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Edweard
Muybridge

Untitled
(Girl Running), c. 1884-7

Untitled
(Running Dog), c. 1884-7

Untitled
(Man with Cricket Bat), c. 1884-7
Artist's
Biography
(b.
April 9, 1830 - d. May 8, 1904) This important English
photographer pioneered work in photographic studies
of motion and in motion-picture projection. He emigrated
to the United States as a young man but remained
obscure until 1868, when his large photographs of
Yosemite Valley, California, made him world famous.
Muybridge's experiments in photographing motion
began in 1872, when Leland Stanford hired him to
prove that during a particular moment in a trotting
horse's gait all four legs are off the ground simultaneously.
His first efforts were unsuccessful because his
camera lacked a fast shutter. The project was then
interrupted while Muybridge was being tried for
the murder of his wife's lover. Although he was
acquitted, he found it expedient to travel for a
number of years in Mexico and Central America, making
publicity photographs for the Union Pacific Railroad,
a company owned by Stanford.In 1877 he returned
to California and resumed his experiments in motion
photography, using a battery of from 12 to 24 cameras
and a special shutter he developed that gave an
exposure of 2/1,000 of a second. This arrangement
gave satisfactory results and proved Stanford's
contention.The results of Muybridge's work were
widely published, most often in the form of line
drawings taken from his photographs. They were criticized,
however, by those who thought that horse's legs
could never assume such unlikely positions. To counter
such criticism, Muybridge gave lectures on animal
locomotion throughout the United States and Europe.
These lectures were illustrated with a zoopraxiscope,
a lantern he developed that projected images in
rapid succession onto a screen from photographs
printed on a rotating glass disc, producing the
illusion of moving pictures. The zoopraxiscope display,
an important predecessor of the modern cinema, was
a sensation at the World's Columbian Exposition
of 1893 in Chicago. Muybridge made his most important
photographic studies of motion from 1884 to 1887
under the auspices of the University of Pennsylvania.
These consisted of photographs of various activities
of human figures, clothed and naked, which were
to form a visual compendium of human movements for
the use of artists and scientists. Many of these
photographs were published in 1887 in the portfolio
“Animal Locomotion, An Electro-Photographic Investigation
of Consecutive Phases of Animal Movement.” Muybridge
continued to publicize and publish his work until
1900, when he retired to his birthplace.
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