Oskar Fischinger is one of the greatest artists of the 20th century, embracing the abstraction the became the major art movement of that century, and exploring the new technology of the cinema to open abstract painting into a new Visual Music that performs in liquid time. If he is less well known than some of the other major artists, it is precisely because he was buffeted about by the wars, Nazism, the communist witch-hunt and other phenomena of his century.
— Dr. William Moritz, 2003
Walther Ruttman’s Lichtspiel Opus 1 was the first abstract film to receive public attention.
Primarily consists of serial rearrangements of an alignment of "staffs," a row of closely-parallel vertical bars, each of which can move up or down freely, thus creating patterns of motion across the screen — undulating waves, diagonal inclines …
The first known simultaneous performance of abstract film, color organ light projections, and music was that of Hungarian composer Alexander László and Oskar Fischinger, in Munich in March 1926.
Beginning in 1925, László performed "Farblichtmusik" concerts with his color-light piano, colored spotlights, and four slide projectors, with music varying from his own compositions to Chopin, Rachmaninoff and Scriabin
Fischinger coined the term Raumlichtmusik: Space, Light, Music
“Of this Art everything is new and yet ancient in its laws and forms. Plastic - Dance - Painting - Music become one. The Master of the new Art forms poetical work in four dimensions … Cinema was its beginning … Raumlichtmusik will be its completion.”
Fischinger's income stabilized when he was hired to do the special effects for the Fritz Lang film. He worked with German rocket scientists, using models and blow torches.
Several short studies, usually set to music, were popular in art circles as well as with psychologists and those interested in synaethesia.
“He was going in a completely different direction than any other animator at the time. He was really exploring abstract patterns, but with a purpose to them — pioneering what technically is the music video.” — Book designer Chip Kidd
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“Everything in the world has a spirit which is released by its sound.”
[His wife] Elfriede claimed that she inspired Oskar's thoughts … when he was lying down in a darkened room and she dropped a key in the adjacent room; he recognized the sound as that specifically of a key … so might the form of the key correspond to a distinctive sound?
Fischinger developed a complicated stop-motion technique to show the cigarettes played sports, capitalizing on the Olympic fever in Berlin.
… he got his revenge on the Nazis in films like Muratti; besides being a brilliant work of art, with its goose-stepping cigarettes it's also a devastating satire on the kind of fascist groupthink at which the Nazis excelled.
It took elaborate scheming to get Komposition in Blau even approved in Germany under Goebble's Reichsfilmkammer, but no distributor would pick it up.
With the help of Ernst Lubitsch and Paramount Pictures, Fischinger and his family moved to Hollywood.
The 1936 color short Allegretto was originally made as an insert for a Paramount feature, The Big Broadcast of 1937, but the studio wanted to print it in black-and-white to fit the film and Fischinger refused. Eventually he bought back the rights to it. Again it's hard to believe this film — with its dizzying concentric circles moving in and out of each other, its bold, beautiful colors, and wild angles — was made more than six decades ago.
“You should give something that the audience will recognize. I don’t think the average audience will fully appreciate the abstract; but I may be all wrong …”
Fischinger was furious when his abstract shapes were turned into half-seen violin bows and stylized mountain peaks for Fantasia. For his part, Walt Disney was uncomfortable with Fischinger's often uncompromising avant-garde vision. (NPR)
Fischinger patented his color organ, the Lumigraph, in 1950. He hoped for commercial backing, but found none. After a speaker fell on his head while performing one night, he stopped public performances because of his superstitious tendencies.
“When I was 19 years old I had to talk about a certain work by William Shakespeare in our literary club. In preparing for this speech, I began to analyze the work in a graphic way. On large sheets of drawing paper, along a horizontal lone, I put down all the feelings and happenings, scene after scene, in graphic lines and curves. The lines and curves showed the dramatic development of the whole work, and the emotional moods, quite clearly.”