
Because some of the original molds no longer exist these are made from a digital three-dimensional scan. These pieces (made of Resin) are the same material the original maquette's were made of. This skillfully crafted, hand-painted sculpture originates from a late 1930's Pinocchio animation maquette from the Walt Disney Animation Research Library the production molds for this piece are made from a digital three-dimensional scan. “This collection of rare maquettes dating back to the making of such classic films as Pinocchio, Fantasia, Dumbo, Bambi and more is the single largest collection of these animation 3D masterpieces ever to be brought to market.Walt Disney Archives - Enesco Jiminy Cricket Maquette Limited Edition Figurine feature to utilize animator models or "maquettes". Where most cartoons boasted six colors, Disney would have a single cel sometimes with more than 35 colors,” says Jim Lentz, Vice President and Director of Animation and Anime Art for Heritage Auctions.

“The level of detail and study that the Walt Disney Studio put into the making of their animated feature films is second to none. Other items of note include a developmental sculpture of the classic Peter Pan villain Captain Hook that predates the 1953 film by 10 to 20 years, a Dopey maquette prototype from 1937 and a Mickey Mouse maquette used on the 1938 short The Brave Little Tailor. In February, Heritage Auctions’ Animation Art Signature® event offers a collection of more than 50 Disney maquettes spanning nearly 85 years and representing some of the rarest artifacts of the studio’s animation process.Īmong the auction’s highlights are pieces from the making of Pinocchio, including a figure of Geppetto at his workbench that is credited as being one of the earliest models ever made by the Character Model Department, as well as an extremely rare model of Jiminy Cricket and two figures of Pinocchio himself. But few outside of the Disney and Pixar animation departments have had a chance to see a grouping that spans so many years all at once - until now. The company took a break from maquette production during World War II, but the models made their return in the 1980s and have since been used on a multitude of fan favorites, including Beauty and the Beast, The Little Mer maid and The Lion King. “The rest had a way of disappearing, especially as we neared the end of a picture.” Some “became permanent decorations in the offices of top personnel,” they wrote. In their 1981 book Disney Animation: The Illusion of Life, longtime animators Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnston, who worked for Disney from the 1930s to the 1970s, also noted how highly coveted the maquettes were back then. “Walt would also give them away to VIPs who visited the studio,” Pacheco says.

But that wasn’t the only way they left the building.

Helen Nerbovig McIntosh - head of the maquette painting team in Disney’s Ink and Paint Department - then hand-painted them with the exact colors used in the films.Īlthough the models were all stamped with “Return to Character Model Dept.” on the base, animators sometimes took them home or received them as gifts when movies were particularly successful. “The Character Model Department sculpted, casted and made around 25 copies that were distributed to the animation team,” Pacheco says. “He’d hold it and tilt it to study various angles and perspectives - how much nose do you see? How far do the lips extend from a side view?”Īfter the success of Snow White, the Character Model Department launched in 1938 under the direction of legendary Disney artist and story man Joe Grant, whose credits include 1940’s Pinocchio, the first feature-length Disney film to benefit from the department’s maquettes. “ Marc Davis made a model of Snow White’s head out of clay so he could pick it up and see it from different angles,” Pacheco says.

That’s because these rare works of art were never meant to be anything more than three-dimensional tools used by the Disney animation department.ĭavid Pacheco, who worked in animation, publishing and Disney Consumer Products during his 40-year tenure at Disney, notes that maquette-making dates all the way back to Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. But when it comes to Disney maquettes, the sculpted models animators use to view a character from all angles, it truly is a small world after all. Jim it’s Baby Yoda, Buzz Lightyear, the parks in Florida and Southern California, or those magical Mickey Mouse ears, the audience for Walt Disney Company properties knows no bounds.
