Carlos Manriquez
1908 - 1981
The man was Walt Disney – and soon thereafter, Manriquez joined the Walt Disney Studio as its first full-time background painter. He was by most accounts also the first artist of Mexican descent at Disney, beginning work there in 1929 and leaving the studio in 1938.
The Disney background department eventually expanded to include Emil Flohri, and remained a two-man enterprise until 1931, when a third artist, Mique Nelson, joined the team. They were responsible for creating the scenic backgrounds upon which hand-painted cels were placed and photographed. Their projects included Disney’s popular “Silly Symphonies” series of animated shorts, as well as many of the studio’s Mickey Mouse shorts.
While he worked in the animation industry, like many other Los Angeles artists, Manriquez painted everyday life around him in his spare time – a Regionalist style that would later come to be known as the “California Scene” genre.
After leaving Disney, Manriquez worked for Warner Bros animation, where he continued to paint backgrounds for cartoon shorts. He later moved to Mexico City, where he worked on “Rocky and Bullwinkle” at Val-Mar Productions. Manriquez later started his own studio in Mexico. He passed away on May 1,1981, at age 73.
Source:
https://news.chapman.edu/2022/09/01/hilbert-museum-acquires-painting-by-one-of-disneys-first-latinx-artists/
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