The history of animation goes back much further than the dawn of cinema – in fact, it seems that the desire to make pictures move is deeply embedded in human culture. Scholars studying Paleolithic cave paintings have noted that the artists depicted animals on the rock walls in such a way to suggest motion, perhaps to be illuminated by a flickering torch flame. Later, the optical illusions of shadow puppetry laid the foundations for “moving pictures” as mass entertainment, an
The history of animation goes back much further than the dawn of cinema – in fact, it seems that the desire to make pictures move is deeply embedded in human culture. Scholars studying Paleolithic cave paintings have noted that the artists depicted animals on the rock walls in such a way to suggest motion, perhaps to be illuminated by a flickering torch flame. Later, the optical illusions of shadow puppetry laid the foundations for “moving pictures” as mass entertainment, an