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Nikolai Petrovich Khodataev (Russian: Николай Петрович Ходатаев; 9 May [O.S. 26 April] 1892 — 27 December 1979) was a Russian and Soviet artist, sculptor and animator, one of the founders of the Soviet animation industry.[1]

Nikolai Khodataev
Born
Nikolai Petrovich Khodataev

(1892-05-09)May 9, 1892
stanitsa Konstantinovskaya, Don Host Oblast, Russian Empire
DiedDecember 27, 1979(1979-12-27) (aged 87)
Moscow, USSR
OccupationArtist, animator, sculptor

Early years


Nikolai Khodataev was born in the Konstantinovskaya stanitsa (modern-day Konstantinovsk, Rostov Oblast of Russia) where his father Peter Petrovich Khodataev served at the time. His paternal grandmother Agafia Kondratievna Khodataeva, a lonely Russian woman, was seduced by a merchant from the Vladimir Governorate and taken away from her native town. He left her as soon as she became pregnant, so that Peter Khodataev was born as an illegitimate son and raised under his mother's surname. The merchant didn't accept the child and later bought off her with a land and two houses. This allowed Agafia Khodataeva to give her son proper education at the Rostov-on-Don realschule. Peter soon married a local midwife Anna. By the time Nikolai was born, he had made a successful career as a tsarist official and could afford to pay for his son's art lessons.[2]

In 1898 the family moved to Moscow. At the age of 20 Nikolai, who had already decided to study fine art at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture, made a trip to the Caucasus in order to train in landscape painting. He was accepted as a student and finished the school in 1918 when it had already been reformed into Vkhutemas by the Soviet government. He continued studying at the architecture department and joined the State Committee for the Preservattion of Ancient Monuments upon graduation.[1][2]


Career


Interplanetary Revolution (1924)

In 1924 Nikolai Khodataev along with the fellow artists Yuri Merkulov and Zenon Komissarenko were hired by Yakov Protazanov to make sketches for his upcoming science fiction movie Aelita. The three suggested to produce a segment that would've mixed live action with animation, but Protazanov rejected the idea.[3] Khodataev then used his own money to set up an experimental workshop under the State School of Cinematography which became the first animation studio in the USSR. Their 20-minute film Interplanetary Revoluion was one of the first Soviet animated films made as a parody of Aelita and the current political situation. The artists made excessive use of cutout animation (called flat marionettes at the time) along with the constructivism art style that was at its peak in Russia, which resulted in a distinguishable look and feel. The film was a great success.[1][2]

In 1925 they were hired by the Soviet government to produce China in Flames, another cutout animation critical of European interference in Chinese economy, this time serious in tone and message. Vladimir Suteev along with the young Vkhutemas graduates Ivan Ivanov-Vano and the Brumberg sisters joined the team which led to a variety of art styles. With 1000 meters of film and 14 frames per second it ran over 50 minutes at the time, which made it the first Soviet animated feature film and one of the first in the world.[4]

In 1926 Khodataev moved to Mezhrabpom-Rus where he directed a number of traditionally animated and live action films. Among his notable works were One of Many (1927) about the adventures of a Komsomol girl in Hollywood that featured both filming techniques and The Samoyed Boy (1928). The latter presented a story about a Nenets child that followed a dramatic narrative which Khodataev described as "the first steps in conquering the tragedy genre".[2] It was stylized as traditional Nenets art and used an innovative technique of printing on thin celluloid.[1][3] Same year he directed a live short Pushkin's Housewarming that was banned by censorship. His experiments started getting less and less support from government that wanted to see comic agitprop and advertisements instead which Khodataev despised.

The Samoyed Boy (1928)

Between 1928 and 1935 he worked at Sovkino. In 1933-1934 he directed his last two animated films: The Little Organ, an adaptation of The History of a Town by Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin, and Fialkin's Career about an ambitious fool. Both featured original graphical style inspired by the works of Vladimir Favorsky as well as smooth animation, "manifesting a plasticity of animation movement and the filmmaker's ability to nudge animation towards real art".[1][5] Nevertheless, they went almost unnoticed, which made Khodataev question the purpose of his work. He left animation around the time Soyuzmultfilm was created, feeling that the industry wasn't up to bold experiments.[6]

Nikolai Khodataev spent the rest of his days living in a shadow and dedicated his life to art and sculpture. According to his friends and relatives, he used every opportunity to paint everything that surrounded him.[2] In contrast to animation, in art he preferred the Renaissance period, drew many portraits, mostly women.[7] He also took part in art exhibitions.[8] In addition, he wrote articles for the Soviet Screen and Iskusstvo Kino magazines and produced animation for theatrical plays staged at the Natalya Sats Musical Theater.[9]

Nikolai Khodataev died in Moscow in 1979. He was survived by his daughter Nela and his son Konstantin, also an artist.[6][7] His sister Olga Khodataeva (1894—1968) was also a prominent Soviet animator who worked with her brother on some of his major films before joining Soyuzmultfilm.[10] Their brother Alexei Khodataev, a musician, left memoirs that give insight into the history of the Khodataev family.[2]


Films



See also



References


  1. Giannalberto Bendazzi (2016). Animation: A World History: Volume I: Foundations - The Golden Age at Google Books, p. 76—78
  2. The Stars of Russian Animation. Film 2. Nikolai Khodataev by Irina Margolina and Eduard Nazarov, 2010 (in Russian)
  3. Larisa Malyukova (2013). OVERcinema. Modern Russian animation. — Saint Petersburg: Umnaya Masha, p. 264 ISBN 978-5-9904193-1-5
  4. Sergey Kapkov (2006). Encyclopedia of Domestic Animation, p. 14
  5. Sergei Asenin (2012). The World of Animation // The Tropes of Soviet Animation. — Moscow: Print-on-Demand, p. 44 ISBN 978-5-458-30516-7
  6. Nikolai Khodataev on why he left animation letter published at the Notes by Film Historian magazine, 2001 ISSN 0235-8212 (in Russian)
  7. Irina Margolina, Eduard Nazarov. Animation from A to Z. Episodes 16, 17 documentary by REN TV, 1997
  8. Nikolai Petrovich Khodataev: Exhibition catalogue // Moscow branch of the Union of Artists of the RSFSR, 1977 at the Russian State Library
  9. Nikolai Khodataev Archived 2017-09-26 at the Wayback Machine at the Encyclopedia of National Cinema (in Russian)
  10. Olga Khodataeva at Animator.ru





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