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Documents the pioneering photographic work of Eadweard Muybridge (1830-1904) in which he rigorously analysed human and animal motion. Muybridge’s multiple camera techniques and his projection device, the zoopraxiscope, were technical curiosities unnecessary for the development of the modern motion picture but through them he overcame a philosophical obstacle. He demonstrated empirically that the infinite flux of time could be reconstructed from a finite number of photographs.
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How to watch
Collection
In ACMI's collection
Credits
Collection metadata
ACMI Identifier
304700
Language
English
Subject categories
Advertising, Film, Journalism, Mass Media & TV → Cinematography
Crafts & Visual Arts → Chronophotography
Crafts & Visual Arts → Photographers - United States
Sound/audio
Sound
Colour
Colour
Holdings
VHS; Access Print (Section 1)