Bengaluru orphanages ‘Paint Happiness campaign’ by MAAC scholars
In Bengaluru, Maya Academy of Advanced Cinematics (MAAC) is a leader in 3D Animation and VFX training with an affirmation of its scholars’ community made its ‘Paint Happiness campaign’.
January 29th, 2014
In Bengaluru, Maya Academy of Advanced Cinematics (MAAC) is a leader in 3D Animation and VFX training with an affirmation of its scholars’ community made its ‘Paint Happiness campaign’. It is a social opening to bring cheer and smiles to the orphaned children. The campaign was begun on January 16, with the painting of St. Patrick’s orphanage at Richmond Road, Bengaluru, and ends on March, 2014. In Jan 2014, Painting of 5 Orphanages will be finished.
Aam Aadmi Party Bengaluru supports “Paint Happiness campaign” and sends its volunteers. Mr. Prithvi Reddy, Head of AAP, Karnataka, attends the event and establishes the ‘Paint Happiness’ campaign with the first stroke of brushes to paint the wall.
The aim of this campaign is to bring smiles on the orphan children’s faces, spread happiness and inculcate social values between scholars to start small steps in their first socially responsible activity at this young age. For this, social cause the pupils get a chance to showcase their creativeness in the form of paintings and make a better environment for the not so privileged kids.
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Phenakistoscope (1831) A phenakistoscope disc by Eadweard Muybridge (1893).The phenakistoscope was an early animation device. It was invented in 1831 simultaneously by the Belgian Joseph Plateau and the Austrian Simon von Stampfer. It consists of a disk with a series of images, drawn on radii evenly spaced around the center of the disk. Slots are cut out of the disk on the same radii as the drawings, but at a different distance from the center. The device would be placed in front of a mirror and spun. As the phenakistoscope is spun, a viewer would look through the slots at the reflection of the drawings which would only become visible when a slot passes by the viewer's eye. This created the illusion of animation.