#Pink panther play doh full#
The Pink Phink can be viewed in its original form with full titles and sans laugh track on The Official Pink Panther channel on YouTube along with the MGM Television logo. Most American broadcasts currently air minus the laugh track.
#Pink panther play doh tv#
Animation: Don Williams, Bob Matz, Norman McCabe, LaVerne Harding.Ī laugh track was added to the theatrical Pink Panther cartoons when they were broadcast as part of the Pink Panther Show aired on NBC, and this laugh track still appears on when the show is aired on the Spanish language Boomerang TV channel, and the France Channel Gulli." The Pink Panther Theme": Henry Mancini.It is also both the only animated Pink Panther short and the only installment in the franchise to win the award. The Pink Phink was the first Pink Panther animated short produced by DePatie–Freleng Enterprises and by winning the 1964 Academy Award for Animated Short Film, it marked the first time that a studio won an Academy Award with its first animated short. The Pink Panther then walks into the house as the sun (also turned pink) sets and the cartoon fades out. The painter gets upset and bangs his head against the mailbox outside. But just before he moves in, he paints the white man completely pink. At the end, the exasperated painter inadvertently turns the house and everything around it pink (first by repeatedly shooting at the elusive panther with a shotgun that the panther had poured pink paint into, and then by burying the panther's pink paint cans in the soil outside the house, where they "sprout" and grow pink grass and trees), and the panther moves in. Each time the painter attempts to paint something blue, the panther thwarts him in a new way, and paints the object/area pink. For more information, to review their résumés, or to request high resolution images, contact us at 212.647.7030, or visit Gallery hours are Tuesday – Saturday, 11AM – 6PM.The Pink Panther and an unnamed painter (known as the "Little Man") compete over whether a house should be painted blue or pink. But, with titles like Devil Bunny and Hand Grenade, Ripley posits that looks can be misleading and lead to dire consequences.Īll seven participating artists have exhibited widely. Playful, bulbous creatures appearing as if sculpted from Play-Doh™ are the subjects of Tim Ripley’s highly rendered paintings. Jon Pellicoro poses bendable figurines of the Pink Panther and Pee Wee Herman in compromising positions to create a perversely humorous sculpture, and also photographs toys on the beach in disturbing juxtapositions, such as a doll head with a skull.
In another image, a muscular, masked executioner lurks behind an innocent looking white creature, his axe poised.ĭouglas Newton’s painting Celebration depicts an angel-shaped cookie cutter which becomes a damsel in distress, alone and vulnerable amidst a barren, windblown landscape while candy-colored toy airplanes swarm the sky above her. In Kendrick Mar’s Decapitation, a pink bear-like toy dumbfoundedly contemplates a decapitated head sitting in a pool of blood. While her palette embraces pinks and baby blues, hostility lurks at every juncture. Monika Malewska’s oils depict bleeding rainbow-hued unicorns, a suspect-looking rabbit bombarded by airplanes, and Godzilla bullying diminutive Pillsbury Doughboys™.
Hello Kitty™ becomes Hello Shitty, wielding a fiery missile while Hello Titty threatens us with a hand grenade. Juxtaposing high art and kitsch, Nancy Baker’s works in gouache, collage, and glitter on paper utilize wordplay and cartoon icons to expose inequities in our politics, economy, and culture. While the effect is seductively cheerful, the images conjure the fatal dangers of small children playing with plastic bags. Meredith Allen encases stuffed animals in shiny cellophane and photographs them with luminous saturated backdrops. Curated by Denise Bibro, Olympia Lambert, and Almitra Stanley. Featuring work by Meredith Allen, Nancy Baker, Monika Malewska, Kendrick Mar, Douglas Newton, Jon Pellicoro, and Tim Ripley, Sinister Play includes painting, photography, works on paper, and sculpture. Seven artists explore the duality of imagery which is at once childlike, cute, and cuddly, yet belies disturbing undercurrents of menace, mischief, and violence. Denise Bibro Fine Art presents Sinister Play, February 3rd through March 5th, 2011.