Independent animator George Griffin (b.1943) grew up in Knoxville, Tennessee, was drafted into the army, studied political science at Dartmouth, then moved to New York in 1967. He apprenticed in commercial studios while also experimenting with design influenced by Saul Steinberg and animation techniques in the spirit of Robert Breer. Griffin has made over 30 films, 10 seconds to 30 minutes long, cartoon narratives and self-referential documations, melding abstraction and figuration. He also makes viewer-activated, animated objects such as mutoscopes and flipbooks. He received Guggenheim, New York State Council, and National Endowment grants, and published FRAMES and FLIP-PACK. Griffin taught courses at Harvard, Parsons, Pratt, and through his studio, Metropolis Graphics, produced educational, commercial, and public service spots for TV. He has served on numerous international film festival panels and written essays for academic journals and books.
Birthday: Invalid Date
April 15, 1988
August 28, 1979
January 02, 1976
October 01, 1994
April 02, 2015
April 12, 1987
July 01, 1975
January 01, 1988
January 01, 1990
January 01, 1981
January 01, 1975
February 01, 2003
June 19, 2005
January 01, 1973
January 01, 1969
January 01, 1969
January 01, 1972
January 01, 1973
January 01, 2007
June 01, 1978
September 28, 1987
January 01, 1980
April 10, 1975
January 01, 1990
November 03, 2008
July 30, 2007