Jiří Barta

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Jiří Barta
Born (1948-11-26) 26 November 1948 (age 72)
OccupationFilm director, screenwriter

Jiří Barta (born 26 November 1948) is a Czech stop-motion animation director. His films, many of which used the medium of wood for animation, garnered critical acclaim and won many awards, but after the fall of the communist government in Czechoslovakia he was unable to release anything for about 15 years (a situation similar to that faced by Russian animator Yuri Norstein). Throughout the 1990s he tried to find funding for a feature film called The Golem, but has thus far only managed to complete a short pilot film, released in 1993, though work on the feature is ongoing as of 2014. In 2007 he released his first computer-animated short film, and on March 5, 2009 he released a new puppet-animated feature film that was geared more towards a children's audience.[1]

Biography[]

Jiří Barta was born in Prague and all important chapters of his life are connected with this town. In 1969 he began studying Film and TV Graphics at the Academy of Arts, Architecture and Design in Prague. He made the first animated film in 1978 in Jiří Trnka's Studio. He made some excellent films for which he won a number of festival awards in the 1980s. The Pied Piper was probably the best of Bart's works. Since the 1980s, he has been considered a master of creative animation. The latest project was the work on a full-length film, Na půdě. The focus of Barta's activity moved to pedagogical work in the early 1990s. At the Academy of Arts, Architecture and Design in Prague he leads . He was appointed as Associate Professor in 1993 and Professor in 2001. In addition to teaching, he collaborates with theater and film projects.[2]

Filmography[]

Feature films

Short films

References[]

  1. ^ Article[permanent dead link] on the Česká televize website
  2. ^ Černý, Milan. "Biography". Retrieved 16 February 2018.
  3. ^ Cafe Neu Romance 2014: Jiří Barta: Golem

External links[]


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