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Mikhail Tsekhanovskiy(1889-1965)

  • Director
  • Writer
  • Art Director
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Mikhail Mikhaylovich Tsekhanovskiy is Soviet artist and director of animation. Honored Artist of the RSFSR (1964). Graduate of the First St. Petersburg Gymnasium. He began to paint in the gymnasium, in 1908-1910 he worked in Paris in a private sculpture workshop; In 1911-1914 he studied at the Law Faculty of St. Petersburg University (did not graduate), then studied at the Imperial Academy of Arts (St. Petersburg), in 1918 he graduated from the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture. From 1918 to 1923 Tsekhanovskiy served in the Red Army, where he was engaged in applied art and sculpture, then returned to Petrograd, where he continued his studies in applied work and worked as an instructor-artist at the State Art and Industrial College.

Since 1926, Mikhail Tsekhanovskiy worked at the Rainbow Publishing House and in the children's editorial board of Lengiz on illustrations of children's and youth books, next to Vladimir Lebedev. Tsekhanovskiy also printed the so-called "movie books" - "The Ball", "Bim-Bom", "Train", when throwing the pages of which created a short animation containing some cinematic techniques.

From 1928 to 1936 and from 1938 to 1942, Mikhail Tsekhanovskiy was a director-animator at the Leningrad film factory Sovkino (then Lenfilm). The first film work of Tsekhanovskiy was the cartoon Pochta (1929), based on his own illustrations for the book of Samuil Marshak, and developing the constructivist method implemented in the book. In 1929, Tsekhanovskiy, along with Evgeny Shoplo and Arseniy Avraamov, stood at the origins of the "drawn sound" - synthesizing musical works by means of graphic representation of sound tracks on film. In 1930, a voiced version of Pochta (1929) was released, which became the first Soviet sound cartoon. It became the first Soviet cartoon to have a wide audience, the first Soviet cartoon to be widely shown abroad, and the hand-painted version became the first Soviet color film.

Since 1942, Mikhail Tsekhanovskiy was the director of the Soyuzmultfilm studio. His animated films have repeatedly won prizes at international festivals.
BornMay 26, 1889
DiedJune 22, 1965(76)
BornMay 26, 1889
DiedJune 22, 1965(76)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Add photos, demo reels

Known for

Bazar (1934)
Bazar
7.6
Short
  • Director(as Mikhail Tsekhanovsky)
  • 1934
Les Cygnes sauvages (1962)
Les Cygnes sauvages
7.3
  • Director(as Mikhail Tsekhanovsky)
  • 1962
Skazka O Glupom Myshonke (1940)
Skazka O Glupom Myshonke
6.9
Short
  • Director(as Mikhail Tsekhanovsky)
  • 1940
Pasifik 231 (1931)
Pasifik 231
6.9
Short
  • Director(as Mikhail Tsekhanovsky)
  • 1931

Credits

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IMDbPro

Director



  • Les Contes de mon enfance (1998)
    Les Contes de mon enfance
    7.6
    TV Series
    • Director (as Mikhail Tsekhanovsky)
    • 1998
  • Pochta (1964)
    Pochta
    5.2
    Short
    • Director
    • 1964
  • Les Cygnes sauvages (1962)
    Les Cygnes sauvages
    7.3
    • Director (as Mikhail Tsekhanovsky)
    • 1962
  • Lisa, bobyor i drugie (1961)
    Lisa, bobyor i drugie
    5.9
    Short
    • Director (as M. Tsekhanovsky)
    • 1961
  • Legenda o zaveshchanii mavra (1959)
    Legenda o zaveshchanii mavra
    6.7
    Short
    • Director (as M. Tsekhanovskiy)
    • 1959
  • Skaz o Chapaeve
    Short
    • Director
    • 1958
  • Devochka v dzhunglyakh (1956)
    Devochka v dzhunglyakh
    6.4
    Short
    • Director
    • 1956
  • Tsarevna-lyagushka (1954)
    Tsarevna-lyagushka
    7.3
    Short
    • Director (as M. Tsekhanovskiy, Mikhaïl Tsekhanovskii)
    • 1954
  • Kashtanka (1952)
    Kashtanka
    7.3
    Short
    • Director (as M. Tsekhanovskiy)
    • 1952
  • Skazka o rybake i rybke (1950)
    Skazka o rybake i rybke
    7.5
    Short
    • Director (as Mikhaïl Tsekhanovskii)
    • 1950
  • Tsvetik-semitsvetik (1948)
    Tsvetik-semitsvetik
    6.8
    Short
    • Director (as Mikhail Tsekhanovsky)
    • 1948
  • Telefon (1944)
    Telefon
    6.8
    Short
    • Director (as M. Tsekhanovskiy)
    • 1944
  • Yolka: Novogodnyaya skazka (1942)
    Yolka: Novogodnyaya skazka
    5.2
    Short
    • Director (as M. Tsekhanovsky)
    • 1942
  • Kino-kontsert 1941 (1943)
    Kino-kontsert 1941
    6.2
    • Director (as M. Tsekhanovsky)
    • 1943
  • Skazka O Glupom Myshonke (1940)
    Skazka O Glupom Myshonke
    6.9
    Short
    • Director (as Mikhail Tsekhanovsky)
    • 1940

Writer



  • Pochta (1964)
    Pochta
    5.2
    Short
    • Writer
    • 1964
  • Skazka O Glupom Myshonke (1940)
    Skazka O Glupom Myshonke
    6.9
    Short
    • Writer (as Mikhail Tsekhanovsky)
    • 1940
  • Bazar (1934)
    Bazar
    7.6
    Short
    • screenplay
    • 1934

Art Director



  • Telefon (1944)
    Telefon
    6.8
    Short
    • Art Director (as M. Tsekhanovskiy)
    • 1944
  • Bazar (1934)
    Bazar
    7.6
    Short
    • Art Director
    • 1934
  • Pochta (1929)
    Pochta
    6.7
    Short
    • Art Director (as Mikhail Tsekhanovsky)
    • 1929

Personal details

Edit
  • Alternative names
    • Mikhaïl Tsekhanovskii
  • Born
    • May 26, 1889
  • Died
    • June 22, 1965
  • Spouses
      Vera Tsekhanovskaya1926 - June 22, 1965 (his death)

Did you know

Edit
  • Trivia
    In 2013, at the XVII Festival of Archival Cinema "White Pillars" in the State Film Fund, the experimental film by M. Tsekhanovskiy "Hopak" (1931) was publicly shown, one of the first Soviet sound cartoons found in the Czech film archive.
  • Quotes
    Animation is a new spatio-temporal form of art.

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