Larry Janiak

Larry Janiak (born 15 February 1938) is a Chicago filmmaker, animator and designer. Janiak was born in Chicago, Illinois and attended Lane Technical College Prep High School where he collaborated with Wayne Boyer and Ronald Larson to create animated cartoon shorts. These high school films were recognized by the Chicago Tribune, Hollywood and the IIT Institute of Design.[1] Janiak then attended the Institute of Design and learned under the influence of László Moholy-Nagy's principles of the "American Bauhaus". After school, Janiak began work in advertising, where he employed these principles of design, and the experimental practices he learned at I.D. in his industrial filmmaking.[2] Janiak not only made advertising films, he also created documentaries, experimental films, animations, graphic design pieces, and worked as a professor at the Institute of Design from 1968 to 1980. Much of his work was inspired by his spiritual practices with the Vivekananda Vedanta Society in Chicago, which he was a member of beginning in 1965.[3]

Early Years

Larry Janiak was born on February 15, 1938 and grew up in both the southwest and northwest side of Chicago. When Larry was six, his family moved to a northwest neighborhood of Chicago, close to the Indian Boundary Forest Preserve, the Chechepinqua Woods and the Des Plaines River. Larry attended Lane Tech High School, where he would begin filmmaking.

At Lane Tech High School, Larry created cartoon animations with Wayne Boyer and Ronald Larson, which would catch the attention of the Chicago Tribune, and even Hollywood. The high school students found inspiration in nature, experimenting with stop motion photography in the nearby woods during their summers. They honed their camera skills, and then began the process of creating drawn animation.[4] Their final project consisted of roughly 200,000 drawings.[1] The students showed their animations at various theaters and galleries in the Chicago area; they were invited to Hollywood, where they met with Walt Disney; and Janiak received the Scholastic magazine tuition scholarship to attend the Institute of Design at the Illinois Institute of Technology.[5]

At the Institute of Design, Larry was taught printmaking by Misch Kohn, a world renowned artist whose etching and prints were displayed at the Art Institute of Chicago, as well as in Paris, Stockholm and London.[6] While at I.D., Janiak worked for Richard Kliedon Animation studio.[3]

Career

Advertising

Janiak worked for Richard Kliedon Animation from 1957-1959. He then began work for Mort and Millie Goldsholl of Morton Goldsholl Associates based out of Northfield, Illinois.[7] At Goldsholl Associates, Janiak was at home with other I.D. graduates who also learned from the design principles of Laszlo Moholy-Nagy. Their common backgrounds contributed to a highly experimental design studio unlike many others in Chicago at the time, where the use of montage, collage, and light experimentation was encouraged.[8] The studio created advertisements for companies such as Kimberly-Clark.[3]Janiak collaborated on the industrial film Faces and Fortunes made for Kimberly-Clark Corporation.[3] The film was intended to clarify the importance of a corporate identity and the importance of good marketing. It discusses the history of corporate identity and branding, drawing upon the use of family crests in the medieval period. This film incorporated many different methods, such as drawn animation, direct animation, collage, and stop-motion animation of objects. Faces and Fortunes won more awards than any other film previously produced by Morton Goldsholl Associates.[8]

Army

In 1962 Janiak was drafted into the United States Army, and served until 1964. While in the army, he continued his work in film. He worked as the director of an educational television station of the U.S. Army Signal Corps Signal School and Communications Research Center at Fort Monmouth, New Jersey.[7]

Teaching

In 1968 Janiak became a professor of design animation and experimental filmmaking at the Institute of Design, and helped to grow the school's animation department.[3] The animation program did grow at I.D., and in 1978 there were 30 animation majors earning degrees.[9] Peter Gorner interviewed Larry Janiak for his article "Tempo A" in the Chicago Tribune, and discusses the tedious nature, and lengthy process that animation requires. One of Janiak's students worked for four years on only a 30 minute long animation.[9]

Films

Allegro was made in 1960 using 16mm film, rubber based masking material and colored dye to create a direct animation of abstracted lines. This short experimental film matches the movement of the colored lines to the rhythm of allegro from the Brandenburg Concerto #3 in G by J.S. Bach.[3]

Disintegration Line #1 was made in 1960 using black and white 16mm film, and is a direct animation depicting lines and abstract shapes resembling nuclei which move and flicker across the screen. The film is silent, but the movement of the shapes is meant to resemble the dance of Shiva.[3]

Adams Film was made in 1963 using color 16mm film, and incorporates direct animation, and footage of a Chicago Earth Day parade and domestic scenes of the Janiak family. The sound track is a tape loop.[3]

Glasshouse (1964) is an experimental documentary of a terrarium, made by Janiak himself. He used color 16mm film, and the sounds consists of a cricket noise and sputtering electronic sounds.[3]

Agamemnon in New York (1964) was produced using black and white 16mm film. The short piece captures Janiak carrying out a conversation, but acting as both people, in a humorous portrait of work at Goldsholl Design & Film Associates.[3]

Life and Film (1965) is an experimental film that functions as a "picture postcard", depicting the experience of young filmmakers walking along a path in the Michigan sand dunes.[3]

Hale House (1965) depicts the Vivekananda Vedanta Society's headquarters in Chicago, which was torn down in the late 1960s. The film serves as a meditative recording of the architecture of the Hale House, paired with traditional Hindu music and prayers.[10]

Vedanta Temple Dedication Day Ceremony (1966) shows the a typical ceremony of the Vivekananda Vedanta Society, with Indian Raga music and Vedic chanting as the soundtrack for the piece.

Disintegration Line #2 (1970) was created using 16mm film that was randomly animated to create sporadic movements of shapes and colors. The film is set to gamelan, music traditional to the Vivekananda Vedanta Society.[3]

Awards

Larry Janiak received recognition for his work starting in high school, winning awards such ash Gold Key awards from the National Scholastic magazine High School Contest, and was granted the opportunity to meet Walt Disney.[4]

Showings

In 1955, Janiak, Boyer and Larson showed their high school animations in an exhibit at the Tribune Tower gallery, and in addition to showing their work, the exhibit outlined the process of creating their animations.[1]

Janiak showed his film, Hale House at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago in 2014. His film was apart of a larger exhibition called "City to See", put on by the Chicago Film Archives. All the films in the exhibition were 16mm films portraying Chicago and its people. [10]

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Film Makers to Show Work at Tribune". ProQuest. Chicago Tribune (1923-1963). 29 May 1955. Retrieved 7 October 2015.
  2. Kosters, Brandon (8 December 2008). "Recovered Visions". fnewsmagazine. Retrieved 25 September 2015.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 "More Janiak Films Head to CFA". Chicago Film Archives. Retrieved 25 September 2015.
  4. 1 2 "Lane High BoysCreate, Film Cartoon Show". Chicago Daily Tribune (1923-1963): 2. Feb. 27 1955. ProQuest. Web. 7 Oct. 2015.
  5. Janiak, Larry. "Larry Janiak Comprehensive Resume". Chicago Film Archives. Print. August 2000.
  6. "2 Artists to Demonstrate Skill at May Festival". 17 May 1962. Retrieved 18 October 2015 via ProQuest.
  7. 1 2 "Larry Janiak Papers". Special Collections Finding Aids University Library. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
  8. 1 2 Beste, Amy. "Designers in Film: Goldsholl Associates, the Avant-Garde, and Midcentury Advertising Films". Learning Mind. Ed. Mary Jane Jacob. Ed. Jacquelyn Baas. January 2000. Print.
  9. 1 2 Gorner, Peter. "Tempo A." ''Chicago Tribune (1963-Current File)'': 2. Jun 01 1978. ''ProQuest''. Web. 7 Oct. 2015.
  10. 1 2 "MCA Screen City to See". MCA Chicago. 7 January 2014. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
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