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Artist Profile

Oskar Fischinger

1900-1967

Oskar Fischinger was not only a painter but also an established filmmaker. He came to the U.S. from Nazi Germany in 1936 under contract from Paramount. He then worked with MGM and Disney Studios where he suggested the concept for Fantasia (released in 1940). An aesthetic disagreement caused Fischinger to leave during the production of the film. Disillusioned with the commercial world of film, Fischinger focused more time in his studio and continued experiments in film. In the late 1940s, Fischinger invented the Lumigraph, which was essentially a light-play instrument where colored beams served as a visual instrument and accompaniment to music. In his work, Fischinger aimed to explore the pure visual effects of emotional drama. Despite Fischinger’s turn to painting, he felt he was primarily a filmmaker and referred to painting as “only helpful studies for my film.” For more information, click here.

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Work

Works in Our Collection

Oskar Fischinger
Snow White-Red Circle
Oil on canvas, 1943
18 x 24 inches
Gift of the Gregory Schwayder Rosenblum Trust
2011.002

Oskar Fischinger
Finger Painting
Oil on cellotex, 1943
20 1/2 x 28 1/2 inches
Gift of Gregory S. Rosenblum
1994.197

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