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Los Angeles museum opens immersive Ponyo exhibit by Hayao Miyazaki
Summary
The Academy Museum in Los Angeles opened an immersive exhibit on Saturday devoted to Hayao Miyazaki's 2008 film Ponyo, showing more than 100 original materials and hands-on animation stations aimed at children.
Content
The Academy Museum in Los Angeles has opened an immersive exhibit devoted to Hayao Miyazaki's 2008 film Ponyo. The show assembles more than 100 original items and production sketches from Studio Ghibli. An interactive station introduces young visitors to basic stop-motion techniques and offers hands-on animation tools. Curator Jessica Niebel said Ponyo is one of Miyazaki's films most directly aimed at a young audience and emphasized the importance of hand-drawn work.
What the exhibit includes:
- Over 100 original materials, including hand-drawn art boards and production sketches.
- Sketches by Hayao Miyazaki and art boards that feature the film's ocean-focused palette.
- An interactive animation table where visitors can create short stop-motion sequences.
- Remarks from Academy Museum senior exhibitions curator Jessica Niebel about the film's appeal to children and early filmmaking.
- The show opened on Saturday at the Academy Museum in Los Angeles.
Summary:
The exhibit highlights hand-drawn artistry from Studio Ghibli and offers participatory stations intended to engage children with filmmaking. Curator Jessica Niebel framed the presentation as both a celebration of Miyazaki's work and a way to underscore manual artistic practice amid discussions about artificial intelligence. Undetermined at this time.
