Showing posts with label discovery bay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label discovery bay. Show all posts

Friday, August 14, 2009

Tom Scherman Tribute Part 2 : Tokyo Disney Sea Artwork

Hello, everyone. Tokyo Disney Sea is largely considered as the most beautiful theme park in the world, and today i will explain to you how you can own a piece of its history. More precisely: of Tokyo Disney Sea Mysterious Island origin. I've presented to you in previous articles the great Nautilus specialist Tom Scherman, and today's article is all about his rare Discovery Bay drawings. As we will see, the design of Tokyo Disney Sea Mysterious Island found its origin in these drawings.



First, we have to thank Rowland Scherman, his brother who own some of Tom's original drawings and provided his artwork for this article. Here is what Rowland told me on why Tom was so interested in the Tokyo DisneySea project:

"Ten years before Tokyo, Tom and Harper Goff had an idea for a TV show and a Theme Park/Ride called Discovery Bay. It was Nemo's home base and there were to be lessons of travel, nature and physics involved.

Harper died before they could collaborate on the project, but Tom kept at it and drew different versions of it over and over again. He also made, at his own expense, a pilot film preview of the idea. It is a cult classic--but no one at Disney ever got to see it.

The drawings Tom made were on napkins--his favorite medium--not only because he could do them while dining at a restaurant, but also he liked the shading effects he could produce on the napkin's absorbent surface. The sketches simply took form in Tom's head. He could visualize the project from any angle, and then simply create it on a napkin!

That Tokyo's Mysterious Island looks like Tom's ten year old drawings is a source of speculation as to which came first. Alas, now that Tom is no longer with us, that answer will probably remain a mystery."

Well, recently i had more explanations about it, as i received an email from somebody who very kindly gave me more informations about the collaboration between Tom Scherman and Harper Goff. As you will see, it seems that imagineer Tony Baxter was also involved in the project:
"Yes, Harper worked on it, but, the project was primarily Tony Baxter and Tom Scherman. In fact, most of the design work that TDS show-producer Steve Kirk and his team used in the final placement of MYSTERIOUS ISLAND was directly inspired and/or lifted from the work that Tom and Tony did on the Port Disney project (Long Beach, CA) for the 'Mysterious Island' installation there. Tom passed on far too early to work upon the DisneySea version of Mysterious Island, and, Tony was not a member of the design team that was assigned to Tokyo DisneySea. But, the work that created that installation rests fully upon the previous foundations laid by Tony Baxter and Tom...dating back to the mid-1970's"

So, quite a while ago, Tom did what he always did to jog his memory: he began to draw Vulcania Island, with what he remembered about the 1954 movie and the WDI imagineer's ideas for the TDS park.

Here are some of those black and white very rare drawings, beginning with this one of the overall view of the volcano and the Nautilus floating in its lagoon.



Here's another one, a closer view of the Nautilus, including one of TDS boats.



This other one shows the fantastic machines built by Captain Nemo as seen around the Vulcania lagoon.



Tom's drawings also depicted the decor in the Journey to the Center of the Earth ride, like this setpiece that everybody walking around the lagoon would see.



Not to mention this concept for the boarding area, as seen after riders took the elevator to arrive in the center of the earth...



As we can see on the pictures below, Mysterious Island is not that far in concept from Tom's work.









Now, the good news is that his brother Rowland own the rights of these drawings and is currently producing a set of limited edition lithographs. It is a very limited edition, between 100 and 150 numbered sets, large-sized, all with a certificate of authenticity.

If you're a Nautilus fan - and who isn't? - this is a one-of-a-kind opportunity to own some of Tom Scherman's artwork and a bit of Tokyo Disney Sea history. If you want to know more, feel free to send Rowland Scherman an email at: photomota@comcast.net

If you have trouble to contact him by email - sometime my own messages were blocked as spam - please email me at: lawrence55@wanadoo.fr and i will forward your request to him.

Thanks to leave a comment or discuss this article on D&M english forum on Mice Chat

Artwork: copyright Tom Scherman

Photos: copyright Oriental Land co

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Disneyland that never was Artwork



The Artwork article of this week is all about WDI concepts for Disneyland that were never realised. Let's have a look to this "Disneyland that never was"!

The first rendering called "Mermaid Lagoon" - below and detail above - is from Herb Ryman. This Mermaid Lagoon in fact did exist, it was a dining area built behind Captain Hook's pirate ship in Fantasyland. When Fantasyland was completely redesigned in 1983, both the pirate ship and the lagoon became a part of Disneyland history.



Below, the initial concept for the Haunted Mansion. It was considered by Walt too decrepit for Disneyland guests, so the more appealing concept that we all know was developed.



One of the most known project is of course Tony Baxter's Discovery Bay. Some elements of Discovery Bay were finally realised at Disneyland Paris Discoveryland and Tokyo Disney Sea...



... but did you know this concept-art of "The Fireworks Factory"...Conceived by Tony Baxter, it was to be a new concept in shooting galleries. The project was not built at Disneyland, but ended to be a restaurant on Pleasure Island.



Below, an acrylic rendering for another Discovery Bay attraction called "Mythia, The Lost World" by Imagineer Joe Rhode. The attraction was not built, but this 1982 rendering went on to inspire "The Adventurers Club" on Pleasure Island, and probably the also never built Beastly Kingdom at Animal Kingdom.



Let's have a look at some Fantasyland attractions concept who never were, like this Crocodile Aquarium where guests were entering by the mouth of Captain Hook's crocodile...



Below, an early design concept called "Little Toot canal boats" for the "Storybook Land Canal Boats", based on the Disney cartoon, Little Toot.



Or this also famous "Big Rock Candy Mountain", a sweet idea rendered by Claude Coats and destined for a spot in Fantasyland.



Less known is this attraction based on the Oz books. A variety of scenes - see the four renderings below - were created by the imagineers in anticipation of developing an attraction based on these books. While the "Rainbow Road to Oz" never materialised as an attraction, "Return to Oz", the movie, did make it to the silver screen.






All Artwork and part of the text: copyright Disney
 
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