Muybridge in Motion  p.  1  |  2  |  3  |  4

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Eakins
The American realist painter and photographer Thomas Eakins was one of the people who convinced Provost Pepper to sponsor Muybridge’s project. Eakins was interested in what physiology could tell the artist about the body in motion. In 1884, he constructed a shed near Muybridge’s outdoor studio at the University of Pennsylvania, and modified a Marey-wheel camera to make chronophotographs of men running and jumping. By 1885, as Muybridge perfected his multicamera system and abandoned his own experiments with a Marey-wheel camera, Eakins dissociated himself from the Muybridge project and left the university grounds to work on his own.


  image- motion study taken with Marey -wheel camera of man using a high stickEnlarge image
Motion study taken with Marey-wheel camera,
by Thomas Eakins
Graphic reproduction
Courtesy of the Philadelphia Museum of Art
  image- Marey-wheel camera prints on cardboard Enlarge image
Marey-wheel camera, October 5, 1885,
by Eadweard Muybridge
Cyanotypes on cardboard mount

 

By June 1885, Muybridge was making up to 36 images at a time to document movement from three different angles. With assistants hired by the university, Muybridge worked right through until the fall. By October 1885, he had made close to 20,000 photographs.


 TOP OF PAGE image- photograph of Muybridge's assistants at U. of Penn. Enlarge image
Muybridge’s assistants at University of Pennsylvania
Photographer unknown
Courtesy of University of Pennsylvania Archives
  image- prints of "Walking, right hand on chin" on cardboard mountEnlarge image
“Walking, right hand on chin” (Catherine Aimer, July 16,1885)
Animal Locomotion Plate 14, 1887
Cyanotypes on cardboard mount

 

During the winter of 1885, Muybridge organized and assembled the camera negatives, and printed them as cyanotypes (his working proofs). He then went back to his original negatives, enlarged them, and assembled them in composite glass plates. The 781 plates were printed as collotypes, put into portfolios, and sold by subscription in the fall of 1887.


  image- Photograph of open letter from Muybridge to Philadelphia Press Enlarge image
Open letter from Eadweard Muybridge to the Philadelphia Press promoting Animal Locomotion, 1887
  image- photograph of original order form for Animal LocomotionEnlarge image
Original order form for Animal Locomotion with selection made for 209 prints and Muybridge’s own instructions for packing and shipping

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National Museum of American History