Ludmila Zeman
- Linda Zeman-Spaleny
- Malvina Spaleny
Ludmila Zeman (born 23 April 1947) is a Czech–Canadian artist, animator, and creator of children's books. She is the daughter of filmmaker Karel Zeman.[1][2][3]
Zeman was born in the Moravian Czech city of Zlín (renamed Gottwaldov in 1949, through 1989).[1] She graduated from the college of art (Střední uměleckoprůmyslová škola) in Uherské Hradiště.[4] She worked as her father's assistant for his final films, and married Eugen Spálený, the chief animator at his studio. They had two children, Linda and Malvinia.[5] She launched a career in story books and animation for children.[2]
In 1983, Zeman and her husband were invited to teach film technique at Emily Carr University of Art and Design in Vancouver. When the couple attempted to emigrate, the Czechoslovakian communist government refused them permission, accusing them of pro-Western leanings. Zeman was told to leave the animation studio, and Spálený was drafted into menial construction work. In the summer of 1984, the family escaped through Yugoslavia to a refugee camp in Austria, finally arriving in Canada to accept the teaching posts.[5]
The Cedar Tree of Life, a thirty-second animated segment the couple produced for the Canadian edition of Sesame Street, attracted the attention of the National Film Board of Canada, which invited the couple to make a short film on a topic of their choice.[5] Zeman's production was Lord of the Sky, based on myths of the Canadian north Pacific First Nations[2] and produced using paper cutouts. The film was a success, winning eleven international awards, including a blue ribbon at the American Film Festival in 1993; it was shown at the Sundance Film Festival the following year and was shortlisted for an Academy Award nomination.[5]
Following Lord of the Sky, Zeman and Spálený planned a feature-length animated film based on the Epic of Gilgamesh. Karel Zeman had introduced the epic, which was among his favorite books, to Ludmila when she was eleven.[5] The concept was eventually developed into a trilogy of children's books written and illustrated by Zeman: Gilgamesh the King (1991), The Revenge of Ishtar (1993), and The Last Quest of Gilgamesh (1995).[5] The final book in the trilogy won the 1995 Governor General's Award for Children's Illustration.[6] The Embassy of Canada in Japan presented an exhibition of Ludmila Zeman's work in Tokyo in 2011.[2]
References
- ^ a b "Archived Content: Ludmila Zeman". Library and Archives Canada. 25 September 2002. Retrieved 7 February 2013.
- ^ a b c d "Children's Story Books and Animations by Ludmila Zeman: June 14 – July 22, 2011: Embassy of Canada Prince Takamado Gallery". Government of Canada (canadainternational.gc.ca). 4 June 2012. Retrieved 7 February 2013.
- ^ "Tundra Books Online: Ludmila Zeman". Tundra Books (tundrabooks.com). Archived from the original on 5 August 2016. Retrieved 7 February 2013.
- ^ Canadian Children's Book Centre (1999). The Storymakers: Illustrating Children's Books: 72 Artists and Illustrators Talk About Their Work. Markham, Ontario: Pembroke Publishers. pp. 150–51. Retrieved 21 August 2013.
- ^ a b c d e f Grutz, Jane Waldron (May–June 1996). "Zeman's Gilgamesh". Saudi Aramco World: 18–26. Retrieved 22 July 2018.
- ^ "1995 Winners". Governor General's Awards. Canada Council for the Arts (canadacouncil.ca). Retrieved 20 May 2013.
External links
- Official website
- Ludmila Zeman at IMDb
- Ludmila Zeman at Library of Congress, with 12 library catalogue records
- v
- t
- e
- Marie-Louise Gay, Rainy Day Magic (1987)
- Kim LaFave, Amos's Sweater (1988)
- Robin Muller, The Magic Paintbrush (1989)
- Paul Morin, The Orphan Boy (1990)
- Joanne Fitzgerald, Doctor Kiss Says Yes (1991)
- Ron Lightburn, Waiting for the Whales (1992)
- Mireille Levert, Sleep Tight, Mrs. Ming (1993)
- Murray Kimber, Josepha: A Prairie Boy's Story (1994)
- Ludmila Zeman, The Last Quest of Gilgamesh (1995)
- Eric Beddows, The Rooster's Gift (1996)
- Barbara Reid, The Party (1997)
- Kady MacDonald Denton, A Child's Treasury of Nursery Rhymes (1998)
- Gary Clement, The Great Poochini (1999)
- Marie-Louise Gay, Yuck, A Love Story (2000)
- Mireille Levert, An Island in the Soup (2001)
- Wallace Edwards, Alphabeasts (2002)
- Allen Sapp, The Song Within My Heart (2003)
- Stéphane Jorisch, Jabberwocky (2004)
- Rob Gonsalves, Imagine a Day (2005)
- Leo Yerxa, Ancient Thunder (2006)
- Duncan Weller, The Boy from the Sun (2007)
- Stéphane Jorisch, The Owl and the Pussycat (2008)
- Jirina Marton, Bella's Tree (2009)
- Jon Klassen, Cats' Night Out (2010)
- Cybèle Young, Ten Birds (2011)
- Isabelle Arsenault, Virginia Wolf (2012)
- Matt James, Northwest Passage (2013)
- Jillian Tamaki, This One Summer (2014)
- JonArno Lawson, Sidewalk Flowers (2015)
- Jon-Erik Lappano and Kellen Hatanaka, Tokyo Digs a Garden (2016)
- David Robertson and Julie Flett, When We Were Alone (2017)
- Jillian Tamaki, They Say Blue (2018)
- Sydney Smith, Small in the City (2019)
- The Fan Brothers, The Barnabus Project (2020)
- David A. Robertson and Julie Flett, On the Trapline (2021)
- Naseem Hrab and Nahid Kazemi, The Sour Cherry Tree (2022)
- Jack Wong, When You Can Swim (2023)