In 1900, a couple presents what they claim to be inventions from the year 2000 to the director of a cabaret.
A story from childhood and an indelible image continue to haunt Jamie many years later.
As kids, most of us played with store-bought toys. Bombarded with commercials for toys during Saturday morning cartoons, we began our initiation into American consumerism via the desire to have the latest and greatest toy trends from Barbie and GI Joe to Transformers and My Little Pony. Do you still have your toys? Probably not. What happened to them? Where did they wind up? Where's your Barbie? This piece questions not only the final resting place of our playthings but also our impact on the earth through pollution, particularly with plastic. It is sad to think that something we love so dearly as a child might wind up in the ocean or as part of the great pacific garbage patch, but this is the harsh reality.
A young woman lives with her sleeping husband. Prisoner of her loneliness, she refuses to accept that this man is only a memory.
Moto Perpetuo shows an absurd picture of our neverending changing culture and history.
A man meets a girl, sitting on a bench in the park. He imagines ways that he can impress her. But will he make the good impression when he gets the chance?
The first animated short film to feature Varga's clumsy claymation character Augusta.
Two masks face each other under a multitude of disturbing glances. A signal is given, begins then a dance, a ritual fight.
In Buffalo Milk Yogurt, a collaboration with Corey Fogel, a man experiences a nervous breakdown in a gourmet supermarket while a woman practices yoga in a display of fall decorations.
The Oven Sky (2011) is set in a quickly gentrifying neighborhood where newcomers pressure a longtime resident to turn her yard filled with lawn ornaments into a dog park. This animation features music by Rachel Mason.
Joseph is mentally deviated. He is a prisoner of his own flat and always in permanent war with his own mind.
For an imaginary friend, living an imaginary life, there's nothing worse than being forgotten.
The tragic tale of two unlucky amphibians and a series of escalating blunders that ends their flirting for good.
Krazy Kat gets falsely arrested for cheese burglaries.
Peter Nestler illustrates a poem by Hans Sachs from 1540.