Animation is everywhere. We encounter some form of animation
every time we turn on the television, go to a movie, or surf the
Internet, but how many of us understand how animation really works?
Visitors to The Children's Museum can explore the science behind the
art at Animation, a new, highly interactive exhibit at the museum.
Animation, created and produced by the Oregon Museum of Science
and Industry (OMSI) featuring Cartoon Network, explores animation from
concept to finished product — from storyboarding, character design and
drawing techniques, to movement, timing, filming and sound.
Larger-than-life graphics of popular Cartoon Network characters provide
a colorful backdrop to the exhibit, which also explores the history of
animation and features a screening room and a cartoon museum.
Animation has proven to be a powerful and effective tool for engaging
and teaching people of all ages about science concepts such as
perception, illusion, geometry and measurement. Math and science are
fundamental to animation. Before producing an animated sequence, an
animator plots out a character’s “path of action” on a grid. An
animator creates characters in scale with their environments through
the use of basic geometry and spatial sense. To illustrate convincing
movement, animators apply knowledge of the physics of motion and the science of human perception.