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The zoopraxiscope - a horse back somersault

The zoopraxiscope - a horse back somersault

description

Summary

Images on a disc which when spun gives the illusion of a man doing a somersault on horseback.
14571Y U.S. Copyright Office.

No. 1.
Copyright by Eadweard Muybridge.
Exhibited: Helios: Eadweard Muybridge in a Time of Change, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, April - July 2010.

In 1832, Belgian physicist Joseph Plateau and his sons introduced the phenakistoscope ("spindle viewer"). It was also invented independently in the same year by Simon von Stampfer of Vienna, Austria, who called his invention a stroboscope. The phenakistoscope consisted of two discs mounted on the same axis. The first disc had slots around the edge, and the second contained drawings of successive action, drawn around the disc in concentric circles. Unlike Faraday's Wheel, whose pair of discs spun in opposite directions, a phenakistoscope's discs spin together in the same direction. When viewed in a mirror through the first disc's slots, the pictures on the second disc will appear to move. After going to market, the phenakistoscope received other names, including Phantasmascope and Fantoscope (and phenakistiscope in Britain and many other countries). It was quite successful for two years until William George Horner invented the zoetrope, which offered two improvements on the phenakistoscope. First, the zoetrope did not require a viewing mirror. The second and most influential improvement was that more than one person could view the moving pictures at the same time.

date_range

Date

01/01/1893
person

Contributors

Muybridge, Eadweard, 1830-1904, artist
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Source

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC
copyright

Copyright info

No known restrictions on publication.

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