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> Museo a New Orleans sulle fiabe Disney
veu
messaggio 16/1/2009, 21:57
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Da ABC26:

NOMA Hosts Disney Before LA-Set Film's Release

A big show of animation art from the Walt Disney studio will open in November at the New Orleans Museum of Art, a month before the release of an animated movie set in New Orleans that features Disney's first African-American princess.

"Dreams Come True: Art of the Classic Fairy Tales from the Walt Disney Studio" will run through mid-March 2010.

"It was Disney animators who really led the way in the 20th century toward establishing animation as a serious art form," museum director John Bullard said.

The Walt Disney Corp. suggested the exhibition to the museum, and Bullard made several trips to Disney's animation research library to decide what will be shown, museum spokesman Jim Mulvihill said.

It will feature more than 600 works from films such as "Snow White," "Cinderella," "Sleeping Beauty," "The Little Mermaid," "Beauty and the Beast," "Silly Symphonies" and the upcoming movie.

"The Princess and the Frog" is scheduled for a Christmas release.

It is set in the Jazz Age and features Princess Tiana, a trumpet-playing alligator named Louis and a lovesick Cajun firefly named Ray.

The animation is by John Musker and Ron Clements. The music is by Randy Newman.



Da wwlt:

Original Disney artwork to be featured at NOMA

An exhibition of hundreds of original artworks created for Disney animated pictures will be coming to New Orleans for a four-month stay at the city’s museum of art later this year.

The exhibition, titled Dreams Come True: Art of the Classic Fairy Tales from the Walt Disney Studio, will start at the New Orleans Museum of Art in City Park on November 15 and will feature works from many award-winning features including; Snow White, Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, The Little Mermaid and Beauty and the Beast.

The showing is in conjunction with the premiere of Disney’s newest animated film, The Princess and the Frog, which is set in New Orleans. Artwork from that film will also be featured.

"We are delighted to present this magical exhibition in New Orleans," said NOMA director E. John Bullard. "Children will love seeing their favorite Disney characters in a museum setting and adults will be taken by the technical skill and emotional depth reflected in these works. It was Disney animators who really led the way in the 20th century toward establishing animation as a serious art form."

Visitors to the exhibition will see themed rooms showcasing artwork related to specific animated features. Arranged chronologically by year of release, the rooms will feature, in order: Silly Symphonies, Snow White, Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast and The Princess and The Frog. Film clips will accompany the artwork to demonstrate how individual sketches and paintings lead to a finished celluloid masterpiece.

The Princess and The Frog will feature Disney's first African American princess, Tiana, who lives in New Orleans during the Jazz Age. Other characters include Louis, a trumpet-playing alligator, and Ray, a love-sick Cajun firefly.


Da tripsmarter:

Dreams Come True: Art of the Classic Fairy Tales from the Walt Disney Studio
New Orleans, LA - From November 15, 2009 to March 14, 2010, the New Orleans Museum of Art (NOMA) will present Dreams Come True: Art of the Classic Fairy Tales from the Walt Disney Studio, a major exhibition featuring more than 600 original artworks that shaped legendary animated features including Snow White, Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, The Little Mermaid and Beauty and the Beast.
Dreams Come True: Art of the Classic Fairy Tales from the Walt Disney Studio

Dreams Come True: Art of the Classic Fairy Tales from the Walt Disney Studio also will include artwork from the upcoming Walt Disney Animation Studios musical, The Princess and The Frog, an animated comedy from the creators of The Little Mermaid and Aladdin, set in New Orleans and due for release at Christmas 2009.

"We are delighted to present this magical exhibition in New Orleans," said NOMA director E. John Bullard. "Children will love seeing their favorite Disney characters in a museum setting and adults will be taken by the technical skill and emotional depth reflected in these works. It was Disney animators who really led the way in the 20th century toward establishing animation as a serious art form."

Visitors to the exhibition will encounter themed rooms showcasing artwork related to specific animated features. Arranged chronologically by year of release, the rooms will feature, in order: Silly Symphonies, Snow White, Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast and The Princess and The Frog. Film clips will accompany the artwork to demonstrate how individual sketches and paintings lead to a finished celluloid masterpiece.

An adjacent Education Area will highlight Disney's long association with music and also will serve as a mini library for animation research and storytelling programs.

About The Princess and The Frog
Walt Disney Animation Studios presents The Princess and The Frog, an animated comedy set against the great city of New Orleans. From the creators of The Little Mermaid and Aladdin comes a modern twist on a classic tale.

When the free-spirited, jazz-loving Prince Naveen of Maldonia comes to town a deal with a shady voodoo doctor goes bad and the once suave royal is turned into a frog. In a desperate attempt to be human again, a favor in exchange for a fateful kiss on the lips from the beautiful girl, Tiana, takes an unexpected turn and leads them both on a hilarious adventure through the mystical bayous of Louisiana to the banks of the almighty Mississippi and back in time for Mardi Gras in New Orleans.

An unforgettable tale filled with music, humor and heart where two frogs--along with the help of a 200-year-old voodoo priestess, a love-sick Cajun firefly, and a trumpet-playing alligator--discover that what they want isn't as important as what they need.

The Princess and The Frog will feature Disney's first African American princess, Tiana, who lives in New Orleans during the Jazz Age. Other characters include Louis, a trumpet-playing alligator, and Ray, a love-sick Cajun firefly.

The Princess and The Frog marks the return to hand-drawn animation from the revered team of John Musker and Ron Clements with music by Oscar®-winning composer Randy Newman (Monsters, Inc., Cars, Toy Story).


Traduzione: A Novembre 2009, un mese prima dell'uscita di Tiana ai cinema, aprirà al museo d'arte di New Orleans una mostra d'arte sulle favole classiche della Disney... ci saranno 600 lavori tratti da "Biancaneve", "Cenerentola", "La Bella Addormentata nel bosco", "La Sirenetta", "La Bella e la Bestia", le "Silly Symphonies" e il futuro "La Principessa e il ranocchio".

La mostra, intitolata "Dreams Come True: Art of the Classic Fairy Tales from the Walt Disney Studio", aprirà a Novembre 2009 e chiuderà a marzo 2010.

Messaggio modificato da veu il 16/1/2009, 22:40


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ariel one
messaggio 17/1/2009, 1:15
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cosa non darei per poterla vedere! rolleyes.gif

"Come vorrei stare a New Orleans, cosa darei per abitar lì accanto..."


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Prince Philip
messaggio 17/1/2009, 13:41
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Vorrei tanto andarci anch'io rolleyes.gif rolleyes.gif
Speriamo poi di trovare delle immagini happy.gif
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Donald Duck
messaggio 17/1/2009, 15:08
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Che sfiga!!
Il mio viaggio in america è previsto per il 2011!!!
Mi farò mandare qualche foto dai miei cugini che vivono a New York.....spero che ci vadano rolleyes.gif
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veu
messaggio 18/1/2009, 12:40
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Sì fatti mandare tante foto e se puoi, postale poi sul forum... ovviamente se ti va! wink.gif


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Donald Duck
messaggio 18/1/2009, 16:18
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CITAZIONE (veu @ 18/1/2009, 12:40) *
Sì fatti mandare tante foto e se puoi, postale poi sul forum... ovviamente se ti va! wink.gif


Ok veu!!!
Spero che ci vadano rolleyes.gif
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veu
messaggio 18/1/2009, 23:01
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Incrociamo le dita!!!! e grazie!!!


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-Wendy86-
messaggio 20/1/2009, 11:42
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pagherei oro per poterla vedere......che nervoso....noi mai mostre così vero?!
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veu
messaggio 20/1/2009, 13:00
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Beh queste cose solitamente le fanno in USA... certo magari potrebbero esportarle anche in Europa... in Italia, magari ai vari musei del Cinema (pensiamo a quello di Torino), ci potrebbe stare benissimo una mostra per la cultura favolistica e cinematografica Disney...


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Flit
messaggio 20/1/2009, 23:30
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Io ho un viaggio in programma in america a natale 2009...solo che a new york...sad.gif


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-Wendy86-
messaggio 21/1/2009, 12:18
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CITAZIONE (veu @ 20/1/2009, 13:00) *
Beh queste cose solitamente le fanno in USA... certo magari potrebbero esportarle anche in Europa... in Italia, magari ai vari musei del Cinema (pensiamo a quello di Torino), ci potrebbe stare benissimo una mostra per la cultura favolistica e cinematografica Disney...

esatto.......ma anche se non fosse proprio in italia......anche a parigi mi va bene, come han fatto quella su walt potrebbero fare anche questa....visto il successo di pubblico che l'altra mostra ha avuto
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