If you're using Canvas, I'd suggest holding a pointer to the current Bitmap and loading all other Bitmaps into an array.
Say,
Bitmap[] frames = new Bitmap[10] //10 frames
Bitmap frame[0] = BitmapFactory.decodeResource(getResources(), R.drawable.circlefram1);
Bitmap frame[1] = BitmapFactory.decodeResource(getResources(), R.drawable.circlefram2);
...
Select the currentFrame by pointing at the frame you're interested in.
Bitmap currentBitmap = frame[3]; // 4th frame
So when you call drawBitmap(currentBitmap) it will only draw the frame you are interested in. You can change the bitmap every so many frames, by assigning an fps to the frame animation.
If you just want to scale or rotate the bitmap (rotating a circle?), the best way to resize a bitmap is using createScaledBitmap, and rotating using a matrix.
For Scaling, you load any bitmap into memory like this
Bitmap circleBitmap = BitmapFactory.decodeResource(getResources(), R.drawable.circle);
If you would like the circle (or any bitmap) rescaled you would do something like this:
Bitmap scaledCircle = Bitmap.createScaledBitmap(circleBitmap, dstWidth, dstHeight, filter);
Where dstWidth and dstHeight are the target destination width and height, which you can previously calculate by scaling the original width and height.
int scaledHeight = circleBitmap.getHeight()/2;
int scaledWidth = circleBitmap.getWidth()/2;
And finally you would normally draw this Bitmap using a canvas like this
canvas.drawBitmap(bitmap)
For rotating, create a Matrix
Matrix mat;
mat.postRotate(degrees); // Rotate the matrix
Bitmap rotatedBitmap = Bitmap.createBitmap(originalBitmap, x, y, width, height, mat, filter);
and finally
canvas.drawBitmap(rotatedBitmap);
Keep in mind Canvases are slow for games or anything real-time!
Hope it helps.