Doodle on the paper. Doodle on the screen: What is a visual style in animation, between traditional visual art methods and advancing technology?
Animation has always occupied a unique position among visual mediums. Unlike painting, photography, or even live-action film, it does not merely capture reality but in its unique ways, it is able to construct it. Every frame is an intentional creation, shaped by choices in form, movement, color, and timing. Due to this, animation thrives on abstraction, bending and simplifying reality in ways that serve expression rather than replication. From its earliest hand-drawn experiments to today’s digitally complex productions, animation has continually reinvented how visual style is created. At the center of this evolution sits a persistent question, of, what actually defines visual style in animation? Is it the artist’s grounding in traditional visual art, or the ever-expanding capabilities of technology? Historically, studios such as Walt Disney Animation Studios built their visual identity on strong draftsmanship and observational drawing, emphasizing clarity, appeal, and motion ...