oppressors unnoticed, however, when he went too far and introduced a religious component or an obvious theme that the Communists thought would encourage open-minded and out-of-the-box views and thus jeopardize the political system, he was quickly set back. Surely Trnka must have known that he was inviting trouble, yet he continued. He would not be passive or compliant.  
  
Trnka arrived to the first post-war [[Cannes Festival]] in 1946 with his three cartoons (his filmmaking career had only begun on May 29, 1945, when a group of young animators asked the famous book illustrator to become their boss). Despite the fact that his fairytale cartoon ''[[The Robbers and the Animals]]'' won the festival, another film that was entered, ''[[The Present]]'',was of more importance to Trnka's work. ''The Present'', written by J. Brdecka, was a cartoon for adults — a satire with Trnka's very own individual art design and a non-Disney way of storytelling. This film was completely misunderstood until Stephen Bosustow congratulated Trnka on it three years later. It was a visible step that divided post-war animation into two groups: the productions of big studios (classics) and films that were modern expressions, created in form and content by strong, individual personalities.
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Jiří Trnka died of [[heart]] illness in 1969.
  
==Puppets Come Alive==
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==Life==
Trnka's preference was for puppets, whom he loved and elevated above all other kinds of art.
 
  
''The Czech Year'' (''Spalicek'', which refers to illustrated folk songbooks and also a piece of wood) is a very significant work for Trnka's career. Asked twenty years later which of his films he liked the most, he answered ''The Czech Year''. This was not an answer of a patriot, although the film is a cycle of six parts illustrating the old Czech folk customs around the year. When he started working on it in 1946, Christmas was drawing in, so he opened with "The Bethlehem" sequence, which was inspired by his own painting. The screening of this first portion of the film met with great success and led to the cycle's expansion to six parts. ''The Czech Year'', his first puppet feature film, was internationally acclaimed for the beautiful, brilliant animation of unpretentious and unembellished wooden puppets and music inspired by Czech folk songs.
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The stop-motion puppet animator, graphic designer, illustrator, painter, sculptor, stage and theater designer, and toy designer Jiří Trnka is, together with H. Týrlová and K. Zeman, the founder of the Czech animated film. Universally accepted values laced with kind humor were a significant component of his works, which combine the traditional with the modern. As a private person he never said much; he weighed every word. Children, his and the others, were the love of his life. He was an excellent reader of the human character and knew how to attract famous people. His physique was almost remarkable - a robust, stocky man with a uniquely sculpted head.  
  
Trnka took on modern issues in the film ''Cybernetic Grandma''.
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Trnka came from a lineage of diversified artists. At the age of eleven, Trnka began studying drawing under puppeteer [[Josef Skupa]] in Pilsen (Plzeň) and started giving puppet performances. Between 1929 and 1935, he studied at the Prague-based Umělecko-průmyslová škola (now Academy of Arts, Architecture and Design), majoring in applied graphics. For almost a year he ran his own puppet show, "Wooden Theater" (Dřevěné divadlo), at the Rokoko theater in Prague.
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In 1939 he grabbed the attention of the publishing world with his illustrations of the children's book ''Míša Kulička'' (''Mickey the Ball''). In the same year, the National Theater in Prague (Národní divadlo) selected his bid for [[Smetana,Bedřich|Smetana's]] opera ''Libuše,'' and he started collaboration with [[Osvobozené divadlo]], where he likewise designed and produced stage props and costumes.  
  
''The Hand'' was Trnka's last, and some say greatest, film. An artist, happy in his life, devotes his time making a pot for his favorite flower. But a giant hand appears and orders him to create a statue of a hand instead. He resists at first, but the hand is all powerful and he is forced to submit, at the cost of his liberty and ultimately his life. This darkly humorous allegory on totalitarianism, which won the top prize at the Annecy International Animation Festival, was banned in Communist Czechoslovakia.
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The early years of World War II Trnka spent working with director J. Frejka on the productions by [[William Shakespeare]], [[Plautus]], and Klicpera. Along with Adolf Zábranský, he invented a new type of illustration for children, and it was around this period that he started illustrating books of novelist and children's writer František Hrubín. In the middle of the war years, he produced the painting "Czech Bethlehem" as an expression of beauty, calm and peace.
  
''Story of the Bass Cello'' is based on [[Chekhov]]'s story about a bass player whose clothes are stolen while he's bathing in a river. When he happens upon a beautiful maiden in the same predicament, he hides her in the case of his large double-bass.
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In 1945, along with other animators, he founded the animated film studio ''Bratři v triku,'' and the film became his creative medium for the next twenty years. In 1946 he founded the puppet film studio that was later renamed Studio Jiřího Trnky. In 1946 his animated film ''The Animals and the Robbers'' won an award at the [[Cannes Film Festival]]. Two years later, an offer came from the United States to teach film animation in university, but he declined with these words: "I cannot make little cowboys; I know how to make Czech peasants, and nobody in America is interested in those. I am local."<ref>Red, Oct. 19, 2005 "Trnka" What is What", ''Encyklopedoe CoJeCo'' [http://www.cojeco.cz/index.php?detail=1&s_lang=2&id_desc=99263&title=Trnka]</ref>
  
''Merry Circus'' is neither a puppet film nor a cartoon, but an entirely unique means of expression and technique. Made from stop action photography of paper cutouts, the movement in this film, whether it's juggling seals or acrobats flying through the air, is magical.
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From 1956 on, he illustrated numerous children's books. The last years of his life were devoted to painting, sculptures, and book illustrations. In 1967 he was appointed professor of his Alma Mater, but failing health made it difficult and, eventually, impossible to work. He died in Prague at the age of 57.
  
Trnka Documentary
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Trnka's films were frequently first recognized outside Czechoslovakia. Trnka attributed this to the fact that in Czechoslovakia, his poeticism and perhaps naiveté was a common fare, whereas the West was inundated by somewhat tougher production. Moreover, he never thought that the fame came simply because of the puppets; what was being said was what mattered, not just the motion and attractiveness of the puppets.
  
This brief documentary offers a glimpse of Trnka’s genius. Includes clips of him working on his puppets and excerpts from such films as Grandpa Planted a Beet, The Czech Year, Prince Bayaya and The Good Soldier Schweik.
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[[Jan Werich]] was once visiting Trnka's studio and, without Trnka being aware of it, observed him painting the backdrop on glass planes. Werich thought he was dreaming, so he came over and asked, "Excuse me, are you painting with both hands?" Trnka responded, "Well, not always, but those morons are not around and we are running out of time (on the children's movie project)." <ref> Martina Lustigová, Aug. 10, 2006 "Jiří Trnka Could Paint with Left and Right Hand Simultaneously" ''Czech Radio'' [http://www.radio.cz/cz/clanek/82021]</ref>
  
''A Drop Too Much'' is a tragic tale of a motorcyclist who, happily on his way to meet his fiancee, stops at a tavern with disastrous consequences. Trnka was the art director on this early warning against drunk driving.
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==Walt Disney of the East==
  
''Song of the Prairie''Another Trnka masterpiece, a parody of the wild American West, where the pistol rules the roost, timidity has no place, and love blossoms at first sight.
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Trnka arrived at the first post-war [[Cannes Festival]] in 1946 with his three cartoons (his filmmaking career had only begun on May 29, 1945, when a group of young animators asked the famous book illustrator to become their boss). Although ''The Robbers and the Animals'' won the award, another film which was entered, ''The Present,'' was of more importance to Trnka's work. ''The Present'' was a cartoon for adults, a satire with Trnka's very own individual art design and a non-[[Walt Disney|Disney]] way of storytelling. It was completely misunderstood until Stephen Bosustow congratulated Trnka on it three years later. It was a visible step that divided post-war animation into two groups: the productions of big studios (classics) and films that were modern expressions, created in form and content by strong, individual personalities. Trnka liberated the Czech, and world, animated and puppet films from American influences and brought in a complexity of animation and poetry. His long-term fellow artists Stanislav Látal, Václav Bedřich, Adolf Born, and Zdeněk Smetana continued in his footsteps.
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Emperor's Nightingale''This English version, featuring a narration by Boris Karloff, has been digitally remastered. It is a puppet animation classic based on the Hans Christian Anderson story about how the song of a simple nightingale teaches an Emperor to revolt against the rigid protocol of his glittering but shallow world. When released recently on home video, the Washington Post called it "a lost classic happily found again" and Wired magazine "one of the most stunningly beautiful animated films ever released" and "a masterpiece of filmmaking and a production that elevates the art form to new heights." http://www.rembrandtfilms.com/jiritrnka.htm
 
  
==Symbiosis with Communist Censorship==
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After seeing Trnka's wide screen puppet feature film ''The Midsummer Night's Dream'' at the Cannes Film Festival in 1959, an English journalist labeled Trnka the "Walt Disney Of The East". This is viewed by some as exaggeration, citing the differences between the two great artists, such as Disney's focus on the children or family audience, while most of Trnka's films targeted the adult audience.
With the February 25, 1948, takeover of the post-war Czechoslovakia by the Communist Party, which gradually prompted many artists and famous personalities into exile, Trnka found himself not only unrestrained in his creative genius but also subsidized, for even the Communists enjoyed his work. They took the puppet stories to be meant for children; therefore, they did not censor or blacklist  them. However, two parts of the film ''Spring'', with a procession of Christians, and ''The Legend of St. Prokop'' were banned on grounds of religious propaganda until the late 1980s. When Trnka finished the national fairytale ''Bajaja'' in 1950, he was greatly honoured by the regime. But when he wanted to adapt ''Don Quijote'' in 1951, his project was banned by the Government as too cosmopolitan.  
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In 1966, four years before his death, ''Newsday'' lauded him as "second to [[Charlie Chaplin|Chaplin]] as a film artist because his work inaugurated a new stage in a medium long dominated by Disney." <ref> ''PBS Official Website'' "Czech Animators" [http://www.pbs.org/independentlens/animateddogs/animation2.html].Retrieved January 29, 2008. </ref>
  
There always existed two sides to the Government's "generous" hand. Instead of Don Quijote,he was pressed to create historic myths in The Old Czech Legends(1952). Trnka didn't want to. He'd rather have quit working at the studio and gone back to illustrating children's book, but in solitude he found the clue to this theme. There are strong and brilliant scenes in the film, great character animation and superb music, more in the way of Janacek than Smetana. Trnka became a real filmmaker with this film but he was right: such a theme had a very limited audience. Even Czechs did not appreciate a filmed version of the history that they had to learn at school.
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==Puppets Come Alive==
  
Jiri Trnka — Walt Disney Of The East!
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Trnka preferred puppets, whom he loved and elevated above all other kinds of art. ''The Czech Year'' (''Spalicek''), which refers to illustrated folk songbooks and also a piece of wood) is a very significant piece in Trnka's career. It was his first puppet feature film; when asked 20 years later which of his films he liked the most, he named this one. This was not simply an answer due to patriotism, although the six-part cycle illustrates the old Czech folk customs around the year. When he started working on it in 1946, Christmas was drawing in, so he opened with "The Bethlehem" sequence, which was inspired by his own painting. The screening of this first portion of the film was so successful that the cycle expanded to six parts. ''The Czech Year'' was internationally acclaimed for the beautiful, brilliant animation of unpretentious and unembellished wooden puppets and music inspired by Czech folk songs.
(continued from page 1)
 
Several of Trnka's films were banned for religeous images like this one in The Archangel Gabriel and Lady Goose. © Kratky Film Praha.
 
Trnka at work on Good Soldier Shweik. © Kratky Film Praha.
 
  
After this limited success, he did three short adaptations of Hasek's famous classic The Good Soldier Sweik(1954) which made Trnka loved by the whole nation at last. But he was still looking for an internationally known classic story where he could speak to the audience using his art. He was a kind of Renaissance man unfortunately born in the wrong time and wrong country. But in 1955 he started and in 1959 he finished his masterpiece, the wide screen puppet feature film The Midsummer Night's Dreamand — it failed. Both abroad and at home too. Even — or because — this adaptation of Shakespeare contains Trnka's entire opinions and esthetic notions about a puppet film. The elements he used were: an internationally known story, a carefully prepared screenplay (co-writer J. Brdecka), perfect characters and brilliant puppet animation, not too much dialogue and only a few lines of narration from time to time. Trnka never allowed lip-synch, he thought it was barbaric for puppets-sculptures-subjects of art to be treated in this manner. Music was always preferred to the spoken word. He often discussed his projects with the composer (V.Trojan) before he beginning work on a screenplay. When the musical score was composed before the animation and he liked it — he would even change his animation arrangement to fit the music. I think it is obvious why his Dreamfailed by most of journalists abroad and by ordinary adult audience too: they felt themselves lost in the picturesque but intricate story. I'm afraid they were not prepared for it. Trnka was strongly criticized at home as creating l'art pour l'art (art for art's sake) and loosing touch with the working class. Let's see the film today! Not on TV but on the wide screen at the cinema as it was intended and created by its creator to be. Trnka shot the film with two parallel cameras (classic and wide screen format which was a novelty at that time) because he did not believe in "compositions seen through a mailbox slot." Thus he created gorgeous work.
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''The Hand'' was Trnka's last, and some say the greatest, film. An unforgiving political allegory, different in content and form, it strictly follows the story outline without developing lyrical detail. In the film, an artist, happy with his life, is making a pot for his favorite plant, when a giant hand appears and orders him to create a statue of a hand, not allowing him to make anything else. Resistance and disobedience take him to prison, where he is forced to give in, at the cost of his freedom and ultimately his life. The same hand organizes the artist's state funeral, where all artists are honored. This darkly humorous allegory on [[Totalitarianism|totalitarianism]], which won the top prize at the Annecy International Animation Festival, was banned in the Communist Czechoslovakia. When it was released, they dismissed it as a criticism of the personality cult ([[Josef Stalin]]), but the general public recognized the alarming allegory of human existence in a totalitarian society.  
  
A reception of The Dreamwas a great disappointment for Trnka, he worked for years on it. Days and nights were spent in shooting, with everybody sleeping in the studio. It cost him his health but he was a strong man and a workaholic. He went back to his book illustrating, painting and sculpture but in the next few years he made another four short puppet films: The Passion(1961), The Cybernetic Grandma(1962), The Archangel Gabriel and Lady Goose after Boccacio(1964) and the classic The Hand (1965).
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This was the first time that Trnka openly expressed what he thought about his own inhumane totalitarian society. ''The Hand'' was one of the first films that helped usher in the [[Prague Spring]]. Oddly, it predicted Trnka's own death. When he died in November 1969, he was awarded a state funeral with honors. Only four months after his death, ''The Hand'' was blacklisted, all copies were confiscated by the secret police, and there was no screening for the next 20 years. This was how much the Communist government felt intimidated by the seventeen-minute puppet film.  
The Artist from The Hand. © Kratky Film Praha.
 
Watch a clip from The Hand and witness why Trnka is the master. © Rembrandt Films. All Rights Reserved.
 
  
The Hand
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Trnka took on modern issues in the film ''Cybernetic Grandma.''
The last of Trnka's films, The Hand, was an unexpected and surprising break in his work thus far. It was something completely new in content and form. The Handis a merciless political allegory, which strictly follows story outline without developing lyrical details as usual; it had a strong dramatic arc with deep catharsisin the end. Trnka had used a combination of his typical funny-foolish but undefeated, ordinary man puppet as the protagonist and a live-action human hand (naked or in gloves) as the despotic antagonist. When The Handwas released it was officially declared as Trnka's criticism of the Cult of Personality (Stalin), but for all people, it was an alarming allegory of human existence in a totalitarian society. The film had the strong up-to-date story about the Artist and the omnipresent Hand, which only allowed the Artist to make sculptures of the Hand and nothing else. The Artist was sent to a prison for his disobedience and pressed to hew a huge sculpture of the Hand. When the omnipresent Hand caused the Artist's death, the same Hand organizes the artist's State funeral with all artists honoured. Trnka, for the first time, openly expressed his opinion about his own inhuman totalitarian society. The Handwas one of the first films that helped to open the short Prague's Spring. It is curious that Trnka predicted his own fate in it. When Jiri Trnka died in November 1969 (at only 57 years of age), he had a State funeral with honours. Only four months later, The Handwas banned; all copies were confiscated by the secret police, put in a safe and the film was forbidden for screening for next twenty years. A seventeen minute long puppet film intimidated the unlimited power of the Totalitarian State. In the 1970s and 80s, we already could find many such examples: films by Jan Svankmajer at the time. The importance of gifted and intelligent animation for an adult audience will never fade. I am sure if Trnka's film The Handwas seen by people in any totalitarian country today, it would help them to believe, as it helped us to believe: We shall overcome! And we did.
 
  
To learn more about Trnka's work, view clips from The Emperor's Nightingale and One Drop Too Many.
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''Story of the Bass Cello'' is based on [[Anton Chekhov]]'s story about a bass player whose clothes are stolen while he is bathing in the river. When he spots a beautiful maiden in the same predicament, he hides her in the case of his large double-bass.
  
A collection of Trnka's world famous puppet films is available in a 3-tape collection at the AWN Store.
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''Merry Circus'' is neither a puppet film nor a cartoon; movement is simulated by paper cutouts.  
  
Edgar Dutka is a scriptwriter, animation historian and professor at The Academy of Performing Arts in Prague.
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''A Drop Too Much'' is a tragic tale of a motorcyclist who, on his way to meet his fiancée, stops at a tavern with disastrous consequences. This was a warning against drinking and driving.
http://www.awn.com/mag/issue5.04/5.04pages/dutkatrnka.php3
 
  
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''Song of the Prairie'' is a parody of the Wild West, where the pistol rules the roost, timidity has no place, and love blossoms at first sight.
  
Many people consider Jiri Trnka the greatest puppet animator the world has ever seen. This Czech master directed some of the most acclaimed animated films ever made. He continues to astound audiences, particularly those not familiar with his work. In 1966, four years before his death, Newsday lauded him as "second to Chaplin as a film artist because his work inaugurated a new stage in a medium long dominated by Disney."
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''Emperor's Nightingale'' is a puppet animation classic based on the story by [[Hans Christian Andersen]] featuring a nightingale who sings a song to the Emperor, emboldening him to revolt against the rigid protocol of his glittering yet shallow world. The ''Washington Post'' described it as "a lost classic happily found again" and the ''Wired'' magazine found it to be "one of the most stunningly beautiful animated films ever released" and "a masterpiece of filmmaking and a production that elevates the art form to new heights." <ref> "The Extraordinary Puppet Films of Jiri Trnka", ''Rembrandt Films Official Website''[http://www.rembrandtfilms.com/jiritrnka.htm].Retrieved January 29, 2008. </ref>
  
==Jiri Trnka Studio==
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Three short adaptations of [[Jaroslav Hašek]]'s famous classic ''The Good Soldier Schweik'' have won the heart of all Czechs, but he was still looking for an internationally reknown classic story where he could address the entire world through his art. Trnka was a [[Renaissance]] man, born with enormous talent in many different areas, but in the wrong time and the wrong place.
  
Along with his fellow animators, in 1946 he established a small studio of puppet films (renamed [[The Studio of Jiri Trnka]] where puppets would "move on the screen".  
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The wide screen puppet feature film ''The Midsummer Night's Dream,'' an adaptation of Shakespeare's play, voicing Trnka's opinions and estheticism of the puppet film, failed both at home and abroad. It was a universally known story with a carefully prepared screenplay (co-writer J. Brdečka), brilliant puppet animation with little dialogue and sporadic narration. Trnka never allowed lip-synch; he thought it was barbaric for puppets - as works of art - to be treated in this manner. Music was always preferred to the spoken word. He often discussed his projects with the composer V. Trojan, before he began working on the screenplay. When the musical score was composed ahead of the animation and he liked it, he would change the animation arrangement to fit the music.  
Jiri Trnka founded the studio in 1947. Like the artist, whose work has been labeled "active dreaming"  thanks to his combining of imagination and poetry with invention and realism, the studio's output is 
 
marked by creativity, superb animation techniques, and wisdom and moral values, both in commercial series production and the production of commercials. The Studio's focus is the Czech puppet film, namely the classic animated puppet films, which are rare and unique and are not shot almost anywhere else in the world.
 
  
Jiri Trnka Studio regularly receives awards from major film festivals in Germany, Canada, Japan and Croatia. Renowned for its tradition and experience, it has worked with all possible technologies employed in the production of animated film, including puppet animation, the studio's most heavily used production method, semi-plastic film, flat-surface film, pixilation (animation of objects), and the plasticine method. A combination of these technologies is also used, as well as electronic superimposition of animated inputs into live features, front and back projections, backgrounds for computer animation, etc. It handles all stages of the project from script-writing to distribution and merchandising.  
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The reception of ''The Midsummer Night's Dream'' was a great disappointment for Trnka; he had worked for years on it. Days and nights were spent shooting, with the crew sleeping in the studio. It cost him his health. Animation historian Edgar Dutka ascribes the fiasco to the picturesque yet intricate story, which was lost on the critics as well as audience. Trnka was strongly criticized at home for creating [[l'art pour l'art]] (Art for Art's Sake) and thus lost touch with the working class. He shot the film with two parallel cameras because he did not believe in "compositions seen through a mailbox slot."
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<ref>Edgar Dutka, July 2000, "Jiri Trnka - Walt Disney Of The East!" ''Animation World Magazine'' [http://www.awn.com/mag/issue5.04/5.04pages/dutkatrnka2.php3].Retrieved January 29, 2008. </ref>
  
http://www.kratkyfilm.com/catalogue/kf/studiojt.htm
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==Symbiosis with Communist Censorship==
  
==Style??==
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After the [[Communism|Communist]] takeover of post-war [[Czechoslovakia]] on February 25, 1948, which gradually prompted many artists and prominent figures into exile, Trnka found himself for the most part not only unrestrained in his creative genius but also subsidized, for even the Communists enjoyed his work. They thought the puppet stories were for children; therefore, they did not see any harm, and they did not censor or blacklist almost any of them. Only two parts of the film ''Spring'', featuring a Christian procession, and ''The Legend of St. Prokop'' were banned on grounds of [[Religion|religious]] propaganda until the late 1980s. When Trnka finished the national fairytale ''Bajaja'' in 1950, he was greatly honored by the regime.  
[[Jan Werich]] testified to Trnka's artistic genius, who was able to paint using both hands. Once Werich visited Trnka's studio and, unbenokwnst to Trnka, saw him painting the background?? on glass planes. Werich thought he was dreaming, so he came over and asked, "Excuse me, are you painting with both hands?" Said Trnka, "Well, not always, but those morons are not around and we are running out of time [children's movie project].
 
http://www.radio.cz/cz/clanek/82021
 
  
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On the other hand, when he wanted to adapt ''Don Quijote'' in 1951, the government barred the project, having found it too cosmopolitan. There always existed two sides to the government's 'generous' hand. Instead of ''Don Quijote'', he was pressed to create historic myths in ''The Old Czech Legends''. Trnka was not initially interested in doing this. He would have rather quit working at the studio and gone back to illustrating children's books, but he gave the theme a second thought and what ensued was a film with strong and brilliant scenes, great character animation, and superb music, more in the way of [[Leos Janacek]] than [[Bedřich Smetana]]. This project proved Trnka's filmmaker skills; however, he was right: such a topic had a very limited audience. Even Czechs did not appreciate a filmed version of the history which they had to learn at school.
  
In most cases, his films became first successful abroad. Trnka attributed this to the fact that in Czechoslovakia, the poeticism and perhaps naiveté found in his work was a common fare, whereas the West was inundated by somewhat tougher production. His films Ty filmy měly většinou úspěch až později, na začátek skoro nikdy, ani tady, ani snad v cizině. Vždycky to bylo rok, dva, tři, než si to lidi uvědomili a pak najednou se to začalo velice líbit a začali to chápat."
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==The Studio of Jiří Trnka==
A. J. Liehm: "Já bych se chtěl zeptat ještě na jednu věc. Vy jste mluvil o tom, že ten úspěch byl motivován rozdílem mezi tím, co je na Západě na trhu v dostatečném množství a tím, co tam schází. Ale já myslím, že tady hrála roli ještě jedna důležitá věc, to znamená, že se tady na plátně poprvé objevily loutky."
 
J. Trnka: "Jistě je to určitá zvláštnost a jistě je to taky k tomu úspěchu přispělo. U nás je to celkem dosti zvyklá věc a tradiční. Tak to u nás tak nepřekvapovalo, tam ano. Ovšem já jsem nikdy nevěřil, že by to bylo jenom těmi loutkami, ten úspěch. Velmi záleželo na to, co se říká. Nejenže to je atraktivní, že se to pohybuje."
 
http://www.radio.cz/cz/clanek/81813
 
  
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Along with fellow animators, Trnka in 1946 established a small puppet film studio (renamed The Studio of Jiří Trnka), where puppets would "move on the screen".<ref>Dutka, Edward, July 4, 2000 "Jiri Trnka — Walt Disney Of The East!" ''Animation World Magazine '' [http://www.awn.com/mag/issue5.04/5.04pages/dutkatrnka.php3]</ref>  Here "active dreaming" – a blending of imagination and poetry with invention and realism, occurred, resulting in the classic animated puppet films, rarely shot elsewhere in the world. Not only puppet films but also commercials produced here were marked by superb animation techniques, wisdom, and ubiquitous moral values. The Czech puppet film remains the studio's focus. All technologies of animated film, including stop-motion puppet animation, semi-plastic film, flat-surface film, pixilation (animation of objects), and the plasticine method are used. <ref> ''Jiri Trnka Studio Official Website'' [http://www.kratkyfilm.com/catalogue/kf/studiojt.htm]</ref>
  
http://www.radio.cz/cz/clanek/85414 (audio by trnka)
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==Selected Works==
  
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===Animated films===
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:*''An Old Man Sowed the Beet'' (''Zasadil dědek řepu'') (1945)
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:*''The Present'' (in or before 1946)
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:*''The Gift'' (''Dárek'') (1946)
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:*''The Spring Man and SS'' (''Pérák a SS'') (1946)
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:*''The Robbers and the Animals'' (''Zvířátka a petrovští'') (1946)
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:*''The Fox and the Pitcher'' (''Liška a džbán'') (1947)
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:*''The Golden Fish'' (''O zlaté rybce'') (1951)
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:*''A Good Old Man's Trading'' (''Jak stařeček měnil až vyměnil'') (1953)
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:*''Two Little Frosts'' (''Dva Mrazíci'') (1954)
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:*''Why UNESCO'' (''Proč UNESCO'') (1958)
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:*''The Bliss of Love'' (''Blaho lásky'') (1966)
  
Jiří Trnka (1912-1969)
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===Full-length puppet films===
Český výtvarník, ilustrátor, scénárista a režisér animovaných filmů. Jeden ze zakladatelů českého animovaného filmu, zakladatel studia 'Bratři v triku' (1945). Narodil se v Plzni. Zpočátku navrhoval a vytvářel kulisy pro divadlo J. Skupy v Plzni, v době druhé světové války se zapojil do pražského divadelního života návrhy scén a kostýmů. Jeho první kreslené filmy ('Zasadil dědek řepu', 'Zvířátka a Petrovští', 'Pérák a SS') zaujaly lyrickým líčením a poetickým výtvarným pojetím. Osobitou režijní koncepci rozvinul v loutkových filmech, v nichž volil snové a pohádkové náměty, které se staly východiskem k vyjádření poselství obecného i nadčasového významu ('Špalíček', 'Císařův slavík', 'Árie prérie', 'Román s basou', 'Bajaja', 'Staré pověsti české', 'Dva mrazíci', tři díly 'Osudů dobrého vojáka Švejka', 'Sen noci svatojanské', 'Kybernetická babička', 'Ruka', 'Archanděl Gabriel a paní Husa'). Ilustrátor dětských knih (J. Karafiát 'Broučci', J. Horák 'České pohádky'). V posledních letech života se kromě práce pro 'Expo 67' v Montrealu věnoval malbě a sochařské tvorbě, ale znovu i knižní ilustraci (Werichovo 'Fimfárum') a sám napsal a ilustroval půvabnou knížku, která byla i zfilmována. Je nositelem asi 50 ocenění z výstav, soutěží a filmových i výtvarných přehlídek. Trnkův přínos spočívá v osvobození českého, ale i světového kresleného a loutkového filmu z amerického vlivu a v prosazení velké výtvarné náročnosti a v poetickém ladění. Na jeho práci pak osobitě navazovali jeho dlouholetý spolupracovník Stanislav Látal, Václav Bedřich, A. Born, Zdeněk Smetana a celá řada dalších. V roce 1967 byl jmenován profesorem 'Vysoké školy uměleckoprůmyslové', ale nemoc mu ztěžovala a nakonec i znemožnila uměleckou práci. Zemřel v Praze.
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:*''The Czech Year'' (''Špalíček'') (1947)
# Zahrada, 1962 (próza) Kolektiv autorů: Encyklopedický slovník, Odeon, Praha 1993
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:*''The Emperor's Nightingale'' (''Císařův slavík'') (1947)
Kolektiv autorů: Všeobecná encyklopedie Universum, Odeon, Praha 2001
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:*''Bajaja'' (1950)
http://libri.cz/databaze/kdo20/search.php
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:*''The Old Czech Legends'' (''Staré pověsti české'') (1952)
http://literatura.kvalitne.cz/trnka.htm
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:*''The Midsummer Night's Dream'' (''Sen noci Svatojánské'') (1959)
  
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===Short puppet films===
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:*''Song of the Prairie'' (''Árie prérie'') (1949)
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:*''Story of the Bass Cello'' (''Román s basou'') (1949)
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:*''The Devil's Mill'' (''Čertův mlýn'') (1951)
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:*''The Gingerbread House'' (''Perníková chaloupka'') (1951)
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:*''The Good Soldier Schweik'' (''Dobrý voják Švejk'') I., II., and III. (1954 and 1955)
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:*''A Drop Too Much'' (''O skleničku víc'') 1954
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:*''The Hurvinek Circus'' (''Cirkus Hurvínek'') (1955)
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:*''Spejbl on the Track'' (''Spejbl na stopě'') (1955)
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:*''Umbrella'' (''Paraplíčko'') (1957)
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:*''The Passion'' (''Vášeň'') (1961)
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:*''The Cybernetic Grandma'' (''Kybernetická babička'') (1962)
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:*''The Archangel Gabriel and Lady Goose'' (''Archanděl Gabriel a Paní Husa'') (1964)
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:*''The Hand'' (''Ruka'') (1965)
  
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===Other===
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:*''Bethlehem'' (''Betlém'') (1947)
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:*''The Legend of St. Prokop'' (''Legenda o sv. Prokopu'') (1947)
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:*''Merry Circus'' (''Veselý cirkus'') (1951)
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:*''Spring'' (''Jaro'')
  
Jiří Trnka
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===Children's book ilustrations===
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:*Vítězslav Šmejc: ''Mr. Bosek's Tyger'' (''Tygr pana Boška'') (1937)
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:*Jiří Menzel: ''Mickey the Ball in his Native Forest'' (''Míša Kulička v rodném lese'') (1939)
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:*Jan Karafiát: ''The Beetles'' (''Broučci'') (1940)
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:*Helena Chvojková: ''Little Suzie's World Discoveries'' (''Zuzanka objevuje svět'') (1940)
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:*Jarmila Glazarová: ''Advent'' (1941)
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:*Wilhelm Hauff: ''Caravan'' (''Karavana'') (1941)
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:*''Stories of the Grimm Brothers'' (''Pohádky bratří Grimmů'') (1942 and 1969)
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:*František Hrubín: ''Repeat after us'' (''Říkejte si s námi'') (1943)
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:*Jiří Horák: ''Czech Fairy Tales'' (''České pohádky'') (1944)
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:*Jiří Mahen: ''Twelve Fairy Tales'' (''Dvanáct pohádek'') (1947)
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:*Josef Kajetán Tyl: ''The Piper of Strakonice'' (''Strakonický dudák'') (1952)
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:*Vítězslav Nezval: ''Things, Flowers, Animals, and Children'' (''Věci, květiny, zvířátka a děti'') (1953)
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:*Vladimír Holan: ''Bajaja'' (1955)
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:*František Hrubín: ''The Tales of Thousand and One Nights'' (''Pohádky tisíce a jedné noci'') (1956)
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:*Hans Christian Andersen: ''Fairy Tales'' (''Pohádky'') (1957)
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:*Charles Perrault: ''Fairy Tales'' (''Pohádky'') (1959)
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:*František Hrubín: ''The Czech Year'' (''Špalíček veršů a pohádek'') (1960)
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:*Alois Jirásek: ''The Old Czech Legends'' (''Staré pověsti české'') (1961)
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:*Jiří Trnka: ''Garden'' (''Zahrada'') (1962)
  
Narodil se roku 1912 v Plzni, kde prožil své dětství. Z Plzně vedla Trnkova životní cesta nejen relativně záhy do Prahy, ale vlastně do celého světa, kde byl znám a oceňován jako autor animovaných, kreslených a loutkových filmů. Obdržel za ně řadu uznání a prestižních cen např. Moliérovu cenu nebo Cenu H. Ch. Andersena aj. K nejznámějším filmům patří: Bajaja, Zvířátka a Petrovští, Císařův slavík, Arie prérie, Špalíček, Staré pověsti české, Osudy dobrého vojáka Švejka a četné jiné, vždyť jich bylo na tři desítky. Jiří Trnka vystudoval pražskou Uměleckoprůmyslovou školu se zaměřením na užitou grafiku. Byl však doslova z rodu výtvarných všeumělů – vynikající kreslíř, grafik, ilustrátor, malíř i sochař, scénograf, navrhoval hračky. Svými knižními ilustracemi si získal uznání snad všech generací. Děti těšil obrázky třeba k Broučkům, veršům, pohádkám a říkankám Fr. Hrubína, k pohádkám bratří Grimmů či H. Ch. Andersena. Trochu odrostlejším neotřelým způsobem přiblížil Staré pověsti české a další tituly. Pohádky měl moc rád, byl totiž obdařen osobitým obrazným viděním světa. Nepostrádal rovněž smysl pro krásný laskavý humor, který dokázal uplatnit v celé své tvorbě. Také neotřelá poetičnost a hluboká lidskost opřená o obecné morální hodnoty byla trvale všudypřítomná v celém Trnkově díle. Patřil však k pozoruhodným osobnostem i po fyzické stránce. Mohutný, sporý, s charakteristicky utvářenou hlavou. Prý toho nikdy moc nenamluvil, spíše pečlivě vážil slova. Měl rád děti, své i ostatní, jim ostatně věnoval značnou část své tvorby. Jiří Trnka zemřel 30. prosince 1969 v Praze, ještě ne šedesátiletý.
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==Notes==
http://osobnosti.unas.cz/#Ji%F8%ED%20Trnka
 
  
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<References/>
  
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==References and Further Reading==
  
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* Bocek, Jaroslav, ''Jiri Trnka, artist and puppet master.'' Prague: Artia Publishing, 1963, 1965.  OCL: 135 1822
  
Jiří Trnka
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* Bolliger, Max, Roseanna Hoover, Jiri Trnka, and Jan Karafiat. ''The Fireflies; a story.''  New York: Atheneum Publishers, 1970. OCLC: 71787
Jiří Trnka
 
* 24. února 1912, Petrohrad na Plzeňsku, + 30. prosince 1969, Praha
 
Český výtvarník a režisér animovaných filmů, ilustrátor, malíř a sochař.
 
Jiří Trnka je spolu s H. Týrlovou a K. Zemanem tvůrce českého animovaného filmu. Vyrostl v rodině, kde se podomácku vyráběly hračky. V roce 1923 se seznámil s J. Skupou a začal hrát loutkové divadlo. V letech 1929-35 studoval u Jaroslava Bendy na Uměleckoprůmyslové škole v Praze. Téměř rok provozoval vlastní loutkové Dřevěné divadlo v sále Rokoka na Václavském náměstí (1936-37). V roce 1937 se poprvé setkal s loutkovým filmem, když pro režiséra reklamních filmů Karla Dodala vyrobil loutku Hurvínka. Událostí roku 1939 se na knižním trhu staly jeho ilustrace k pohádkové knize Míša Kulička. V témže roce zahájil scénografickou spolupráci s Osvobozeným divadlem (Nebe na zemi) a Národním divadlem v Praze, kde vyhrál soutěž na výpravu Smetanovy Libuše. Začátkem války začala jeho dlouholetá spolupráce s režisérem J. Frejkou (Shakespeare: Zimní pohádka a další inscenace, Plautus: Lišák Pseudolus, Klicpera: Zlý jelen). Za války se Trnka stal spolu s Adolfem Zábranským tvůrcem nového ilustračního typu pro děti, vedle dalších v roce 1941 ilustroval Karafiátovy Broučky a zároveň začala jeho dlouholetá spolupráce s Františkem Hrubínem (Říkejte si se mnou až po soubor Špalíček). Uprostřed okupace namaloval obrazový triptych Český Betlém (1943), v němž vyjádřil svou představu krásy, pokoje a míru.
 
V roce 1945 spolu s mladými výtvarníky založil studio kresleného filmu Bratři v triku a na příštích 20 let se upsal filmu. Po reakci na válku (Pérák a SS) byl podle jeho námětu i uměleckého návrhu natočen první výtvarným názorem český kreslený film Zasadil dědek řepu. V té době začala Trnkova spolupráce se scenáristou Jiřím Brdečkou. V roce 1946 založil studio loutkového filmu, kam za ním přešli i jeho budoucí hlavní spolupracovníci Karel Látal a Břetislav Pojar. V roce 1947 natočil básnickou loutkovou suitu Špalíček, která se spolu s hudbou Václava Trojana stala vystižením národní představy o životě, štěstí, pokoji a práci. V roce 1948 natočil svůj první celovečerní loutkový film Císařův slavík. V roce 1950 po třech krátkých filmech Román s basou, Árie prérie a Čertův mlýn usiloval se svými animátory v pohádce Bajaja o skutečné loutkoherectví. Po pohádce O zlaté rybce s vtipným komentářem v podání Jana Wericha dokončil v roce 1952 Staré pověsti české, v nichž v dokonalé syntéze hereckého slova, hudby, děje a stylizovaných stroze modelovaných loutek vystihl monumentalitu a velebnost starých mýtů. V roce 1954 pracoval na krátkých filmech podle Haškových Osudů dobrého vojáka Švejka s komentářem Jana Wericha. Po realizaci ploškového filmu Dva mrazíci se od roku 1956 věnoval knižní ilustraci (Pohádky tisíce a jedné noci, Andersenovy Pohádky), jež v jeho pojetí dostala rysy bohatosti a výpravnosti. Podílel se v té době i na přípravě české expozice Expo 58 v Bruselu. V roce 1958 se vrátil k loutkovému filmu a pracoval na animátorsky náročné verzi Shakespearova Snu noci svatojanské. V roce 1961 opět ilustroval (Pohádky bratří Grimmů, Staré pověsti české). V roce 1964 natočil renesančně rozmarný film Archanděl Gabriel a Paní Husa a o rok později vyvrcholila myšlenkově závažným loutkovým filmem Ruka jeho řada filosofických snímků Vášeň a Kybernetická babička, jíž varuje před manipulací člověka stroji. V posledních letech života se kromě práce pro Expo 67 v Montrealu věnoval malbě a sochařské tvorbě, ale znovu i knižní ilustraci (Werichovo Fimfárum) a sám napsal a ilustroval půvabnou knížku Zahrada (1962), která byla i zfilmována. Je nositelem asi 50 ocenění z výstav, soutěží a filmových i výtvarných přehlídek.
 
Trnkův přínos spočívá v osvobození českého, ale i světového kresleného a loutkového filmu z amerického vlivu a v prosazení velké výtvarné náročnosti a v poetickém ladění. Na jeho práci pak osobitě navazovali jeho dlouholetý spolupracovník Stanislav Látal, Václav Bedřich, Adolf Born, Zdeněk Smetana a celá řada dalších. V roce 1967 byl jmenován profesorem Vysoké školy uměleckoprůmyslové, ale nemoc mu ztěžovala a nakonec i znemožnila uměleckou práci.
 
(Jan Pömerl)
 
  
==Works==
+
* Grimm, Jacob, Wilhelm Grimm, H.C. Anderson, and Jiri Trnka. ''Favorite tales from Grimm and Andersen.'' New York: Exeter Books, 1961, 1983, OCLC: 11687778 ISBN 0671060406
* Archanděl Gabriel a paní Husa
 
:ČR, 1964, 28 minut
 
* Betlém
 
:ČR, 1947, 10 minut
 
* Cirkus Hurvínek
 
:ČR, 1955
 
* Císařův slavík
 
:ČR, 1948, 71 minut
 
* Dva Mrazíci
 
:ČR, 1954
 
* Kybernetická babička
 
:ČR, 1962
 
* Legenda o sv. Prokopu
 
:ČR, 1947, 10 minut
 
* Pérák a SS
 
:ČR, 1946, 13 minut
 
* Ruka
 
:ČR, 1965, 18 minut
 
* Sen noci Svatojánské
 
:ČR, 1959, 75 minut
 
* Staré pověsti české
 
:ČR, 1952, 91 minut
 
* Zvířátka a petrovští
 
:ČR, 1946
 
  
==References and further reading==
+
==External Links==
*http://www.awn.com/mag/issue5.04/5.04pages/dutkatrnka.php3
+
All links retrieved August 1, 2022.
*http://katalog.artfilm.cz/osobnost/OSO151
+
 +
* [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0873240/ "Jirí Trnka (I)"], ''IMDb''
  
  
==External links==
 
* [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0873240/ IMDb record]
 
* [http://www.awn.com/mag/issue5.04/5.04pages/dutkatrnka.php3 Jiri Trnka — Walt Disney Of The East!]
 
 
[[Category:Art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
 
[[Category:Art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
 
[[Category:Film]]
 
[[Category:Film]]

Latest revision as of 02:02, 9 February 2023


Jiří Trnka (February 24, 1912 Plzeň – December 30, 1969 Prague) was a Czech puppet maker, illustrator, motion-picture animator and film director, renowned for his puppet animations.

Trnka graduated from the Academy of Arts, Architecture and Design in Prague. He created a puppet theater in 1936, which was dissolved at the outbreak of World War II. He then immersed himself into stage design and illustration of books for children. After the war ended, he established an animation unit at the Prague film studio and soon became internationally recognized as the world's greatest puppet animator using the traditional Czech method, and won several film festival awards. The award at the Cannes Film Festival in 1946 came merely one year after his entry into the world of motion picture.

He was dubbed "the Walt Disney of the East" [1], although what he essentially did was substitute depth for lack of it, and performed mastery of technique for superficialism. Most of his motion pictures targeted the adult audience, although he loved children and illustrated numerous books for them.

After the Communist takeover of Czechoslovakia in 1948, he not only found a way to live and create art in the country that repressed anything that merely hinted at subversion and ran against the official doctrines, but also secured funding and was even granted a state funeral with honors. This remarkable symbiosis with the Communist government was only possible because of the medium he embraced – puppets were deemed too innocent to undermine the ideology, and because of the universal values epitomized by his art, which even Communists found hard to suppress.

Trnka's works carried sublte story lines expressing the struggles of life under a communist regime, bringing a voice and method of release to his fellows. Much of this subtility passed by the oppressors unnoticed, however, when he went too far and introduced a religious component or an obvious theme that the Communists thought would encourage open-minded and out-of-the-box views and thus jeopardize the political system, he was quickly set back. Surely Trnka must have known that he was inviting trouble, yet he continued. He would not be passive or compliant.

Jiří Trnka died of heart illness in 1969.

Life

The stop-motion puppet animator, graphic designer, illustrator, painter, sculptor, stage and theater designer, and toy designer Jiří Trnka is, together with H. Týrlová and K. Zeman, the founder of the Czech animated film. Universally accepted values laced with kind humor were a significant component of his works, which combine the traditional with the modern. As a private person he never said much; he weighed every word. Children, his and the others, were the love of his life. He was an excellent reader of the human character and knew how to attract famous people. His physique was almost remarkable - a robust, stocky man with a uniquely sculpted head.

Trnka came from a lineage of diversified artists. At the age of eleven, Trnka began studying drawing under puppeteer Josef Skupa in Pilsen (Plzeň) and started giving puppet performances. Between 1929 and 1935, he studied at the Prague-based Umělecko-průmyslová škola (now Academy of Arts, Architecture and Design), majoring in applied graphics. For almost a year he ran his own puppet show, "Wooden Theater" (Dřevěné divadlo), at the Rokoko theater in Prague.

In 1939 he grabbed the attention of the publishing world with his illustrations of the children's book Míša Kulička (Mickey the Ball). In the same year, the National Theater in Prague (Národní divadlo) selected his bid for Smetana's opera Libuše, and he started collaboration with Osvobozené divadlo, where he likewise designed and produced stage props and costumes.

The early years of World War II Trnka spent working with director J. Frejka on the productions by William Shakespeare, Plautus, and Klicpera. Along with Adolf Zábranský, he invented a new type of illustration for children, and it was around this period that he started illustrating books of novelist and children's writer František Hrubín. In the middle of the war years, he produced the painting "Czech Bethlehem" as an expression of beauty, calm and peace.

In 1945, along with other animators, he founded the animated film studio Bratři v triku, and the film became his creative medium for the next twenty years. In 1946 he founded the puppet film studio that was later renamed Studio Jiřího Trnky. In 1946 his animated film The Animals and the Robbers won an award at the Cannes Film Festival. Two years later, an offer came from the United States to teach film animation in university, but he declined with these words: "I cannot make little cowboys; I know how to make Czech peasants, and nobody in America is interested in those. I am local."[2]

From 1956 on, he illustrated numerous children's books. The last years of his life were devoted to painting, sculptures, and book illustrations. In 1967 he was appointed professor of his Alma Mater, but failing health made it difficult and, eventually, impossible to work. He died in Prague at the age of 57.

Trnka's films were frequently first recognized outside Czechoslovakia. Trnka attributed this to the fact that in Czechoslovakia, his poeticism and perhaps naiveté was a common fare, whereas the West was inundated by somewhat tougher production. Moreover, he never thought that the fame came simply because of the puppets; what was being said was what mattered, not just the motion and attractiveness of the puppets.

Jan Werich was once visiting Trnka's studio and, without Trnka being aware of it, observed him painting the backdrop on glass planes. Werich thought he was dreaming, so he came over and asked, "Excuse me, are you painting with both hands?" Trnka responded, "Well, not always, but those morons are not around and we are running out of time (on the children's movie project)." [3]

Walt Disney of the East

Trnka arrived at the first post-war Cannes Festival in 1946 with his three cartoons (his filmmaking career had only begun on May 29, 1945, when a group of young animators asked the famous book illustrator to become their boss). Although The Robbers and the Animals won the award, another film which was entered, The Present, was of more importance to Trnka's work. The Present was a cartoon for adults, a satire with Trnka's very own individual art design and a non-Disney way of storytelling. It was completely misunderstood until Stephen Bosustow congratulated Trnka on it three years later. It was a visible step that divided post-war animation into two groups: the productions of big studios (classics) and films that were modern expressions, created in form and content by strong, individual personalities. Trnka liberated the Czech, and world, animated and puppet films from American influences and brought in a complexity of animation and poetry. His long-term fellow artists Stanislav Látal, Václav Bedřich, Adolf Born, and Zdeněk Smetana continued in his footsteps.

After seeing Trnka's wide screen puppet feature film The Midsummer Night's Dream at the Cannes Film Festival in 1959, an English journalist labeled Trnka the "Walt Disney Of The East". This is viewed by some as exaggeration, citing the differences between the two great artists, such as Disney's focus on the children or family audience, while most of Trnka's films targeted the adult audience.

In 1966, four years before his death, Newsday lauded him as "second to Chaplin as a film artist because his work inaugurated a new stage in a medium long dominated by Disney." [4]

Puppets Come Alive

Trnka preferred puppets, whom he loved and elevated above all other kinds of art. The Czech Year (Spalicek), which refers to illustrated folk songbooks and also a piece of wood) is a very significant piece in Trnka's career. It was his first puppet feature film; when asked 20 years later which of his films he liked the most, he named this one. This was not simply an answer due to patriotism, although the six-part cycle illustrates the old Czech folk customs around the year. When he started working on it in 1946, Christmas was drawing in, so he opened with "The Bethlehem" sequence, which was inspired by his own painting. The screening of this first portion of the film was so successful that the cycle expanded to six parts. The Czech Year was internationally acclaimed for the beautiful, brilliant animation of unpretentious and unembellished wooden puppets and music inspired by Czech folk songs.

The Hand was Trnka's last, and some say the greatest, film. An unforgiving political allegory, different in content and form, it strictly follows the story outline without developing lyrical detail. In the film, an artist, happy with his life, is making a pot for his favorite plant, when a giant hand appears and orders him to create a statue of a hand, not allowing him to make anything else. Resistance and disobedience take him to prison, where he is forced to give in, at the cost of his freedom and ultimately his life. The same hand organizes the artist's state funeral, where all artists are honored. This darkly humorous allegory on totalitarianism, which won the top prize at the Annecy International Animation Festival, was banned in the Communist Czechoslovakia. When it was released, they dismissed it as a criticism of the personality cult (Josef Stalin), but the general public recognized the alarming allegory of human existence in a totalitarian society.

This was the first time that Trnka openly expressed what he thought about his own inhumane totalitarian society. The Hand was one of the first films that helped usher in the Prague Spring. Oddly, it predicted Trnka's own death. When he died in November 1969, he was awarded a state funeral with honors. Only four months after his death, The Hand was blacklisted, all copies were confiscated by the secret police, and there was no screening for the next 20 years. This was how much the Communist government felt intimidated by the seventeen-minute puppet film.

Trnka took on modern issues in the film Cybernetic Grandma.

Story of the Bass Cello is based on Anton Chekhov's story about a bass player whose clothes are stolen while he is bathing in the river. When he spots a beautiful maiden in the same predicament, he hides her in the case of his large double-bass.

Merry Circus is neither a puppet film nor a cartoon; movement is simulated by paper cutouts.

A Drop Too Much is a tragic tale of a motorcyclist who, on his way to meet his fiancée, stops at a tavern with disastrous consequences. This was a warning against drinking and driving.

Song of the Prairie is a parody of the Wild West, where the pistol rules the roost, timidity has no place, and love blossoms at first sight.

Emperor's Nightingale is a puppet animation classic based on the story by Hans Christian Andersen featuring a nightingale who sings a song to the Emperor, emboldening him to revolt against the rigid protocol of his glittering yet shallow world. The Washington Post described it as "a lost classic happily found again" and the Wired magazine found it to be "one of the most stunningly beautiful animated films ever released" and "a masterpiece of filmmaking and a production that elevates the art form to new heights." [5]

Three short adaptations of Jaroslav Hašek's famous classic The Good Soldier Schweik have won the heart of all Czechs, but he was still looking for an internationally reknown classic story where he could address the entire world through his art. Trnka was a Renaissance man, born with enormous talent in many different areas, but in the wrong time and the wrong place.

The wide screen puppet feature film The Midsummer Night's Dream, an adaptation of Shakespeare's play, voicing Trnka's opinions and estheticism of the puppet film, failed both at home and abroad. It was a universally known story with a carefully prepared screenplay (co-writer J. Brdečka), brilliant puppet animation with little dialogue and sporadic narration. Trnka never allowed lip-synch; he thought it was barbaric for puppets - as works of art - to be treated in this manner. Music was always preferred to the spoken word. He often discussed his projects with the composer V. Trojan, before he began working on the screenplay. When the musical score was composed ahead of the animation and he liked it, he would change the animation arrangement to fit the music.

The reception of The Midsummer Night's Dream was a great disappointment for Trnka; he had worked for years on it. Days and nights were spent shooting, with the crew sleeping in the studio. It cost him his health. Animation historian Edgar Dutka ascribes the fiasco to the picturesque yet intricate story, which was lost on the critics as well as audience. Trnka was strongly criticized at home for creating l'art pour l'art (Art for Art's Sake) and thus lost touch with the working class. He shot the film with two parallel cameras because he did not believe in "compositions seen through a mailbox slot." [6]

Symbiosis with Communist Censorship

After the Communist takeover of post-war Czechoslovakia on February 25, 1948, which gradually prompted many artists and prominent figures into exile, Trnka found himself for the most part not only unrestrained in his creative genius but also subsidized, for even the Communists enjoyed his work. They thought the puppet stories were for children; therefore, they did not see any harm, and they did not censor or blacklist almost any of them. Only two parts of the film Spring, featuring a Christian procession, and The Legend of St. Prokop were banned on grounds of religious propaganda until the late 1980s. When Trnka finished the national fairytale Bajaja in 1950, he was greatly honored by the regime.

On the other hand, when he wanted to adapt Don Quijote in 1951, the government barred the project, having found it too cosmopolitan. There always existed two sides to the government's 'generous' hand. Instead of Don Quijote, he was pressed to create historic myths in The Old Czech Legends. Trnka was not initially interested in doing this. He would have rather quit working at the studio and gone back to illustrating children's books, but he gave the theme a second thought and what ensued was a film with strong and brilliant scenes, great character animation, and superb music, more in the way of Leos Janacek than Bedřich Smetana. This project proved Trnka's filmmaker skills; however, he was right: such a topic had a very limited audience. Even Czechs did not appreciate a filmed version of the history which they had to learn at school.

The Studio of Jiří Trnka

Along with fellow animators, Trnka in 1946 established a small puppet film studio (renamed The Studio of Jiří Trnka), where puppets would "move on the screen".[7] Here "active dreaming" – a blending of imagination and poetry with invention and realism, occurred, resulting in the classic animated puppet films, rarely shot elsewhere in the world. Not only puppet films but also commercials produced here were marked by superb animation techniques, wisdom, and ubiquitous moral values. The Czech puppet film remains the studio's focus. All technologies of animated film, including stop-motion puppet animation, semi-plastic film, flat-surface film, pixilation (animation of objects), and the plasticine method are used. [8]

Selected Works

Animated films

  • An Old Man Sowed the Beet (Zasadil dědek řepu) (1945)
  • The Present (in or before 1946)
  • The Gift (Dárek) (1946)
  • The Spring Man and SS (Pérák a SS) (1946)
  • The Robbers and the Animals (Zvířátka a petrovští) (1946)
  • The Fox and the Pitcher (Liška a džbán) (1947)
  • The Golden Fish (O zlaté rybce) (1951)
  • A Good Old Man's Trading (Jak stařeček měnil až vyměnil) (1953)
  • Two Little Frosts (Dva Mrazíci) (1954)
  • Why UNESCO (Proč UNESCO) (1958)
  • The Bliss of Love (Blaho lásky) (1966)

Full-length puppet films

  • The Czech Year (Špalíček) (1947)
  • The Emperor's Nightingale (Císařův slavík) (1947)
  • Bajaja (1950)
  • The Old Czech Legends (Staré pověsti české) (1952)
  • The Midsummer Night's Dream (Sen noci Svatojánské) (1959)

Short puppet films

  • Song of the Prairie (Árie prérie) (1949)
  • Story of the Bass Cello (Román s basou) (1949)
  • The Devil's Mill (Čertův mlýn) (1951)
  • The Gingerbread House (Perníková chaloupka) (1951)
  • The Good Soldier Schweik (Dobrý voják Švejk) I., II., and III. (1954 and 1955)
  • A Drop Too Much (O skleničku víc) 1954
  • The Hurvinek Circus (Cirkus Hurvínek) (1955)
  • Spejbl on the Track (Spejbl na stopě) (1955)
  • Umbrella (Paraplíčko) (1957)
  • The Passion (Vášeň) (1961)
  • The Cybernetic Grandma (Kybernetická babička) (1962)
  • The Archangel Gabriel and Lady Goose (Archanděl Gabriel a Paní Husa) (1964)
  • The Hand (Ruka) (1965)

Other

  • Bethlehem (Betlém) (1947)
  • The Legend of St. Prokop (Legenda o sv. Prokopu) (1947)
  • Merry Circus (Veselý cirkus) (1951)
  • Spring (Jaro)

Children's book ilustrations

  • Vítězslav Šmejc: Mr. Bosek's Tyger (Tygr pana Boška) (1937)
  • Jiří Menzel: Mickey the Ball in his Native Forest (Míša Kulička v rodném lese) (1939)
  • Jan Karafiát: The Beetles (Broučci) (1940)
  • Helena Chvojková: Little Suzie's World Discoveries (Zuzanka objevuje svět) (1940)
  • Jarmila Glazarová: Advent (1941)
  • Wilhelm Hauff: Caravan (Karavana) (1941)
  • Stories of the Grimm Brothers (Pohádky bratří Grimmů) (1942 and 1969)
  • František Hrubín: Repeat after us (Říkejte si s námi) (1943)
  • Jiří Horák: Czech Fairy Tales (České pohádky) (1944)
  • Jiří Mahen: Twelve Fairy Tales (Dvanáct pohádek) (1947)
  • Josef Kajetán Tyl: The Piper of Strakonice (Strakonický dudák) (1952)
  • Vítězslav Nezval: Things, Flowers, Animals, and Children (Věci, květiny, zvířátka a děti) (1953)
  • Vladimír Holan: Bajaja (1955)
  • František Hrubín: The Tales of Thousand and One Nights (Pohádky tisíce a jedné noci) (1956)
  • Hans Christian Andersen: Fairy Tales (Pohádky) (1957)
  • Charles Perrault: Fairy Tales (Pohádky) (1959)
  • František Hrubín: The Czech Year (Špalíček veršů a pohádek) (1960)
  • Alois Jirásek: The Old Czech Legends (Staré pověsti české) (1961)
  • Jiří Trnka: Garden (Zahrada) (1962)

Notes

  1. Edgar Dutka, July 2000, "Jiri Trnka - Walt Disney Of The East!" Animation World Magazine [1]. Retrieved January 29, 2008.
  2. Red, Oct. 19, 2005 "Trnka" What is What", Encyklopedoe CoJeCo [2]
  3. Martina Lustigová, Aug. 10, 2006 "Jiří Trnka Could Paint with Left and Right Hand Simultaneously" Czech Radio [3]
  4. PBS Official Website "Czech Animators" [4].Retrieved January 29, 2008.
  5. "The Extraordinary Puppet Films of Jiri Trnka", Rembrandt Films Official Website[5].Retrieved January 29, 2008.
  6. Edgar Dutka, July 2000, "Jiri Trnka - Walt Disney Of The East!" Animation World Magazine [6].Retrieved January 29, 2008.
  7. Dutka, Edward, July 4, 2000 "Jiri Trnka — Walt Disney Of The East!" Animation World Magazine [7]
  8. Jiri Trnka Studio Official Website [8]

References and Further Reading

  • Bocek, Jaroslav, Jiri Trnka, artist and puppet master. Prague: Artia Publishing, 1963, 1965. OCL: 135 1822
  • Bolliger, Max, Roseanna Hoover, Jiri Trnka, and Jan Karafiat. The Fireflies; a story. New York: Atheneum Publishers, 1970. OCLC: 71787
  • Grimm, Jacob, Wilhelm Grimm, H.C. Anderson, and Jiri Trnka. Favorite tales from Grimm and Andersen. New York: Exeter Books, 1961, 1983, OCLC: 11687778 ISBN 0671060406

External Links

All links retrieved August 1, 2022.

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