Eadweard Muybridge
San
Francisco photographer, Eadweard Muybridge conducted motion-sequence still
photographic experiments and is often called the "Father of the motion
picture" even though he did not make films in the manner we know them as
today.
Eadweard
Muybridge developed a fast camera shutter and used other state-of-the-art
techniques of his day to make the first photographs that show sequences of
movement. In 1879, the Zoopraxiscope was developed by Eadweard Muybridge, which
projected a series of images in successive phases of movement obtained through
the use of multiple cameras.In Eadweard Muybridge's most famous motion studies,
a row of cameras snapped a dozen or more photographs of a passing horse; the
public was astonished to see proof that a trotting horse can simultaneously
have all four hooves off the ground. For this experiment Muybridge devised a
fast camera shutter and used a new, more sensitive photographic process, both
of which dramatically reduced exposure time and produced crisp images of moving
objects.
Eadweard
Muybridge was born and died in Kingston upon
Thames, Surrey, England. The majority of his work
as a professional photographer and innovator occurred in America.
I really like how he takes inspiration from movement and the human body, and how each image captures movement very thoughtfully. A lot of his work is based around sport movement or daily activities.