La lanterne magique (The Magic Lantern) thaumatrope Interactive

Object On display
Photograph by Egmont Contreras

How do you cage a bird? With a thaumatrope, an optical toy that binds a disc to lengths of string. Illustrated on each side of the disc are distinct images that become one when you pull the string and the thaumatrope spins. The first known thaumatrope was invented by John Ayrton Paris in 1824, when he used it to demonstrate his theory of ‘persistence of vision’ to London’s Royal College of Physicians.

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Collection

In ACMI's collection

On display until

16 February 2031

ACMI: Gallery 1

Appears in

Group of items

La Lanterne Magique (The Magic Lantern) thaumatrope

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Collection metadata

ACMI Identifier

P181404

Curatorial section

The Story of the Moving Image → Moving Pictures → MI-02. Play and Illusion → MI-02-C02

Measurements

270 x 325 x 240mm

Object Types

3D Object

Exhibition Prop

Optical Toy

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If you would like to cite this item, please use the following template: {{cite web |url=https://acmi.net.au/works/99904--thaumatrope-interactive-model/ |title=La lanterne magique (The Magic Lantern) thaumatrope |author=Australian Centre for the Moving Image |access-date=18 April 2024 |publisher=Australian Centre for the Moving Image}}