Disney Legend Carson Van Osten Passes Away
He was not on the list.
Disney Legend Carson Van Osten has passed away. He was named
a Disney Legend at the ceremony held at the 2015 D23 Expo. He was 69 years old.
The following is from his official Disney Legend bio:
“I think I always knew that I’d be an artist,” Carson Van
Osten says, “and although I was too young to remember it, my parents told me
that I said I wanted to draw cartoons for Walt Disney when I grew up.” And
since 1970, Carson Van Osten has done just that. He’s helped bring Disney
characters to life, in a wide breadth of media all around the world.
After attending the Philadelphia College of Art, Carson instead
became a professional musician and recording artist, founding the rock group
Nazz along with Todd Rundgren. Moving to Hollywood, he applied his artistic
skills as an assistant animator, layout man, and background artist at Fine Art
Films, creating animated titles and interstitial segments for The Sonny &
Cher Comedy Hour, The Ken Berry ‘Wow’ Show,Jonathan Winters’ Hot Dog, and The
Dean Martin Show. He also worked on the animated feature Shinbone Alley, based
on the “Archy and Mehitabel” stories by Don Marquis.
He arrived at Walt Disney Productions in 1970, beginning as
an illustrator of Mickey Mouse comic books.
“I did like to draw Mickey and Goofystories from the start,”
Carson says. “And the Studio needed them more—Tony Strobl and Al Hubbard drew the
ducks.”
Carson became a staff comic strip artist and story man in
1974, working alongside legendary Disney comic artists Floyd Gottfredson and
Manuel “Gonzy” Gonzales. “We all worked in the same big room and got to be
great friends,” Carson says. “They loved to talk about the early days at
Disney.” Carson was an interested and attentive listener. “I still think about
Floyd often, especially when I draw Mickey in the 1930s style.”
One of his best-known works is the Disney Comic Strip
Artist’s Kit, a seven-page primer on staging, perspective, and other design
fundamentals inherent in comic panel art. It is still in use today, all around
the world. “I wrote and drew those sketches around 1975, and I’m so tickled to
know that people still find them helpful today. Frank Thomas saw it and used it
for an animation class he was teaching at the Screen Cartoonists Guild. That’s
how some sketches wound up in the book that he and Ollie wrote,Disney
Animation: The Illusion of Life.”
In 1980, Carson became a manager in Creative Services for
Disney Consumer Products, providing art supervision and concepts for Disney
West Coast Licensing. He also oversaw motion picture tie-in advertising, Disney
publications, and the Disney Music Company.
“I really liked the variety of work for 2D and 3D products,
book or magazine art, record cover ideas, and more. It was changing and
challenging every day.”
In 1988 Carson took on the role of vice president in
Creative Resources for Disney Consumer Products, providing art supervision and
guidelines for art production, as well as helping to establish some of the
first licensing style guides for the group. In 1994 he became vice president of
Creative Services for the European regional office of Disney Consumer Products
in Paris, and, starting in 1997, he was vice president of International
Creative Development for the Disney Publishing Group. In that role, he provided
art and editorial supervision for key international publishing projects.
Other projects to which Carson has contributed were the logo
concepts for Mickey Mouse’s 50th and 60th birthdays, The Walt Disney Studios,
and the Disneyland Hotel clock tower “Mickey” at Disneyland Paris. More
recently, he has served as a consultant for the Disney Epic Mickey and Where’s
My Mickey? games.
“I retired from Disney in 2000,” Carson says, “but I have
continued to do projects for my friends there as an outside consultant and
illustrator. Most of my work is for books, but I’ve also done concepts for
licensing, interactive games, and other areas, too; including seminars about
the history of Disney Consumer Products.
Altogether, I’ve been doing some kind of work for Disney
regularly for the past 45 years.”
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