Gerrit van Dijk (5 December 1938 – 4 December 2012) was a Dutch animator, film maker, actor and painter.[1]
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (March 2020) |
Biography
editThis section needs additional citations for verification. (August 2024) |
Gerrit van Dijk was born in a Catholic family in the village of Volkel, in the municipality of Uden.[2] He studied as a fifteen-year-old boy at the academy in Tilburg.[3] He was not very satisfied about the school. "You only learn technique. The creativity you learn is no creativity at all. You know exactly what colour socks you should wear and what your hair should look like, but not how to put something on paper." After finishing his study, he initially became a teacher, then became a painter who frequently collaborated with other artists from other disciplines.
His painting career ended abruptly when he saw Norman McLaren's films and bought a double-eight camera. He made his first film It's Good in Heaven, seeing his shift to film as a logical continuation of his work as a painter, and considered his films moving paintings. In 1963 van Dijk married Cilia van Lieshout, a film producer who won an Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film.
Over time, Dijk moved away from classic filmmaking, instead creating collages combining photographs and image-by-image technique. He also experimented with various techniques, including cels, cut-outs, rotoscopy, pixilation, and live action combined with animation. He also joined a theatre group called Orkater that was set in Haarlem, Netherlands.
Dijk's films Pas a Deux and I move, so I am earned him Golden Bears at the Film Festspiele, Berlin in 1989 and 1998, respectively.[citation needed] He also received the Order of the Dutch Lion from Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands in 1998.[3]
On 4 December 2012, van Dijk died from lung cancer.
Filmography
editTitle | Length | Year |
---|---|---|
Far away from home | 5.19 min | 2009 |
Sold out | 7.30 min | 2006 |
Trailer for Filmmuseum | 1.5 min | 2005 |
The Letter | 50 sec. | 2004 |
Jute 14: Deed gij ook niet, wat U geschiedt? | 3 min | 2004 |
The last words of Dutch Schultz | 23 min. | 2003 |
I move, so I am | 8.5 min. | 1997 |
Frieze Frame | 4.5 min. | 1991 |
Janneke | 8.5 min. | 1990 |
Pas A Deux | 5.5 min. | 1988 |
A Good Turn Daily | 13 min. | 1983 |
Jute 9 Tanzen nach den Pfeifen von F.J.Strauss | 3 min. | 1979 |
Jute 2 Alle Menschen werden Brüder | 3 min. | 1979 |
Quod Libet | 7.5 min. | 1977 |
Sportflesh | 3 min. | 1976 |
Butterfly | 3.5 min. | 1973 |
References
edit- ^ "Gerrit van Dijk was de grootste tovenaar van Nederlandse animatie – Home" (in Dutch). Volkskrant.nl. 12 May 2012. Retrieved 5 January 2013.
- ^ a b "International Animation Festival Hiroshima – International Jury". Hiroshima: Hiroshima International Animation Festival. 2010. Gerrit van Dijk profile. Retrieved 16 December 2010.
- ^ a b Van Dijk, Gerrit (14 September 2009). "biografie". Retrieved 16 December 2010.
Sources
edit- Gloudemans, Ton (1990) Gerrit van Dijk: De kunst van de beweging, Haarlem: Stichting Animated People. ISBN 9094014653 9789094014650
- Heesen, Hans & Veerkamp, Lex (2013) Ik ben blij dat ik er geweest ben. Gerrit van Dijk Uden 5.12.1938-Haarlem 4.12.2012, Utrecht: Stichting Holland Animation Film Festival.
- Peters, Mette (2019) “Verf en kleurpotlood. Animatiefilmer Gerrit van Dijk (1938-2012)”, in: Haarlem Filmstad. Harry Hosman (sam.), Eindhoven: Lecturis. ISBN 9789462262928
- Overtoom, Jacques & Koster, Gonda (eds.) (2020) Gerrit van Dijk, hommage aan een inspirerende dwarsligger. Haarlem: Jacques Overtoom / Gonda Koster (eigen beheer).
External links
edit- Gerrit van Dijk at IMDb
- Van Dijk, Gerrit (23 July 2010). "gerrit van dijk". Retrieved 16 December 2010.
- "Animatie: Gerrit van Dijk" [Animation: Gerrit van Dijk] (in Dutch). Amsterdam: EYE Film Institute Netherlands. Retrieved 16 December 2010.[permanent dead link ]
- Filmmuseum informatiecentrum (20 October 2004). "Themalijst Gerrit van Dijk" [Topic List Gerrit van Dijk] (in Dutch). Amsterdam: EYE Film Institute Netherlands. pp. 1–9. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 July 2011. Retrieved 16 December 2010.