Noyes started creating animated images in his teens and was one of the first animators to use clay.[7] In 1964, Noyes created the eight-minute animated film Clay or the Origin of Species which was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film.[5] The film is considered one of the earliest examples of claymation, establishing it as a medium.[6] The work was cited by Wallace and Gromit creators, Peter Lord and David Sproxton, as a large influence on their work.[8]
In the early 1970s, Noyes filmed documentaries with Claudia Weil, including This Is the Home of Mrs. Levant Graham, a cinéma vérité film of the life of a Black family in Washington, D.C., and Aspen: 1970, which concerned a "generational clash of architects".[9] Noyes also used sand for his animations, including in his 1973 work Sandman and the 1976 pixelated stop motion Peanut Butter and Jelly. He also designed animated sand pinwheels for the Nickelodeon show Pinwheel[3] and created the sand alphabet for Sesame Street.[10]
Noyes partnered with Kit Laybourne to establish Noyes and Laybourne Enterprises in 1983. One of their first series was Braingames on HBO, and they also later created Eureeka's Castle and Gullah Gullah Island for Nickelodeon.[11] They created ten-second channel IDs for Nickelodeon that were rotoscoped.[7] Noyes and Laybourne Enterprises became established as the east coast branch of Colossal Pictures, from which they produced animation and network graphics for MTV's Liquid Television, as well as commercials for several major brands.[11] In association with Colossal, Noyes directed and illustrated the 1994 interactive CD-ROM Ruff's Bone for Living Books, a project of Broderbund and Random House. He also directed and developed The Blockheads, a series of two-minute animations.[7]
After relocating to Northern California in the 1990s, Noyes developed the Disney Channel afternoon programming block Zoog Disney with Walt Disney Imagineering. He was also involved in interactive projects with Pixar and served as the creative director for Oxygen television network in the late 1990s.[3]
Noyes was married to Augusta Talbot and had two children, Isaac and Abigail. He and his family moved to San Francisco in 1991.[3] He enjoyed jazz piano and played the accordion and oboe.[9]
Noyes died in San Francisco on March 23, 2024, at the age of 81, owing to complications from prostate cancer.[11][3]