Thursday, October 30, 2008

Flying Changes - Instantaneous Photography and the Horse in Motion




In our fast-pace world full of minute-by-minute technological advances, we often take for granted how far we’ve come in a relatively short span of time. A recent purchase of a fabulous old book entitled “The Horse in Motion” inspired me to look deeper into the story about the first photographs taken of a running horse (using a process then called instantaneous photography), and how it changed the art & photography worlds. I was somewhat familiar with the basic tale, but with a little research I learned more of the story.

In 1872, former California governor, Leland Stanford, sought the services of a bookseller turned photographer named Eadweard Muybridge to photograph a horse for him. Mr. Muybridge was becoming well-known for his West Coast landscape photography, but was intrigued with the idea of the commission. The purpose of the photograph would be to see if at any point in a horse’s stride all four feet left the ground. The undertaking would certainly require a lot of skill, innovation and patience. This may hardly seem like a groundbreaking venture to us, but during the early years of photography it seemed an unrealistic and possibly unattainable goal.

Mr. Stanford owned the fastest trotting horse of his day, Occident, and wanted the photograph to show the horse’s gait at racing speed. He felt that the art of the time was incorrectly portraying the horse in action, and wanted to prove it. There were some rumors that a bet was involved, but no real evidence of this has been found. Muybridge wasn’t sure it could be done, but was swayed by the determined Stanford. Leland Stanford was also president and builder of the Central Pacific Railroad... a railroad that was once thought impossible to complete because of the difficulties of terrain.

The early efforts of the photographer were mixed and the photographs not crystal clear, but he did succeed in proving Leland Stanford’s hunch about the mechanics of a horse’s motion. Occident was trained to race over white sheets to provide contrast for these first attempts, and Mr. Muybridge was said to have captured his likeness by using an arrangement of double lenses and a spring release setup for the shutter of his camera. Announcements of the success appeared in a California newspaper in 1873.



In 1874 Muybridge’s life took a tragic turn when he found that his wife was having an affair, and that she felt their son was really the son of her lover. The distraught photographer killed the interloper and was later acquitted for the crime. After the trial and a photography expedition to Central America, Muybridge resumed his motion studies at Stanford’s Palo Alto estate in 1878, convinced they could improve on the earlier work. An elaborate bank of cameras was set up (photo above), with thin threads run across the track to release a camera shutter as the animal ran by. An innovative electrical shutter designed by mechanical engineer John Isaacs was instrumental in these efforts. Horses were the primary focus for the studies, but other animals and humans were also photographed successfully.



In 1879, Eadweard Muybridge used his photographic motion studies as a basis for an invention he called a zoopraxiscope or “animal action viewing device.” His invention was precipitated by some skepticism about the validity of his motion photographs. The projector-like device used circular discs with images redrawn from the photographs to show a repeating moving image, the technology to project actual photographs was not yet available. The idea may have come from various suggestions Muybridge received to create zoetrope images from his photographs. Both the zoetrope and the zoopraxiscope worked on the principle of persistence of vision, but the zoopraxiscope actually projected these moving images and thus could be viewed by groups of people . By 1880, Muybridge was giving presentations with this device to rapt audiences. Here is a video clip of Occident trotting, that I put together from the Palo Alto photos, which approximates zoopraxicope imagery.



In the early 1880’s, Leland Stanford asked an old friend, J.D.B. Stillman, to work on a book about the Palo Alto project. Stillman was a medical doctor and writer and was not familiar with the subject. He set Stanford’s carpenters to task on the assembly of a horse’s skeleton so that it could be posed, and began to familiarize himself with the work. The book which resulted from these efforts, “The Horse in Motion” was copyrighted in 1881 and published in 1882. Artwork drawn from the photographic series was used to illustrate the book, supposedly because of printing limitations. This publication caused a rift between project patron Leland Stanford and photographer Muybridge, who thought Stanford was not giving him proper credit for the studies. Muybridge sued Stanford for damaging his reputation, but lost the case.

Eadweard Muybridge went on to photograph a landmark series of animal and human motion studies sponsored by the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. He made about 30,000 photographs from 1884 to 1886. In 1894 he returned to his native England where he died in 1904.

Former California governor and railroad magnate Leland Stanford became a U.S. Senator in 1885, and served until his death in 1893. Stanford, ever the avid horseman, was proud of the achievements of his great racehorses... Occident, Electioneer, champion filly Sunol and others. He paid his farm workers well, and wouldn’t tolerate any roughness or abuse of his horses. Leland and his wife Jane founded Leland Stanford Junior University as a memorial to their teenage son who died of typhoid.





The groundbreaking photographs these two men brought to light changed the world. The motion studies were embraced by artists, photographers, veterinarians and scientists. Almost overnight artists changed the way they portrayed the horse. The awkward floating horses with splayed limbs quickly disappeared, replaced by accurate depictions of equine locomotion. In addition, Eaedward Muybridge’s zoopraxiscope became a forerunner and inspiration in the development of motion pictures. (Zoopraxiscope photograph courtesy of Kingston Museum & Heritage Service.)

Compare artwork of today with these antiquated pictures of horses trotting & galloping from the book "Horses in Motion." This art was used in the book to show the incorrect style of locomotion portrayed in the art of the day.




I thoroughly enjoyed researching this subject. If you would like more detailed information about this fascinating story, the following books are highly recommended:

“Time Stands Still - Muybridge and the Instantaneous Photography Movement” by Phillip Prodger; Oxford University Press, 2003.

“River of Shadows - Eadweard Muybridge and the Technological Wild West” by Rebecca Solnit; Viking Press, 2003.

“The Horse in Motion” by J.D.B. Stillman, published by Leland Stanford, 1882.

“Animals in Motion” by Eadweard Muybridge; Dover Publications, 1957.

“The Human Figure in Motion” by Eadweard Muybridge; Dover Publications, 1955.

“Muybridge’s Complete Human and Animal Locomotion” Volumes I, II and III; Dover Publications, 1979.

A very special thank you to author Gretchen Haskin!  Gretchen had written a fine magazine article entitled "Leland Stanford Had a Farm" from which I gleaned a lot of insight into Leland Stanford's life and horses at his Palo Alto estate. Unfortunately, I only had tearsheets from a magazine and didn't know the source of the article. Gretchen kindly took the time to look up this information, and here it is: "Leland Stanford Had a Farm" from Horse of Course magazine. Oct. 1980, Vol 9 No 10, pages 44-46.

Let me also extend a thank you to the Kingston Museum & Heritage Service for permitting the use of their zoopraxiscope photograph in this article. Please visit their website for more information about Eadweard Muybridge and to see some of the rare items in their wonderful collection "The Eadweard Muybridge Bequest." 





© Kim Jo Hess - Hobby Horses

Saturday, September 27, 2008

EQUINE BOOKS: C.W. ANDERSON'S "THE CROOKED COLT"


My name is Kim and I’m a bibliophile.
I’ve been mad about books from the time I could read. As a child, I was befriended by the traveling librarian who routinely came to our school with a van full of books. The Traveling Library’s visit caused real excitement in our small school of three classrooms, and it was great fun to clamber in and search for a new treasure.  The benefits of having a friend in the traveling library meant that I was allowed to borrow from their home base when I visited my grandparents’ in town. Walking through the somewhat darkened room of bookcases full of so many unread titles was intoxicating. Imagine my delight years later to find used bookstores... with cases of books, so like the library’s, with the wondrous option of purchasing the books to take home forever!

Thus began an obsession with buying books. Not just any books, new books were nice... old, out-of-print books were the titles most sought. The types of books collected were, and are, many... but primarily of an equine nature. As an equine artist, I eagerly searched for books with illustrations from artists I’d loved as a child... Paul Brown, C.W. Anderson, Sam Savitt (who grew up nearby), Wesley Dennis, and others. Favorite authors were also on my “hit” list... Marguerite Henry, Walter Farley, Patsey Gray, Dorothy Lyons, T.C. Hinkle, Will James, Mary O’ Hara, Rutherford Montgomery, and so many more.

Dog books, such as the collie books of Albert Payson Terhune, and animal books were added to the my wish list and began to occupy my shelves. Non-fiction books on horses and dogs  and horse racing titles also began to follow me home. The addition of ebay as a bibliophilic resource has only added to the strain of finding more room for books... but happily so.

I am not an expert on books or collecting... just an amateur with passion. When a favorite title is brought up here for discussion, I welcome your feedback... and we’ll learn more together.

This week,
Do You Remember...
“The Crooked Colt” by C.W. Anderson.


I remember borrowing this book in second grade. The artwork was so extraordinary, and the story of a little colt who didn’t fit in with his peers hit home, as I'm sure it must have done for many children.

C.W. (Clarence William) Anderson was born in Wahoo, Nebraska in 1891. He attended the Chicago Art Institute, after a stint in the Navy, and moved east... eventually settling in Mason, New Hampshire. The artist drew cartoons for The New Yorker and other publications. In the 1930’s he began his famous “Billy and Blaze” book series, with many additional fine children’s books to come. The artist also penned and illustrated some superb books about thoroughbred racing and racehorses, and offered some beautiful art portfolios and prints. His early illustrations were done with etching and lithography, later he turned to using a black colored pencil in a style simulating his earlier lithos.  C.W. Anderson also illustrated a few children's books and poetry books written by his wife, Madeleine Paltenghi Anderson. The artist passed away in 1971.

“The Crooked Colt” was first published in 1954. The story tells of a little white-faced colt who was small and had crooked legs. He couldn’t run and play with the other colts in the pasture, and was befriended by the farm’s youngest daughter. The colt’s mother led him to a far pasture where they stayed until he grew stronger. Sunshine and grass, and exercising with Mom, soon put him right and he returns to see the little girl and race the other colts in the pasture. All’s right in the end. The book was reprinted numerous times in hardcover and paperback. If you would like to find a copy, check with the online auctions and booksellers... it shouldn’t be too difficult to locate.

If you would like to find out more about C.W. Anderson... I would highly recommend a book by Charles Emil Ruckstuhl entitled “Andy as I Knew Him.” It was published in 2004. Mr. Ruckstuhl is Mr. Anderson's stepson.

I’m sure we’ll revisit more of Anderson’s titles later on, and we'll have many to choose from.
If you know of any titles missing from this list, please let me know.


Books written by C.W. Anderson:
  • A Filly for Joan
  • A Pony for Linda
  • A Pony for Three
  • A Touch of Greatness
  • Afraid to Ride
  • And So to Bed (cartoons)
  • Another Man O' War
  • Big Red
  • Billy and Blaze
  • Black, Bay and Chestnut
  • Blaze and the Forest Fire
  • Blaze and the Grey Spotted Pony
  • Blaze and the Gypsies
  • Blaze and the Indian Cave
  • Blaze and the Lost Quarry
  • Blaze and the Mountain Lion
  • Blaze and Thunderbolt
  • Blaze Finds Forgotten Roads
  • Blaze Finds the Trail
  • Blaze Shows the Way
  • Blind Connemara
  • Bobcat
  • Complete Book of Horses & Horsemanship
  • Deep Through the Heart
  • Favorite Horse Stories
  • Great Heart
  • Heads Up, Heels Down
  • High Courage
  • Horse Show
  • Horses are Folks
  • Linda and the Indians
  • Lonesome Little Colt
  • Phantom, Son of Gray Ghost
  • Salute
  • Sketchbook
  • The Crooked Colt
  • The Horse of Hurricane Hill
  • The Miracle of Greek Sculpture
  • The Outlaw
  • The Rumble Seat Pony
  • The Smashers
  • Thoroughbreds
  • Tomorrow's Champion
  • Twenty Gallant Horses
Books illustrated by C.W. Anderson for other authors:

  • A Pony Called Lightning by Miriam Mason
  • Gallant and Game by A.H. Hutchinson
  • Honey on a Raft by Madeleine Paltenghi Anderson
  • Honey the City Bear by Madeleine Paltenghi Anderson
  • Midnight, Rodeo Champion by Robert Gard
  • Remus Goes to Town by Madeleine Paltenghi Anderson
  • Rumpus Rabbit by Madeleine Paltenghi Anderson
  • Silverpoints by Madeleine Paltenghi Anderson
  • The Red Roan Pony by Joseph Lippincott
  • Under One Bough by Madeleine Paltenghi Anderson
© Kim Jo Hess - Hobby Horses