Didier Ghez is the author of Disney's Grand Tour and Disneyland
Paris: From Sketch to Reality, and the editor of the Walt's People
book series. He lives in Florida.
Pete Docter is vice president of creative at Pixar Animation
Studios and the writer and director of Disney/Pixar's Inside Out.
He also directed the Academy Award®–winning feature films Monsters,
Inc. and Up. He lives in Piedmont, California.
Holiday Gift Guide Pick "Feast your eyes on the fantastic lost art
of Disney's 1930s concept artists."
-Entertainment Weekly
"Didier Ghez has brought to light numerous discoveries, from early
Jiminy Cricket designs by Albert Hurter to documents by Gustaf
Tenggren for The Sorcerer's Apprentice With material culled from
personal letters, journals and anecdotes from friends, family and
coworkers, this unprecedented portrait of these artists comes to
life, revealing how they helped shape the Walt Disney Studio, and
how they continue to inspire us to this day."
-Animated Views
"Didier Ghez is a brilliant illuminator of the often unexplored
corners of the art and artists behind the Disney films, and he's
brought that the unique and wonderful skill to They Drew As They
Pleased: The Hidden Art Of Disney's Golden Age, which explores the
works of a quartet of Disney's first concept artists as the
company's horizons broadened rapidly in the 1930s."
-A Site Called Fred
"Disney devotees will admire 'They Drew as They Pleased: The Hidden
Art of Disney's Golden Age: The 1930s' by Didier Ghez (Chronicle
Books, 208 pages, $40). This is the first in a planned series of
six works exploring the revered studio's output. The edition is
loaded with scenes from classics such as 'Snow White and the Seven
Dwarfs, ' 'Pinocchio, ' plus lots of previously unpublished
artwork."
- San Jose Mercury News
"Early Walt Disney Studio animation has a special, glowing magic
familiar to anyone who has seen classics such as 'Snow White and
the Seven Dwarfs' or 'Pinocchio.' Credit the Disney Story
'Department, and the artists 'including a woman, Bianca Majolie"
whose stories and artwork are collected in a lovely coffee-table
book..."
-Newsday
"If you're looking for in-depth Disney history, you honestly can't
do better than Didier Ghez...If you have a plethora of Disney
animation history books on your shelf, you probably have several
images that are burnt into your mind, because you see them over and
over. Not here. Thanks to Disney's ARL (i.e., Animation Research
Library), you're going to be seeing art that the public has never,
EVER seen before...'They Drew As They Pleased -- The Hidden Art of
Disney's Golden Age: The 1930s' is a treasure, and a gift to future
generations of art students."
-Jim Hill Media
"It's an important examination of Disney's key concept artists of
the 1930s. The fact that it's also lavishly illustrated,
well-written (loaded with new information) and entertaining is
icing on the cake...buy this book."
- Jerry Beck, Cartoon Research
"Now, indefatigable Disney chronicler and aficionado Didier Ghez
has dug even deeper for the first in a series of books, focusing on
four key figures: Hurter, Ferdinand Horvath, Gustaf Tenggren, and
Bianca Majolie. Their sketches, doodles, drawings, and paintings
are inventive, whimsical, and sometimes breathtaking. Ghez sets
their work into context with his informative essays. This is not
the kind of book to be swallowed whole but savored."
-Leonard Maltin
"This is a gem for film buffs and Disney enthusiasts looking for an
absorbing title to fill out their collections."
-Library Journal
Holiday Gift Guide Pick
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