Carmen D'Avino
Directing
Known For
No description available.
Motif

Background is a 1973 American short documentary film directed by Carmen D'Avino. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The original version was preserved by the Academy Film Archive in 2012.
Background
I scratched an old film, leaving some parts, then I added ink and paint.
A Trip
Short animation featuring cut-out photographs of all kinds of shoes and feet dancing a tarantella.
Tarantella
A fantastic, growing, decorative canvas, influenced by Indian art but with a moderate element of its own.
The Weavers
"A destitute room, transmuted by the startling magic of stop-motion photography into a luxuriant explosion of color. A new work by D’Avino (THE BIG O)." – Cinema 16 program notes, May 1959. Preserved by the Academy Film Archive in 2007.
The Room
Brightly coloured stones wander along the banks and through a river.
Stone sonata
Short film by Carmen D'Avino.
Theme and Transition

An experimental animated short film in which a piano plays a song and the keys, hammers, and various other parts of the piano are different colors. Preserved by the Academy Film Archive in 2007.
Pianissimo
Short animation combining abstract patterns with photographs of famous personages.
Minestrone with Music
Vernissage, in the 19th century, referred to varnishing the painting, the final step to hanging in the gallery. Varnishing Day meant there were no more changes, the work was complete. Now the word has come to mean "the opening of an art exhibition" or a "private viewing"...here, vernissage is a glimpse into the creative lives of American artists (World War Two veterans) who came to study and work in Paris, the art capital of the world. World War Two Veterans studied art in Paris during the 1950's. They formed Gallery Eight, which became the showcase for the artwork. Carmen D'Avino filmed these artists in Paris in 1950 for his silent documentary 'Vernissage.' Transferred to video, and enhanced with a classical soundtrack and introduction notes in 2002. Featuring Jonah Kinigstein, Sidney Geist, Oscar Chelimsky, Norman Rubington, John Anderson, Shinkicki Tajiri, and Herbert Katzman.
Vernissage of American Artists
Short animation
The Big O
A stop-motion animation using mannequins in a forest setting impressionistically telling a Finnish folk story.