word’sout word’s out
Plenty of kids go to Disneyland with their parents, but few come home with a lifelong career inspiration. Heather Holian found hers in an art gallery above the Pirates of the Caribbean attraction. “My parents are artists, and we talked about the Disney production art that was on display just as seriously as they would talk to me about Michelangelo or Van Gogh,” she says. When Holian got back to school and opened her art survey book, Walt Disney’s name wasn’t in it. “Even when I got into grad school, you couldn’t study the art of Disney,” she says. Now as associate director of the School of Art and a professor of art history, Holian has ensured that UNCG College of Visual and Performing Arts students have a broader, more inclusive definition of art. It’s all thanks to a collection of Disney originals, which Holian arranged to be loaned to the Weatherspoon Art Museum. The collection is comprised of original works of art from Walt Disney Studios’ “Golden Age,” including “Snow White,”
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uncg research spring 2024
“Pinocchio,” “Fantasia,” “Dumbo,” and “Bambi.” “Each production cel has to be individually hand-painted and animated to show movement,” Dr. Holian explains. In a group of art from “Pinocchio,” for example, one cel depicts Geppetto and Pinocchio on a raft. Another cel depicts the waves crashing around them. Yet another is of them in the boat. At once, the scale of these original drawings makes their artists feel more relatable. Eraser marks hint at the artist’s thought process. Narrowing and widening pencil marks show the artist’s skill in creating movement. In the margins of each cel, handwritten notes from one artist to another reveal important collaborations. To examine collaborative processes like these, Holian spent a decade collecting interviews with Pixar artists, directors, and animators. “In a lot of conversations, Pixar artists would say to me, ‘If you took one person out of this team, you’d have a whole different dynamic,’” Holian says. “Each
person brings their own ideas, inspirations, life histories. It’s like a pot of soup; if you add different ingredients to the recipe, you get a different product in the end.” Her work in understanding the role of individual contributors gives valuable background and insight to students as they grasp the value of diversity, collaboration, and individuality in the production process. Dr. Emily Stamey, head of exhibitions at the Weatherspoon Art Museum, worked with Holian to select the pieces for the fall 2023 exhibition. “We so often imagine artworks as the outcome of singular individuals alone in their studios,” she says. “Understanding how those collaborations happen can resonate with so many other parts of our lives.” Holian knows of only two other art historians focused on Disney, and she is the only one to ever study Pixar in depth. But her latest focus is on the impact of Disney in the art world. “Looking at a variety of primary source materials, I’m trying to reconstruct how many exhibitions there