Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Paper Port (Spanish: Puerto Papel) is a 2016 animated television series produced by Zumbastico Studios. The series blends stop-motion and 2D animation with papercraft characters and environments, in a technique called Papermotion .
This is a complete list of Francisco Goya's 63 large cartoons for tapestries (Spanish: cartones para tapices) painted on commission for Charles III of Spain and later Charles IV of Spain between 1775 and 1791 to hang in the San Lorenzo de El Escorial and El Pardo palaces.
This category has only the following subcategory. Spanish children's animated television series by genre (8 C) Pages in category "Spanish children's animated television series"
Spanish anime-influenced animated television series (12 P) C. Spanish children's animated television series (1 C, 8 P) F. Spanish flash animated television series (6 P)
Villainous (Spanish: Villanos) is a Mexican-American animated television and web series produced by A.I. Animation Studios for Cartoon Network and Max.It was created by Alan Ituriel, a veteran of the animation industry in Mexico.
The first children's block, "Mi Tele" ("My TV"), a two-hour animation block on weekday mornings featuring a mix of imported Spanish-language cartoons such as Fantaghiro and El Nuevo Mundo de los Gnomos ("The New World of the Gnomes"), as well as the originally produced in English as the Zodiac Entertainment cartoon series, Mr. Bogus and the ...
Most of the clients asked for cartoons with country, jocular, allegorical themes, and only a minority requested cartoons with historical allusions. In the specific case of Goya's cartoons, the weavers of the Royal Factory filed complaints against the Aragonese for the detail with which he made the sketches, especially that of The Meadow of San ...
Billiken, a children's magazine started in 1919, already included some cartoons. The popularity of comics grew in the 1920s, and children's comics gained popularity. The newspaper La Nación started publishing comics daily in 1920, and comics, both foreign and domestic, were a big reason for the popularity of the newspaper Crítica .