Art Clokey Mandala



Mandala is an extraordinary film, made in 1974-77, in which transformations of colored abstract shapes in a mystical dreamscape of clay animation transition out to the real world and back, suggesting a revolution in thinking, and an evolution of feeling.
This journey through moving clay sculpture scenes consistently leads toward a Mandala in the background, the symbol for eternal life.
We asked Art how he made this exquisite work of art.
“Well, we shot that in our basement in Topanga. We had an 1,100 square foot basement in an A-frame on a hillside. It was perfect for our needs. My whole family worked on it, my daughter and Gloria’s daughter. That was our second marriage for both of us. She had a daughter and I had a daughter. They were both artistic, and my son and Gloria worked with the camera. So it was a family effort all in clay.”
Art explained that the goal of Mandala was to communicate “the idea of evolving our consciousness from primordial forms to human form, and then beyond the human to the spiritual and eternal. The theme was the evolution of consciousness: we begin in the mud and we just go out and up.”
The film shows lots of masks and tribal images. “The masks were symbols of the condition that we live in where we are all behind the masks and the whole process of life is to discover who it is behind that mask,” Art told us. “Who are we? Who is that guy behind the mask we’re holding up there? That’s the purpose of all religion. You just have to find out who that guy is behind the mask.”
Mandala still stands out as Art Clokey’s most visionary, abstract, kinesthetic masterpiece.


Art Clokey---The Formative Years



Art Clokey, the creator of Gumby and Pokey, and a true innovator in the clay animation industry, began his work with clay figures on his grandfather’s farm 80 miles north of Detroit where he spent his summers in the 1930s. It was paradise to him as a boy. A neighboring farmer had a son about his age. They would play together in the barnyard or in the living room of the house. The son had a set of blocks and toy cannons. They built forts with toy soldiers. They would shoot pencils and marbles out of the cannons and destroy the forts. When they ran out of soldiers Art began to make them of clay. It was the first time he can remember working with clay.
Art tragically lost his father in a car accident in Detroit when he was nine. After living in a home for abandoned boys for several years, he was adopted at the age of twelve by Joseph W. Clokey. Professor Clokey was a renaissance man who wrote over 200 pieces of original music and taught music at Pomona College. Joe and Art spent the summers going on adventures in Canada, Alaska, Siberia and the American West. They would explore, paint and film with their new camera.
From the 8th grade on, Art attended Webb School, which had the inspiring Ray Alf teaching geology. Ray would take Art and his best friend Bill Webb on fossil digs in the Mojave Desert and as far away as the Nebraska Badlands. They uncovered dinosaur bones and ancient camel tracks. They formed the Peckery Society, named after a bird fossil they had discovered. The Webb School Museum rivals most colleges when it comes to fossils, and Art was one of the founders. These were wonderful years for young Art, and he took his father’s film camera along on these adventures.
Art always stressed that the Gumby episodes were “The Adventures of Gumby.”  The adventures he had growing up definitely found their way into the creative storytelling of his career. “The Silver Mine” is a Davey and Goliath episode that Art wrote and produced is just one example. The limitless imagination and creativity of Gumby owes itself in part to Art’s turn of fortune in his youth.
Art spent WWII helping the military with photo intelligence in North Africa, Italy, and France as the war progressed. When he returned home, Art studied geology (of course) and got his liberal arts degree from Miami of Ohio. He then went to the Hartford Seminary to become an Episcopal Priest. He met Ruth Parkander, who was getting her Masters in Religious Education. Their romance led to marriage, and they moved to Hollywood to make religious films. Well, that would come with Davey, after some other creations.


Art Clokey--Art Films and Pilots



Art Films and Pilots

Art Clokey created a number of innovative art films during his life. He also developed pilots for comedic and stop motion TV programs. You can learn about some of these in section on Art Clokey.
Gumby Gumbo Fire Station
Gumby Morphs Pokey
Gumby & Pokey drinking Milk
Gumby Pokey Haunted House
Gumby Professor Kapp.


Art Clokey's Artwork


Art Clokey Animating Gumby
Art Clokey animating Clay
Art ClokeyA nimation lecture
How Art Got His Big Break: The Power of Gumbasia
Art on the Art of Film and Animation
The Beginning: Thank You Budweiser!
The Clay Peacock
Davey and Goliath: A Message of Love
Mandala: A Visionary Masterpiece
The Pilots
The Formative Years


Art Clokey Gumby Best Images,Pictures, Wallpapers and Photos


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