1872
EADWEARD JAMES MUYBRIDGE (1830 - 1904)
Muybridge uses a battery of 24 cameras to photograph a race horse owned by California Governor Leland Stanford. The resulting 24 pictures taken as the trotting horse raced past, was the beginning of what would become known as stop-action series photography. Muybridge would continue the study of motion and the theory of locomotion using animals, and later, humans. Muybridge's investigations into the gate of a horse at the Sacramento racetrack were inconclusive. 1873
EADWEARD JAMES MUYBRIDGE (1830 - 1904) Muybridge publishes over 2,000 photographs of the far western U.S. in his 'Catalogue of Photographic Views'. His photos showed famous American landmarks in their pristine state.
In April of 1873 the Daily Alta California reported that Muybridge had photographed the horse \u2018Occident\u2019, owned by Governor Leland Stanford. The newspaper stated in the story that Muybridge's photographs had in fact shown the animal "frozen" in mid stride. Word will quickly spread around the U.S. and then the world, of what Muybridge's work was actually proving - that horses leave the ground, and that recorded motion was possible. Without identifying Muybridge by name, the New York Times will report in May of 1873 that
Muybridge had taken a path that would lead directly towards an art form that would cause landscape photography to pale in comparison. No one had ever seen anything like this before. Stanford and Muybridge had discussed the idea of a horse's legs being off the ground or not, when trotting. To prove conclusively the truth, Muybridge rigged his cameras to photograph in stop-action, a series of pictures which showed that in fact, the four hooves did leave the ground at one point, at the same time. The cameras had been set along the track on the outer rim, with triggered shutters set at appropriate intervals. The horse was 40 feet from the camera and the exposure was 1/1000 of a second. The exposure was triggered electro-magnetically using wires across the track. This event has gone down in history as one of the most important moments in the story of moving picture development. The series was published later in 1881 under the title 'Attitudes of Animals in Motion'. A patent was granted for this method of stop-action series photography in 1897.
This was reported in the Palo 'Alta' ;
| Like Edison, Muybridge had produced his own photographs for the purpose of creating motion on a screen. Cine-photography had become a reality. The animation of Sallie Gardner is from a proof sheet, taken of the horse on June 19, 1878.
GO TO https://archives.upenn.edu/exhibits/penn-history/muybridge
https://www.instructables.com/id/Eadweard-Muybridge-Experiment/ To see a 'Street Zoopraxiscope' in action in an urban landscape. Once again, the pictures never move. There are no glass plates and no machine. Just photos of the Muybridge horse and you in your car.
1881
EADWEARD JAMES MUYBRIDGE (1830 - 1904) and ETIENNE-JULES MAREY (1830 - 1904) These men unite in Paris to begin collaborating in the study of motion. Muybridge had by now, constructed a series of pictures depicting motion by the use of a single camera. He then alongside Marey, shows these photos using a Uchatius lantern and could possibly have acquired picture-motion this way. The Zoopraxiscope has been, albeit rarely, called the Zoogyroscope as well. One such instance was a write-up from in Cassiers's Magazine of 1881 in which we read ;
Muybridge's photo-plates ranged in size from 12 x 9 inches to 6 x 18 inches. The eleven folio volumes contained over 20,000 images of men and women (some nudes), children and animals and sold for $600. A considerable amount at the time which therefore constricted its market to libraries, universities and scientists for the most part. Muybridge reduced the cost and content of the original work in 1898 to $100 with only the most important plates and photographs included. Two volumes, Animals In Motion and The Human Figure In Motion were sold.
1887
EADWEARD JAMES MUYBRIDGE (1830 - 1904) Muybridge publishes his 100,000 plus photos in 'Animal Locomotion- An Electro-photographic Investigation of Consecutive Phases of Animal Movements'. There were over seven hundred plates, all folio-sized, in eleven volumes. This work is today a reference source in motion study and is considered the most exhaustive analysis ever made of the subject. When seen through the Zoopraxiscope (as early as 1879), Muybridge's photographs are without debate, the world's first motion pictures. Men, women, children and animals are seen as in true motion, resembling nothing less in quality or appearance than the earliest works of the Lumiere's in 1895. Muybridge's final accomplishment was without Celluloid, yet fluid, preceding the commercial films of the 1890's by at least 16 years. When considering the fact that there are 172,800 + frames in a typical two hour film of today, Muybridge's 20,000 pictures, if shown consecutively (impossible with the Zoopraxiscope) would provide a film of approximately 13+ minutes in length. In comparison, The Great Train Robbery of 1912 (Edwin Porter) was 12 minutes, and Chaplin's Behind the Screen of 1916, was 15 minutes. Muybridge of course, was not using Celluloid.
1888
THOMAS ALVA EDISON (1847-1931) and EADWEARD JAMES MUYBRIDGE (1830 - 1904) Muybridge speaks with Edison again, about the possibility of amalgamating his Zoopraxiscope with EdisonĂ¢'s Phonograph in the hopes of producing sound pictures in the future. Edison was already considering this idea in his New Jersey laboratories however it would be another forty years before becoming a reality. Muybridge had been lecturing at Orange, New Jersey at the invitation of the New England Society. On the contrary, Edison disputes this mention, or at least his notes apparently did when it was found in them that Edison scratched out the words . . . . .1893
EADWEARD JAMES MUYBRIDGE (1830 - 1904) Muybridge attends the Columbian Exposition at Chicago and provides a work entitled 'Descriptive Zoopraxography'. The Zoopraxiscope is the star of the show as Muybridge presents his work at his Zoopraxigraphicall Hall.
ZOOPRAXISCOPE WALTZING COUPLE The Zoopraxiscope operated by projecting images (drawn from photographs in some cases) rapidly and in succession onto the screen. The photographs were painted onto a glass disc for the Zoopraxiscope (even though the Hallotype photographic process allowed photographs to be placed onto glass). When rotated and projected within the Zoopraxiscope the spinning disk provided an illusion of motion.
THE HISTORY OF THE DISCOVERY OF CINEMATOGRAPHY An illustrated Chronological History of the Development of Motion Pictures Covering 2500 Years Leading to the Discovery of Cinematography in the 1800's
http://precinemahistory.net
-- Paul Burns
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