Luca Dipierro


Luca Dipierro is an Italian animator and illustrator who grew up in Merano, in Northern Italy, a few blocks from the Pension Ottoburg, where Franz Kafka wrote some of his Letters to Milena. Dipierro's drawings have been used on numerous book and record covers. His cut-out animations, filmed in stop motion with marionettes made out of paper and old book cloth, have been called "a perfect balance of creepy and charming". His work has been shown in theaters, galleries, and film festivals in the United States and Europe: notably the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival, the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino, and the Portland Film Festival.
In a 2010 interview with Ken Baumann on HTMLGIANT, Dipierro referred to the painstaking quality of his own work as a "systematic, patient, scrupulous waste of time."
Dipierro currently lives in Portland, Oregon.

Films

Since 2006, Dipierro has created more than thirty short animated films, some used as booktrailers for the work of writers such as C.A. Conrad, Mary Gaitskill, Tove Jansson, Jim Knipfel, Robert Lopez, Jenny Offil, Studs Terkel, and Leni Zumas. In 2014, Dipierro began touring with the show Paper Circus, a screening of his animations with a live soundtrack he performs with the Italian band Father Murphy. Paper Circus has been presented in various cinemas and galleries across the USA: the Hollywood Theatre and the Clinton Street Theatre in Portland, OR, Cinefamily at The Silent Movie Theatre in LA, the Grand Illusion Cinema in Seattle, WA, Spectacle Theater and Millennium Film Workshop in Brooklyn, NY and many others.
He is currently working on his first feature-length animation, The Cadence.
Dipierro was the subject of a 2011 documentary short film directed by American photographer McNair Evans.

Publications

Dipierro is the author of the art-zine series Das Ding, published by The Walk; an illustrated novel in cards, A Wooden Leg, co-created with Leni Zumas ; and numerous art booklets. Dipierro has also published a book of short fictions in Italian, Biscotti neri, described by Jim Knipfel as "dark, surreal, and extremely unsettling folk tales of the future." Dipierro's prose in English has appeared in Gigantic, Harp and Altar, No Colony, New York Tyrant, PANK, the anthology City Sages Baltimore, and other publications.