Karen Maness is the co-author of The Art of the Hollywood Backdrop, which looks at painted backdrops used in Hollywood films. She is the principal instructor of scenic art and figurative painting at the
University of Texas at Austin's Department of Theatre & Dance, scenic art supervisor at Texas Performing Arts, and founder of
Rust Red Studio in Austin, Texas.
Q: How did you come up with the idea for your book?
A: Tom Walsh, then president of the ADG [Art Directors
Guild], approached me with the idea after my presentation about the West Coast
Scenic Artist at the USITT [U.S. Institute for Theatre Technology] national
conference in 2012. My co-author Richard Isackes joined the project shortly
thereafter.
Q: How did you research the book, and was there anything
that particularly surprised you in the course of your research?
A: The research was conducted through multiple academic and
studio film archives, in addition to direct interviews with the scenic artists
themselves with access to their private portfolios and historic collections.
The ADG archives and the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and
Sciences were critical allies in the success of this project. The video
interviews conducted for this project are now housed in the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences in the Art Directors Guild Core collection for future
historians.
The surprise to me was the caliber of the scenic art
discovered in the extant collection of backdrops owned by JC Backings. The
quality of execution, depth, color, value structure, visual texture, and
efficiency of brushstroke was superior to any scenic art I had seen to that
point.
Q: What background did most of the artists have, and did
they tend to spend most of their careers in Hollywood?
A: The skills and heritage of scenic art bloomed from the
rich tradition of theatrical painting and found its way into the cinema. Many
of the artists migrated from theatres into the scenic studios.
Skills were passed from generation to generation, master to
apprentice. The Chouinard school which would become Cal Arts, proved to be a
common educational thread in between multiple artists during the 1950s.
As the educational system in the United States shifted from
traditional art skills training to exclusively conceptual work, artists were
left to fend for themselves for technical art training, or seek out masters who
were willing to share their knowledge.
Q: How much are the painted backdrops still used today, and
what do you see looking ahead?
A: The painted backdrop is as relevant as ever; unfortunately it is being employed less frequently as film productions are moving to the faster, more flexible, and much heavier option of printing their backdrops.
A: The painted backdrop is as relevant as ever; unfortunately it is being employed less frequently as film productions are moving to the faster, more flexible, and much heavier option of printing their backdrops.
The expense of this choice is many layered. It has
resulted in the rapid generational loss of the knowledge required to produce a
painted backdrop. It has also resulted in overly high definition backgrounds
which leap to the foreground, a common atmospheric perspective problem of the
untrained artist.
These backdrops oftentimes suffer from linear perspective
problems when the image is designed by a person without an understanding of the
camera position and appropriate scale of the image in relationship to the built
environment.
Another loss resulting from the scarcity of painted backdrops
on set has been the knowledge of how to light them properly. Painted
backings require much less light than backlit printed backings. As a
result, when painted backings are used on set, they are often times flooded
with light when lit by an inexperienced DP.
Fortunately, production designers are still commissioning
backdrops to be painted for films to great effect, including Jess Gonchor for
the Coen Brothers feature film Hail, Caesar! (2016) and for their upcoming new
anthology series The Ballad of Buster Scruggs (2018). Nathan Crowley has also
set teams of NY scenic artists to work on the upcoming Hugh Jackman film The
Greatest Showman (2017).
Q: What are you working on now?
A: An unprecedented collection of historic Hollywood motion
picture backings has been discovered and is in need of photography and
preservation.
I will be working closely with the Art Directors Guild
Archives and various supporting entities to photograph, archive and document
the visual treasures of Hollywood’s scenic art history held within.
Additionally, I have begun the early stages of a project
focusing on pioneer art director and master scenic artist Ben Carré. This
fall I return to teach at UT Austin while preparing for multiple exhibitions of
my contemporary figurative and landscape paintings.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: There is an exhibition on display through August 12, 2017
at the Art Directors Guild Gallery 800 in North Hollywood, entitled “Scenic
Art: Painting Through Time.” Every major artist featured in The Art of the
Hollywood Backdrop has original art work on display.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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