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ART ATTACK


Neil Buchanan on the ''Art Attack''

'''Art Attack''' was a British children's television series about art. It was one of CITV's longest running children's programmes, running from 1989 until 2007. It was presented throughout by Neil Buchanan. The show involves Buchanan producing three or four works of art, taking the viewer through its production step by step. It was originally fifteen minutes long but this was extended to twenty minutes from series 11.
He often introduces a particular segment by showing the finished piece, then the litany "Come have a look at this!!". When a piece involves painting or gluing or anything else that requires time to dry or set, he puts the piece — with a few slops of paint or such over it — to one side and says, "and then you'll have something that looks like this". His works are designed so children can follow his technique and make their own copy of his piece, and they are generally pictures with some quirk added to them, e.g. 'Lolly Lettering' (a type of calligraphy using lolly sticks) and using cardboard squares as paint palette knives to create a painting of a ship. In several episodes he makes something that included lots of torn-up newspaper and papier-mâché (using a solution of PVA glue and water), like the 'Dinosaur Banks'.
Once he has finished explaining his work, he says the famous "Try it yourself" line to the viewers.
One of ''Art Attack's most famous inclusions is the Big Art Attacks. These are pieces of art done by Buchanan on a huge scale, often on a playing field, tarmac ground and similar. One of his most well-known is a 'picture' of Queen Elizabeth II made up of £250,000 worth of £10 banknotes. In a special Christmas episode of ''Art Attack'', Buchanan arranged for a big art attack on the skyline of New York, having specific apartments turn their lights on and off to pixelate a Christmas scene. Also memorable is 'The Head', an animated stone bust who laughs and recaps the steps needed to produce the last art piece made. Although he follows Neil's instructions, he always makes it hilariously wrong. In series one, The Head was played by Steve Sweeney, in series 2, Andrew O'Connor and from series 3, it was voiced and operated by Francis Wright. It did not appear in series 13 and from series 17 to date.
The programme was originally a TVS production, devised by two TVS employees, Neil Buchanan and Tim Edmunds. Buchanan and Edmunds met each other at Southern Television in 1978, and worked together on No.73 and Do It. The Art Attack pilot was shot on location at a disused swimming pool in Gillingham, Kent in 1988, and the series began the following year. When TVS lost its franchise, Edmunds and Buchanan produced the programme through their company, 'The Media Merchants'. The Media Merchants produced the show for SMG Productions (Scottish Television). At this time (1992) another ex-TVS employee, Peter Urie set up a production management company, Television Support Services. Television Support Services managed all of the Media Merchants productions. The show was filmed from The Maidstone Studios, Maidstone, Kent. ITV announced the cancellation of the series in July 2007.[1]

Contents
Trivia
References
External links

Trivia



★ Buchanan's ''Art Attack'' jumper costs £700 to make as it is made from a special material. This is because of the way TV cameras behave when they pick up red pigment.[2]

★ In Latin America it is retitled ''"Disney's Art Attack"'' and is broadcast on "Latin Disney Channel", first with Rui Torres then with Jordi Cruz and Buchanan only appearing in the second part of the show, in the segment where he creates "Big Art Attacks" on the floor.

★ In Taiwan it is dubbed in Mandarin. Buchanan presents the entire show.

★ Art Attack has been repeated on Disney Channel until 2005.

★ In Germany, ''Art Attack'' was hosted by Benedikt Weber and aired on Toggo from the german broadcaster SuperRTL. While Neil Buchanan's hands were shown drawing or painting, Weber's voice was heard to make the viewers think it was Weber doing all the work. In every episode, there was one section in which Neil Buchanan created a huge work of art outside. Weber used to announce the new work by Buchanan, who was called “Neil, unser großer Künstler” (''Neil, our great artist'') throughout the whole German series, and refers to him. The show hushed the fact that Buchanan in fact was the mastermind behind the scenes and feigned that he was simply the mute guy doing the giant artworks outside.

References


1. ''Art Attack'' axed after 18 years
2. Meet Neil

External links



artattack.co.uk - Official Website

''Art Attack'' at itv.com/citv

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