Dmitry Geller
Russian animator and film director (born 1970) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Russian animator and film director (born 1970) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dmitry Alexandrovich Geller (Russian: Дмитрий Александрович Геллер; born 12 October 1970) is a Russian animator and film director.
Geller began his creative activity as an independent artist, participating in art exhibitions in St. Petersburg, Copenhagen, Washington and Sofia.[1][failed verification] In his native city Yekaterinburg he participated in exhibitions in several civic centres. In 1985, together with a group of architects, he participated in creation of happenings at disco parties in a civic centre.
In 1990s he began working as an artist at the studio "A-Film"[2][failed verification][3] at the Sverdlovsk Film Studio. He studied at the High Courses for Scriptwriters and Film Directors in Moscow (workshop of Fyodor Khitruk, Yuriy Norshteyn, Eduard Nazarov,[4] and Andrei Khrzhanovsky), and graduated in the year 1997. In the same year, he made a one-minute film for the animation project Optimus Mundus.
Geller directed and animated sequences in feature and documentary films. He created graphic design for a series of documentaries about the small nations in Africa, Asia and the north of Russia, as well as opening night posters for movies.
Invited by Jilin Animation Institute in 2011–2020 he created together with students four animated films, one of which received the Chinese National Award for the best short film in 2012, and the Grand Prix of the Hiroshima Film Festival.
Films of Geller have participated in musical performances in France and the Netherlands[5] as his film Filmworks XIX: The Rain Horse ("Boy") was shown in the jubilee presentations celebrating the 60th anniversary of John Zorn in Paris and on his jubilee concert in Mexico City.
Retrospectives of Geller’s films have taken part at film festivals in Moscow, St. Petersburg,[6] Yekaterinburg,[7] ANIMATOR (festival), Nikozi,[8] Kraków,[9] and Sofia,[10] and selected films were shown in Amsterdam on the ship Azart ("The ship of fools").[11][failed verification] Geller's films are shown in the collections of the Hiroshima Film Festival museum, Victoria and Albert Museum in London, and Cinematheque in New York.
Man meets woman
I saw mice burying a cat
The sparrow who kept his word
Boy. The Rain Horse
Declaration of love
The little night symphony
Hello from Kislovodsk
Mystery - it’s you
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