The pink palace from the movie “Coraline,” on view at MoPOP. The 7,500-square-foot exhibit created by MoPOP curators, in partnership with LAIKA creators, will be on display at MoPOP through summer 2024, before it sets off to other museums around the country. ![]() Credit: Nancy Chaney Something for everyoneįamilies with tweens or teens interested in film, art, engineering, sculpture, technology, 3D printing, robotics, painting, costume design, and even jewelry-making will find many things to love. Props from the movie “ParaNorman” on view at MoPOP. Through large-scale displays, film artifacts and interactive elements, visitors discover the myriad tiny elements that combine to create the imaginative and richly detailed worlds of LAIKA. The exhibit offers an immersive look at how LAIKA’s stop-motion animated films are made. It’s called “ Hidden Worlds: The Films of LAIKA” and it opened this week at Seattle’s Museum of Pop Culture, commonly called MoPOP. But now families can examine the hidden details of LAIKA’s worlds at a new special exhibit. ![]() Set from the movie “Kubo and the Two Strings.” Credit: Nancy Chaneyīuilding LAIKA’s complex miniature worlds takes an attention to detail that few people can imagine or understand. From “ Coraline” to “ Missing Link,” each LAIKA production inhabits its own world, each with a unique aesthetic.īut unlike most animation studios, LAIKA actually creates its worlds - in real life. Many families have likely watched stop-motion animated movies created by LAIKA Studios, perhaps without realizing the origin of the films.
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