THE PUBLIC EXHIBITION OF MOVING PICTURES BEFORE 1896
by Deac Rossell
[Published in slightly altered form in KINtop: Jahrbuch zur Erforschung des frühen
Films, 14/15 (Frankfurt am Main/Basle, 2006: Stroemfeld/Roter Stern)]
Part 1: Choosing a different perspective
This article is an attempt to refresh our ideas of how moving pictures were invented
and first seen. It is also an attempt to find one new way — of many possible ways —
of discussing the earliest moving pictures, and in so doing to think again about which
inventors or pioneers were significant in developing moving image culture.
A fresh look at the period of invention before 1896, particularly one that is frank and
open about its assumptions and methodology, and one that incorporates recent
scholarship from all of Europe as well as America, can help to illuminate the work of
some figures who have been poorly served – or even wholly ignored – in the
received version of the history of the invention of moving pictures. As an appendix to
the main text, but as a crucial element of this recast narrative, a chronology noting
specific moving picture exhibitions forms Part 3 of this essay.
Why is an article about the earliest public exhibition of moving pictures necessary?
What new shapes does it bring to the story of the invention of the cinema as it is
usually written? This story is usually conceived as a narrative about technology;
indeed, the very use of the word “invention” popularly implies some ingenious
arrangement of mechanical elements to produce a wholly new effect or process. In
the received history of cinema invention, “patents of invention” issued by various
countries have been the most prominent source of information. The first technical
historians who wrote seriously about the invention of moving pictures were both civil
servants in patent offices,1 and their work privileged innovative mechanisms that had
been accepted as patents. Within their engineering perspective, they were allinclusive, turning the invention of moving picture apparatus into a set of mechanical
Goldberg variations. They excluded from consideration any actual moving picture
exhibition, any consideration of the films themselves, any private demonstrations or
cultural practices, and any reduction to practise of the ideas put forth in the patents,
beyond the sometimes required patent model; they were concerned principally with
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mechanical devices and their abstract principles.2 This early work turned the
invention of moving pictures into a feat of engineering. From the beginning, the
history of the invention of moving pictures had little to do with actually showing
something in movement to an audience.
On this narrow foundation later historians began in the 1920s to construct an
elaborate narrative of invention that sought consciously and manipulatively to take
ownership of the invention story for a variety of purposes, including satisfying
patriotic feelings, giving the new art a cultural pedigree, supporting a favourite
pioneer, or privileging the activities of still-living figures.3 Even though recent
scholarship has started to correct some of the worst errors of the past, as well as to
re-evaluate some previously ephemeral figures and to surprise us with work on
entirely new pioneers who turn out to be important figures, very little of this
scholarship has as yet been integrated into the master narrative of the invention of
moving pictures. Somehow the sheer weight and complexity of our received history,
with its Greek- or Latin- based nomenclature, its hidden assumptions and complex
cultural politics, compounded by its often ill-expressed and shifting definition of just
what constitutes a “moving picture”, seems to be immovable and mute, a huge
edifice constructed by specialists and for specialists. Now that there is some very
good new scholarship on several early moving picture exhibitors including Ludwig
Döbler4, Eadweard Muybridge5, Georges Demenÿ6, Thomas Edison7 and Ottomar
Anschütz8 to do battle with the interpretations in the old-fashioned received history, it
seems to be a good time to suggest some new ways of looking at the master
narrative of the invention of moving pictures. A review of the earliest exhibitions of
moving pictures is one of these possible new perspectives.
Defining public exhibition
John Staudemeier has suggested that “A design concept cannot be considered a
true invention unless its significance has been recognized by the inventor and, more
important, has been successfully communicated to an appropriate audience.”9 He
then suggests further that “If a potential inventor must demonstrate the value of a
new idea to an audience for recognition and validation, it follows that cultural
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congruence – or dissonance – is part of the story of the new invention.”10 Since the
ordinary story of the invention of cinema has concentrated so narrowly on
technology, this article is a first attempt to include the idea of communicating to an
appropriate audience by concentrating only on one element of the many factors
involved in developing an emerging technology: the public exhibition of moving
pictures before 1896.11 For the purposes of this article, “public” is defined as
“exhibited before persons other than the inventor/s or the employees and family
members of the inventor/s.” In other words, public exhibition takes place outside the
laboratory and outside the closed world of technicians and family. There are two
principal types of “public” exhibition considered here. The first type of exhibition is
that given to professional groups or meetings, where the audience is limited to either
members or associated colleagues of some kind. In a few rare cases, such a group
was comprised of both family and non-family guests, the important element here
being the invited guests, the outsiders. This type of public exhibition has most often
been called a “demonstration” of moving pictures in the literature, and it is frequently
given to a group that has privately assembled for a specific purpose and does not
pay an admission fee specifically to see the moving picture exhibition.
The second type of exhibition is that given to the general public at large, in other
words, to groups assembled without any restrictions of association. This type of
exhibition often takes place in an entertainment or social context, with or without a
specific admission fee or viewing charge. The present article also uses a clear and
simple definition of “moving picture”. It includes all attempts to reproduce natural and
continuous movement, principally through stroboscopic means, whether drawn or
photographic. A corollary to the definition used in this article is that it also specifically
includes “moving pictures” that were projected, or seen on a screen at a distance
across space away from the reproducing apparatus, as well as those that were not
projected but were seen either by one person at a time or by small groups of people
who looked towards or into the originating apparatus itself.12 A strip of photographic
celluloid moving picture film (c. 1895 until today) is, of course, in its physical
existence nothing more than a number of separate sequential images that rely on
stroboscopic effects for the smooth perception of movement by the viewer. The
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reason for taking up this particular definition, which might seem surprising in the
context of how the story of “the cinema” has usually been written, is because a more
limited definition that requires photographic images to be taken on bands of celluloid
“film” presents a number of insurmountable difficulties, and arbitrarily excludes from
discussion several significant figures who made clear contributions to the emergence
of moving pictures, like Eadweard Muybridge and Ottomar Anschütz, amongst
others. Once photographic images taken in series on individual plates, like those of
Muybridge, Anschütz and Ernst Kohlrausch are included in the story, a very close
relationship between stroboscopically represented photographed series and
stroboscopically represented drawn series becomes apparent, and a second set of
Scholastic dilemmas appears. As more and more angels appear to dance on the
heads of pins, the broader and more inclusive definition used here, in the end, turns
out to avoid building hidden political assumptions into the definition. It also turns out
that there are few enough figures who qualify as exhibitors of stroboscopic
continuous movement so that a definition which at first seems to be “all-inclusive”
and unmanageable in fact reveals itself to be plain, simple, and direct. The attempt
in this article is to highlight those figures who actually exhibited moving pictures in
public, or as an essential part of their experimentation, and distinguish them from
those many more numerous pioneers who were “at work” in private attempting to
invent moving pictures but who never exhibited them in public in any way. Some of
these latter figures made significant direct or indirect contributions to the cinema
invention story, like the non-exhibiting Etienne-Jules Marey, for one example, while
others have somehow inveigled their way into the story without leaving much of real
substance behind. The received version of the overall grand narrative of the
invention of the cinema is an elaborate structure that contains an intensely politicized
theology of early cinema, including work that variously succeeded, failed, was
partially successful, contributed an element of a later successful apparatus, or just
documented dreams and hopes later fulfilled by others and therefore somehow
prefigured the invention of the medium.
With the rise of interest in reception studies over the past twenty years or more,
choosing to shift the fulcrum of the master account of the invention of moving
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images from abstract mechanical or perceptual principles to actual occurrences of
the use and communication of images in public makes a certain amount of sense.
Indeed, a shift in emphasis is necessary if the history of the origins and invention of
the cinema and its allied arts is to remain connected to contemporary media studies.
Without conceptual reform, study of the invention of moving pictures risks – is fated,
even – to forever chase its own tail of technological determinism and nationalistic
fervour while remaining unable to escape the initial, incomplete, narratives compiled
in the first decades of the 20th century.
Even for those like myself who think that they know the story of the invention of
moving pictures reasonably well, the results of this exercise can be surprising. And it
is clearly acknowledged that looking at the master narrative in this way does not tell
the whole story. But I think that it does raise new questions about how the received
story of moving picture invention has typically been structured, and it clears away a
lot of the interstitial information which is packed inside an unreconstructed received
history in ways that only add to the theological complexity of the story, instead of
doing what it should: that is, increasing genuine knowledge about the earliest days of
modern moving pictures. It is useful to know of the existence of these interstitial
tidbits, for example that Georges Demenÿ evidently drew a sketch of a “Grande
Projecteur” in 1895 which he then may have shown to Louis Lumière during a visit to
his studio in December 1894,13 but when dropped into an unreconstructed received
history, and used as glue to solidify a structure already constructed weakly through
the use of unrevealed assumptions, the interpretation of these tidbits is all too often
wildly distorted. What is interesting about the Demenÿ event is that it represents a
direct contact between two key figures, a type of contact which although it is not
often included in standard histories was in fact not at all uncommon between any
number of the significant pioneers of the cinema in the mid-1890s.14 What the event
does not represent, even though it is sometimes implied by weak scholars that it
does so, is a direct transfer of the inspiration for the Lumière Cinématographe from
Demenÿ to Lumière, a kind of replacement of the dream about a sewing-machine by
a hasty sketch, and – Voila! – the true, essential inventor of the cinema is revealed
as Marey’s long-time assistant, with evidence lovingly and carefully preserved for a
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century by his family. This event is only one of many examples which could be
produced of minor events or designs – the Maltese Cross intermittent movement is
another good example here – that can be, and sometimes have been, fitted in
between chunks of the received story of cinema invention so that they carry more
significance than they should. This is only possible because the major chunks of the
received story are so incomplete, so separated by unresearched elements, so
awkwardly placed in the narrative, that it is possible for small, innocent islands
between them to take on a disproportionate meaning. With a properly organised
grand narrative, shaken loose from hidden assumptions, there would be no need,
indeed, no place, for such mannerist elements. This article is an attempt to reassert
the value of one element of the earliest days of cinema, an element that would seem
to be essential but which has so far received too little attention: the public exhibition
of moving pictures in the period before and during the invention of the cinema.
Magic lantern culture as an essential context
One caution is necessary. The background and the broad context to the specific
topics taken up in this article, to the inventors, devices, and practises dealt with in
some detail, is in the first instance the attempt to portray movement in magic lantern
projections from 1659 onwards, followed by a variety of experiments with optical
phenomena conducted by scientists early in the 19th century that led to the
stroboscopic reproduction of movement and the development of “philosophical toys”
to represent it. The first movements portrayed in the magic lantern used the limited
motions or image transformations of mechanical lantern slides, whether manipulated
by a lever, rack-and-pinion gears, a belt drive, or simply by slipping one painted
glass across a second one. The history of these attempts to project movement
begins at least in 1659, when Christiaan Huygens made a series of drawings of a
skeleton in various poses that he intended to be projected in a magic lantern. There
are both clear descriptions of mechanical moving slides in the 17th century as well as
several descriptions of early lantern shows that suggest the use of mechanically
transformed images.15 By the end of the 18th century, the projecting lantern itself
began to move in the phantasmagoria show that originated in Germany and was
established as a popular public exhibition by Etienne-Gaspard Robertson in Paris.
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Now a projected image — sometimes additionally using mechanical slides — could
be enlarged or diminished by the motion of the lantern itself. Phantasmagoria shows
brought dynamic new movements to large public audiences, and quickly became a
worldwide entertainment.16 Early in the 19th century the dissolving view exhibitions
that evolved from phantasmagoria practise became a staple of public lantern shows,
eventually combining sequenced slides carefully painted to transform day into night,
or winter into summer, or buds into flowers, and sometimes involving additional
mechanically moved detail slides so that complex visual or narrative effects of
motion or transformation could be achieved. Even today an audience will commonly
gasp with delight at the “extra” and unexpected movement in a dissolving slide set;
for one example in the widely popular set produced with a triunial lantern, The Old
Mill, after watching the seasons change, the mill wheel again begin to turn, the
pedestrians wandering along the side of the mill pond, and the family of swans
paddling across the water, a sharp audience reaction is normally produced when the
swans, swimming peacefully in formation across the mill pond suddenly dip their
heads underwater to feed on their way across the water. Lantern exhibitions using
five or more lanterns, a technological array which implies vigorous dissolves and
intricately detailed movements, are known to have been given at the Royal
Polytechnic Institution in London, by the Langenheim brothers in Philadelphia, by the
Skladanowsky family, and by others in Berlin and elsewhere, but these shows
remain largely unresearched. Some concentrated work on these specialist
exhibitions, from the perspective of the nature and types of movements deployed,
would bring to life a useful and most interesting background for the introduction of
cinematic moving pictures, a kind of “missing link” without knowledge of which our
understanding of the motivations and aspirations of early cinema pioneers is
seriously depleted.
Although magic lantern culture is an extremely significant and still under-recognized
predecessor of and parallel to the emergence of moving pictures and the cinema at
the turn of the 20th century, it would be impossible here to trace even the smallest
percentage of the lantern shows using these means of mechanical movement over a
period of more than two hundred years. For a particularly pertinent example, one
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element of moving magic lantern images that is often noted in the pre-cinema
literature is the device called the Choreutoscope, invented by Lionel S. Beale in
1866, where drawn sequenced images on a notched circular disk with a revolving
shutter were intermittently brought into a lantern’s optical axis by turning a small
crank with a pin that engaged the notches. A refinement, the Giant Choreutoscope,
was patented by William Charles Hughes in 1884. These devices, with variants
marketed by Alfred Molteni in Paris, J. H. Steward in London, and others, did use
stroboscopic principles to approach natural movement, but they formed only a single
element in magic lantern shows whose principle focus remained the exhibition of
themed slide sets, dissolving views, chromatropes, and other visual components of
the lantern showman’s standard repertoire. To the best of my knowledge, no single
lantern exhibition was organised and promoted to the public solely around the
Choreutoscope, although a popular image like Beale’s figure of the “dancing
Chancellor” Sir Christopher Haddon was exhibited 177 times at the Royal
Polytechnic Institution in London by January 1873.17 The Choreutoscope, perhaps
the most widespread of a number of inventive lantern accessories involving
movement and image transformation, is a recognisable technological attempt at the
projection of stroboscopic images but its few seconds of repetitive deployment in an
evening’s entertainment left it wholly embedded within magic lantern culture in a way
that should not be (and, empirically, can not be) elevated to a decisive prominence in
affecting the course of the public exhibition of moving pictures. Nonetheless, even if
not discussed here in detail, it is the use of moving images across magic lantern
culture, as well as the technical skills of lantern operators and slide designers, which
form the essential background and context for the work examined in this article.
A few broad trends
The brief sketches that follow outline the work of those moving picture pioneers who
were active in presenting public exhibitions before 1896, exhibitions that distinctively
and specially involved the presentation of images in motion. All were consciously
attempting to separate their exhibitions from ordinary magic lantern or
phantasmagoria shows, and all sought to demonstrate a new and revolutionary
dimension of projected imagery. Since many of these pioneers are well known,
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readers can refer to the bibliographic notes for their wider careers; these brief
paragraphs will discuss only the special context of their moving picture work. The
idea of using projected images to extend beyond normative magic lantern culture
and provide new visual thrills was one that was described frequently during the 19th
century; these were the few pioneers who implemented what often seemed to be
only impractical dreams.
A few broad trends are evident from the list of pre-1896 moving picture exhibitions.
Across the entire period, there is no overlap between moving picture exhibitors; or, in
other words, known exhibitions took place in a linear and sequential way so that no
moving picture exhibitor had direct competition from any other. Setting aside a bit of
egoism evidenced in Berlin in 1891, the only real overlap is between the lectures of
Eadweard Muybridge and the Schnellseher of Ottomar Anschütz; by the time
Anschütz came to commercialise his moving picture system in 1892-3, Muybridge
had been relegated to a largely provincial lecture circuit, so there is only the most
minimal and indirect competition over commerce or showmanship between them.18
Virtually all of the Anschütz exhibitions had ended by the time the first Kinetoscope
exhibitions began.
At the beginning of the period under examination stands the towering figure of
Ludwig Döbler, one of the most famous and successful European showmen of the
early 19th century. Welcomed by Royal families from London to Vienna to Petersburg
and with a mass following amongst the middle classes across the Continent, Döbler
uniquely combined the talents of a master showman and magician with the technical
skills of an entertaining science lecturer and innovator. Although he drew large
audiences to his moving picture exhibitions when they began in early 1847, he had
been drawing packed houses to his shows for decades and it was not the idea of
movement itself that was the main attraction: Döbler’s well-known personality and
consummate stage skill was the overarching draw for these performances late in his
career. Döbler’s Phantaskop was only that year’s new trick, the innovation that
brought the well-known magician back to some of his favourite theatres. Although it
would have had to have been operated skillfully and with panache to fit within the
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high standard of Döbler’s shows, moving pictures were not in and of themselves a
bold enough attraction to find their own existence outside Döbler’s presentations.
The fact that moving pictures did not “catch on” after Döbler’s introductory
exhibitions is suggestive; to use the vocabulary of particle physics, perhaps it is a
result of visual movement being a kind of “weak force” which was not noticeable
enough on its own to create momentum or lasting excitement amongst the midcentury public. In this context, it is important to notice that the most popular visual
entertainments up to about 1860 all involved massive constructions of buildings or
the elaborate outfitting of special premises: the phantasmagoria show, the
panorama, the Diorama. Only with the rapid spread of stereoscopic imagery in the
home (c. post-1860), of popular amateur photography (c. post-1870 and again after
1888), and of photographically illustrated mass produced magazines (c. 1875) did
visual materials achieve an individual scale that could generate excitement without
professionalised skills or grandiose buildings to reinforce their public perception.19
Fundamentally, Döbler’s exhibitions were self-contained within his reputation as a
magician and a showman, and represented for him the same attitude that the
Skladanowsky brothers brought to their Bioskop shows of 1895-6, which for them
were that season’s innovative stage trick, and could not be repeated the following
season. The construction of their moving picture system, and their attitude towards
performing with it during the 1895-96 season both underscore this similarity.
Three decades after Döbler, the exhibitions of Eadweard Muybridge had not moved
all that far from mid-century practise. Setting aside for the moment the inexplicably
flawed technology that prevented Muybridge from projecting his own photographs,
he still fulfills the traditional role of the educational showman/lecturer, a category of
populariser then familiar to the public for more than a century. Muybridge’s energy,
striking appearance and lurid biography meant that even his flawed stage trick gave
him an entree to the well-established late 19th century lecture circuit. He began his
lecture career at the top: invitations from leading intellectual societies, shows
arranged by prominent artists and scientists. But Muybridge gave more or less the
same lecture for two decades, with the same apparatus, and over time he moved
from large cities to small ones, from prominent to provincial societies.
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Notwithstanding his famous visit with Thomas Edison in 1887, Muybridge seems to
have made no efforts to commercialise his moving pictures. When he was busy
making new series photographs at Philadelphia, there were few lectures, and
therefore no moving picture projections. Essentially, Muybridge did not exist as a
public figure without the Zoopraxiscope, and his projected moving pictures were
never seen without his tall, strikingly bearded figure at the lectern. He was wholly
subsumed into the public lecture culture of his time. In the end, he was perfectly
comfortable playing the role of Eadweard Muybridge: western photographer,
correcter of art history, locomotion researcher, and public figure.
Only with the work of first Ottomar Anschütz and then Thomas Edison did the idea of
moving pictures itself take centre stage. Neither of these very different men were
lecturers or showmen; both attempted to set moving picture systems freely into the
commerce of the world around them. Both the Schnellseher and the Kinetoscope
were moving picture devices that had an existence apart from the ongoing
professional concerns of their creators, and both devices began the process of
creating a new space devoted to reproduced moving photographic images for leisure
and information.20 These two moving picture pioneers could not have had more
diametrically opposed personalities. Edison was one of the great public figures of the
late 19th century, a man whose personal fame equalled or surpassed his
groundbreaking successes with imaginative and powerful technologies. Anschütz
became a prominent society photographer but remained an essentially private figure
whose life is still today a mystery. Edison had a famously robust involvement with
popular journalism, where his gift for concise, easily understood explanations of
arcane scientific works was legendary. Anschütz, when he spoke at all, did so only
through meetings of the photographic societies; no journalistic interviews with him
are known. Moving pictures were a minor, if appealing, tangent in the daily work of
the Edison “invention factory” in New Jersey; for Anschütz they consumed a vast
proportion of his energy and capital in the early 1890s, a passionate obsession
which came to an end only when it seemed that moving picture work might make him
bankrupt and seriously endanger his entire photographic enterprise and his social
standing in Berlin. Yet as different as they are, it is unquestionable that it was these
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two inventors alone who tried to establish photographic moving pictures as an
infinitely reproducable independent technology (and medium) whose commercial
success (or failure) would be distinct from their personal involvement as magician,
lecturer, or entertainer, and which would simultaneously create new entertainment
spaces apart from existing circuits and venues. In this vast, epic, unimaginably
courageous and idealistic venture, both were ultimately failures, with Edison making
a little money along the way and Anschütz making a huge debt. Nonetheless, it was
on their shoulders that the next generation of moving picture inventors and pioneers
stood, from Thomas Armat and C. Francis Jenkins to Birt Acres to the Lumière
brothers, as they began to establish the cinematographic apparatus and practices
which would ultimately succeed and would come to permeate the twentieth century.
Part 2: Notes on exhibitors of moving pictures before 1896
Leopold Ludwig Döbler (1801 - 1864)21
When Leopold Ludwig Döbler began to give moving picture shows late in his
performing career, he was already a renowned magician and showman throughout
Europe. Educated in his father’s profession as an engraver but fascinated by magic
and performance from an early age, Döbler toured constantly across Europe from
the late 1820s, not only appearing before virtually all of the royal houses, including
those of Russia, Sweden, Austria, Belgium, Spain and England, where he
entertained for Queen Victoria at both Windsor and Buckingham palaces, but also
booking long engagements in leading theatres. He entertained Goethe in Weimar,
and at home in Vienna aroused the jealousy of the dramatist Franz Grillparzer for his
close and cordial relationships with the Habsburg court. Döbler was always watching
for a new technological or semi-scientific trick with which to headline his
consummately skilled exhibitions, and he is widely considered the first performer to
introduce dissolving view exhibitions to continental Europe, in 1843. He also
pioneered the use of limelight projections in his shows, and was the first on the
Continent to present “beautiful microscopic projections,”22 with an oxy-hydrogen
microscope.
It was Döbler’s habit to introduce his new presentation each year at the Josephstadt
Theatre in Vienna, and towards the end of his career in January 1847, he began
giving shows of “living pictures” by means of a projecting phenakistiscope that he
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had just patented.23 Döbler’s Phantaskop was most likely inspired by the suggestion
of T. W. Naylor that the phenakistiscope and magic lantern could be combined, and
by the first apparatus of his acquaintance Franz Uchatius (see below). Döbler’s
apparatus had twelve lenses at its front, each provided with its own phased image
from a full set that comprised a simple motion. An additional internal pair of lenses
was rotated by a crank, and directed powerful limelight illumination at each of the
front lenses in succession. With this new instrument developed in his home
laboratory outside Vienna at Klafterbrunn and with lenses made by the Vienna
optician Wenzel Prokesch, Döbler gave his first public performance of stroboscopic
moving pictures at the Josephstadt Theatre on 16 January 1847. The moving
pictures were the second of three parts of Döbler’s performance, which opened with
a series of dissolving views and ended with a display of chromatropes; the music
used throughout the performance was specially written by the court composer Anton
Emil Titl. Döbler projected eight sequences of movement using sequenced pictures
painted by Hr. Geyling: “1. The Turkish Conjuror. 2. The Ring Jumper. 3. Small
Parade. 4. The Woodcutter. 5. The Chinese Conjuror. 6. The Strutting Dancer. 7.
The Tightrope Walker. 8. The Duellists.”24 Döbler then took his new show on the
road, travelling until Spring 1848 to Brünn, Prague, Hamburg, Breslau, Pest, Munich,
and several other towns, returning intermittently to Vienna.25 It is difficult to be certain
which of these additional performances included the Phantaskop moving pictures; it
would seem that the apparatus was sometimes inoperative and at other times in use.
Given Döbler’s fame and skill, the reported sold-out venues and the extended runs in
several cities are not in themselves enough evidence to support the conclusion that
the Phantaskop was always in use.26 At the end of 1849 Döbler retired from
performing in public, sold all his apparatus in 1850, and became the mayor of the
small town of Eschenau outside Vienna, where he spent his last decade producing
impressive engravings and giving memorable parties.
Franz Freiherr von Uchatius (1811 - 1881)27
A career army officer and outstanding metallurgist, Uchatius began outfitting the new
Vienna Arsenal in 1849 and travelled widely across Europe studying methods of
artillery manufacture. He invented a significantly improved method for making hard
steel which was just on the verge of mass manufacture in Britain and elsewhere
when it was unexpectedly overtaken by Bessemer’s process. Uchatius was also an
enthusiast of photography, and produced two different designs of projecting
phenakistiscope in 1843 and 1853, both constructed by the Vienna optician Wenzel
Prokesch. The first model used an oil lamp and gave weak and unsatisfactory results
with pictures only a maximum of six inches in diameter;28 the second model was
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illuminated by limelight and was demonstrated for the Vienna Academy of Science,
where Uchatius suggested building an apparatus with 100 pictures and 100 lenses
which would allow a “moving tableau” of about 30 seconds to be shown.29 It is often
mis-stated in the literature that Döbler bought a Uchatius apparatus and toured with
it, but this is not the case.30 Not a showman, over the succeeding years Uchatius
from time to time gave performances of his projection apparatus to his guests at
home; we have the date of one such exhibition for a half-dozen or more persons
(amongst them probably Döbler and his wife) in a surviving watercolour by the artist
Georg Dill, which shows the projecting phenakistiscope on a table scattered with
picture disks, projecting onto a pinned-up temporary screen on a nearby wall.
Henry Renno Heyl (1842 - ??)31
An engineer born in Columbus, Ohio who worked from 1863 in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, Heyl developed a new method of binding books with wire instead of
thread in 1870 that ultimately revolutionized bookbinding, and in 1877 invented and
patented the first practical office stapler that inserted and clinched a wire staple in
paper.32 But he is best remembered for presenting in 1870 two public exhibitions of
moving pictures with his Phasmatrope, a device using 16 photographs arranged
around the edge of a revolving disk moved intermittently by a spur gear. There were
three disks and three subjects: a couple dancing a waltz, a Japanese acrobat
making a precipitous leap, and a brief speech by “Brother Jonathan,” as the iconic
US mascot figure of Uncle Sam was then known. The images of the dancing couple
were posed in four positions, which were then printed four times each to make up
the sixteen images for a disk. Heyl’s moving pictures were exhibited twice: for an
audience of 1500 persons at the Philadelphia Academy of Music during a church
entertainment evening on 5 February, and for the Franklin Institute on 16 March. At
the Academy of Music there were three showings of the Phasmatrope, each one
using a different disk. The “Uncle Sam” disk was accompanied by a lecturer
declaiming the represented speech, and the dancers (Heyl was the man) were
synchronised with the evening’s 40-piece orchestra playing a waltz.
Heyl clearly had both photographic and mechanical skills, and it would be most
interesting to know more about him. He went to some trouble to design, build,
register and exhibit the Phasmatrope, and he thought enough of it to keep it, so that
the apparatus and one disk survive today. Was it really only used in public twice?
Was this really the only optical or lantern innovation to which he turned his attention?
What motivated the production (and the preservation) of the Phasmatrope? There is
a good research project here, but all that can be said at the moment is that Heyl’s
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work remains an inexplicable intervention in the story of moving pictures.
Eadweard Muybridge (1830 - 1904)33
By 1870 a landscape photographer of growing reputation in the American west, the
energetic former bookbinder and bookseller Eadweard Muybridge was a natural
choice for Leland Stanford when he sought to apply photographic methods to
improving the training regime of his racehorses. The results of their collaboration,
begun in 1872 and ended in 1882, were historic. Sequenced photographs of
Stanford’s horses in various gaits revealed previously unknown aspects of
locomotion while Muybridge’s photographic technology became the basis for many
new physiological and aesthetic experiments as he influenced figures as diverse as
Etienne-Jules Marey and Thomas Eakins. Shortly after the public announcement of
his successful photographic series, Muybridge began in 1879 to construct a
projecting phenakistiscope that could be used to show moving pictures in his public
lectures, at first called the Zoogyroscope and then the Zoopraxiscope.34 Stephen
Herbert is correct to emphasize that one principal motivation for Muybridge was to
have a way to synthesize the movements depicted in his individual photographs,
which were initially widely mocked by leading artists and intellectuals because they
showed awkward and unfamiliar movements of the horses’s legs, contradicting the
ways in which the horse in motion had been depicted for centuries.35
Muybridge’s apparatus affixed two counter-rotating disks mounted on the same axle
to the front of a modified magic lantern. One disk held images painted in sequences
derived from Muybridge’s photographs, while the other disk was slotted and acted as
a shutter. Oddly, because of a mechanical design where both disks rotated at the
same speed although in opposite directions, Muybridge could not use his
photographs in the device: the effects of optical compression meant that slightly
elongated drawings were the only viable means of producing a natural image on the
screen. It remains a mystery why Muybridge never modified his design according to
very well known optical principles over the almost two decades while this machine (in
two slightly different models, using picture disks of 16 and 12 inches diameter,
respectively) was in use; or, indeed, why it was designed in this way in the first place.
Ottomar Anschütz (1846 - 1907)36
An ambitious and well-educated photographer from the Prussian town of Lissa in
Posen (today Leschnow, Poland), Anschütz spent most of a decade attempting to
construct and then implement a system for exhibiting series chronophotographs as
moving picture loops with a device he named the Schnellseher (“Quick Viewer”), and
which was sometimes called the “Electrical Tachyscope”. The images were fixed
16
around the circumference of a continuously spinning disk, and intermittently lit from
behind by the flash of a Geissler tube. Early models from 1886 to 1890 were seen by
4 - 7 people at a time in a specially darkened room with the apparatus on the other
side of a wall. The drum model of 1890 was a long cylinder that no longer required
the special room or wall, and had five viewing apertures along its length. From 1891
the leading electrical and engineering firm Siemens & Halske built a free-standing
coin-operated automat model in some 152 examples. There were also two “home”
models operated by a crank rather than by an electric motor (although still using an
electrical circuit for its Geissler tube illumination), and an elaborate projecting model
in 1894 with continuous illumination but two large disks moved intermittently.
Anschütz prepared about 60 different subjects for the Schnellseher from his
established stock of chronophotographs, including series of athletes and horses and
riders. He also made a few purely entertainment disks, including Card Players,
showing three men in open air sitting around a small table playing skat; Funny
Journey, where a worker transports a boy in a wheelbarrow through the streets; and
Man with Changing Expression, a facial expression series. All of these entertainment
disks, seen from 1890, anticipate later typical film subjects. Perhaps the most
interesting of the Anschütz entertainment series is his own Barber Shop Scene; the
production date of this disk is uncertain, but it seems likely that this was his response
to seeing the very similar Kinetoscope subject.37
Georges Demenÿ (1850 - 1917)
Before turning cinema pioneer in 1894, at the small studio/laboratory in LevalloisPerret he had established two years earlier and where he made some exquisitely
beautiful films, Demenÿ had spent most of his career as the laboratory assistant to
Etienne-Jules Marey, where he was often the subject of Marey’s chronophotographs
and where he made significant contributions to Marey’s photographic apparatus. It
was due to an argument over the commercialisation of this apparatus that Demenÿ
left Marey’s establishment in 1894. His first independent device was the
Phonoscope, demonstrated in July 1891 and patented in March 1892,38 which
functioned either as a projector or as a peep-show device, and which used series
photographs mounted around the circumference of a revolving disk. Intermittency
was provided by a counter-rotating shutter and illumination by a magic lantern
lamphouse. An example of the Phonoscope and several disks survive at the Musée
Henri Langois of the Cinémathéque française.
Given Demenÿ’s prominence in the historical literature, where his Phonoscope is
ubiquitous, it is a surprise that he appears in the chronology here only three times:
17
for two demonstrations in Paris and for a very brief attempt at commercial exhibition
in Cologne under the auspices of Ludwig Stollwerck. It is unclear whether Demenÿ
actually projected images with the Phonoscope at his first Paris demonstration in
July 1891, but in December at the Conservatory of Arts he evidently showed 30
picture disks to an audience of 1200 people. The very small images (about 2,8cm
high [1.1 inches]), however, were not really adequate for projection to very large
audiences; instead, they were scaled for private homes or small rooms. Apart from
Demenÿ’s undoubtedly key work with Marey — another non-exhibiting figure
prominent in the traditional story of cinema invention — and his own post-1894
experiments, which justify the attention given to him by historians, these three shows
are in fact the only known public exhibitions of Demenÿ apparatus before 1896.39
Demenÿ introduced his Phonoscope as a device to replicate movements that he
called “portraits parlants” or “Speaking Portraits” and demonstrated it for scientists as
a possible apparatus to help the deaf learn to speak. As the Phonoscope appeared
some 17 months after Ottomar Anschütz had publicly demonstrated his “entirely
new” chronophotographic series which he called “Sprechende Porträts”, or
“Speaking Portraits”, it seems that there may have been a direct influence on
Demenÿ’s work on the Phonoscope.40
Emile Reynaud (1844 - 1918)41
Brought up in a middle-class technically-oriented household, Emile Reynaud was at
one point apprenticed to a precision engineer in Paris, worked for the sculptor and
photographer Adam Salomon, and was a longstanding assistant to Abbé François
Moigno, an impressive advocate of audio-visual education who was known as “The
Apostle of Projection”. In 1877, while working with Moigno, Reynaud developed an
optical toy called the Praxinoscope which used a ring of mirrors around its axle to
reflect a revolving band of sequenced drawings placed against the circumference of
its outer rim. A year later, he produced an improved model called the Praxinoscope
Theatre which combined the reflected movements with printed scenery; a Projecting
Praxinoscope followed. These immensely popular amusements were enlarged by
Reynaud and transformed into his Théâtre Optique for professional exhibition. Using
a small magic lantern to project a background scene and an intense lantern lamp to
project moving images reflected from rotating mirrors, Reynaud’s Théâtre Optique
opened at the Musée Grevin in Paris in October 1892. The device utilised images
painted on gelatin squares fastened between flexible leather bands 65mm wide and
up to 40-45 metres long. Registration of the image to the face of each mirror was
accomplished by sprocket holes reinforced with metal ringlets. As many as 700
images formed each band, which was manipulated by hand forwards and backwards
18
during a show; through 1901, and using some filmed elements after summer 1896,
about 12,500 performances primarily given by Renaud himself were seen by a halfmillion viewers.
Reynaud’s Théâtre Optique is a particularly important pre-1896 moving picture
technology, but not for the reasons usually noted, which include his “invention” of
sprocket holes for the registration of the image band and his ability to produce 12 to
15 minute narratives from each painted story. Rather, the Théâtre Optique is a
significant and successful example of a moving picture apparatus using a
continuously-running image band and an optical intermittent system. And as a
constant public exhibition across nine years beginning in October 1892, apart from
nine months taken to refurbish the apparatus and paint new picture bands between
1 March 1894 and 1 January 1895, the Théâtre Optique had an indisputable
prominence that could not be avoided by any moving picture inventor. Yet apart from
a very few experiments,42 the idea of an optical intermittent technology using a
continuously running film band was an option that was not taken by the majority of
cinematographic apparatus after 1896. Why? The potential advantages were many,
prominent amongst them the lack of wear and tear on the fragile celluloid image
band, which was the most expensive recurring cost for early film exhibitors, plus the
elimination of on-screen flicker, an exhibition problem with mechanical intermittent
devices that was not solved until 1903.
On a moment’s reflection, intermittently starting and stopping the film band itself by
mechanical means for each and every image frame was a ludicrous enterprise. Not
only was it the single most difficult technological problem facing inventors and
pioneer exhibitors, but it also condemned uncountable audiences to watching murky
shows using worn, scratched, torn, hastily repaired and bedraggled films with barely
visible moving images. Yet even in the glare of Reynaud’s successful example,
which was followed up by the continuously running film loop in the Edison
Kinetoscope, it was a mechanical technology that was adopted as the standard
practise for film exhibition, which it remains today. This seems not only counterintuitive, but indeed an absolutely perverse evolution of moving picture technology.
Can there be any reason at all for this retrograde evolution? The answer is Yes,
when it is put in the inclusive context of the whole projection apparatus. Briefly, what
is necessary for a viable projection device is a clear optical path which runs from an
illuminant, then through an image, and then through lenses which produce an
enlarged image on a screen. To make a portable (at the least moveable) projector,
19
given the heat of the illuminant, requires both some skill and some knowledge in
devising a proper and efficient optical path. Alternatively, producing an accurate
optical path that was itself in motion, like Reynaud’s spinning mirrors, was an
immensely more complex matter of great precision and great expense. It is not
surprising that most inventors concentrated on incorporating the highly efficient,
practical and robust optical pathway developed for the magic lantern and then
refined in practise over the preceeding 240 years. By the end of the 19th century the
magic lantern was already a commoditised product, and adding to its existing
projection platform a mechanical device that would quickly and intermittently move
the “slides”, i.e. an image-carrying film band, seemed to be much the cheaper and
easier option for making progress with photographic moving pictures. It was the
existence of the magic lantern, with its highly experienced and widespread
community of users who themselves formed a vast repository of sophisticated
projection skills and abilities, that turned the invention of moving pictures into a
narrowly-defined conceptual problem: how – and using what materials – to move the
“slides” fast enough to achieve the stroboscopic illusion of natural movement.43
Thomas Edison (1847 - 1931)44
The development of the Kinetoscope viewer and its associated elements, particularly
the Kinesigraph camera and the 35mm celluloid bands which became known as
“Edison standard” widths, is now well researched and well published.45 The viewer
went through four distinct experimental stages between October 1888 and May/June
1893: 1) a design derived from Edison’s own gramophone apparatus, 2) briefly, a
design based on the Anschütz Schnellseher, 3) a narrow gauge design using 22mm
film perforated on one side only, and 4) the final instrument with 35mm film
perforated on both sides. Over the long period of its development it was eagerly
anticipated, and there were several press notices of its imminent availability in
succeeding years. Edison’s unique business reputation, already prominent through
the success of his light bulb, electrical, and telegraph work, and then reinforced by
the wonder of the gramophone, meant that there were many eager syndicates and
agents ready promptly to support the sale of the Kinetoscope and its films. The
apparatus was expensive, though, and the actual number of exhibitors outside large
cities – especially as opposed to the number of sales agents and syndicates directly
related to Edison – who made substantial profits from the apparatus is difficult to
determine. Charles Musser recently noted that the Kinetoscope had a relatively short
commercial life and was a profitable enterprise only for about the first 18 months
after April 1894.46 Nonetheless the Kinetoscope received an ecstatic reception in the
press as the latest of “Wizard” Edison’s many inventions.
20
There are two anomalies about this instrument which are not often emphasized, but
which are an interesting contribution to the discussion of early film exhibition. First,
Edison (and his team) would seem not to have been in any great hurry to actually
conclude their experiments on moving pictures. To be sure, its development was
tangential to the main work at the laboratory on electrical batteries and mining
apparatus. And neither Edison nor any of his group were oriented towards show
business. At the same time, their casual attitude towards its timely completion seems
quite odd in the face of both an excited press awaiting the public introduction of the
machine and by comparison with other pioneers both before and after the
Kinetoscope who went public immediately (too quickly?) with their moving picture
machines. It is noteworthy that the five-year period of experiment came to an end in
early May, 1893, but Edison did not order the first 25 Kinetoscopes to be built to fill
an order of 2 May until June, 1893, and then did not take delivery of these first
commercial models until March, 1894 — and this in the face of pressure from the
World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago (amongst many others), which wanted
Edison’s latest marvel at the fair. The delays here seem quite lackadaisical and
uncharacteristic of Edison’s other inventive work at West Orange.47
A second anomaly of the Kinetoscope is the number of attempts that were made to
turn it into a projector, or to make it into a multiple-viewer apparatus. This seems to
have been quite a substantial motivation communicated to people experiencing the
Kinetoscope, except for Thomas Edison himself. In England, Cecil Wray patented an
accessory that would allow a kinetoscope picture to be enlarged and projected onto
a screen as early as 3 January 1895.48 In November of the same year, Henri Joly in
France patented a kinetoscope-type apparatus that allowed four viewers to see two
different films running in 110 meter loops.49 The Latham family were already
Kinetoscope exhibitors, and dissatisfied with the commercial volumes achievable
with the machine when they began work on their projection device, evidently
following the advice of their customers (see below). Thomas Armat was another
early inventor inspired to make the translation from peep show viewer to projection.
And then there was Edison’s principal investigator on the Kinetoscope, W. K. L.
Dickson himself: it may well have been the same motivation that led him to work on
projection with both the Lathams and the Biograph group, of which he was a
founder. He seemingly never worked on projection apparatus at West Orange. What
was Edison’s commitment to single-person peep-show viewing? It might have been
sheer ignorance of the entertainment industry. But there seems to have been no
serious attempt at building projection apparatus at the Edison laboratory at all; the
21
Vitascope was famously bought in from Armat and C. Francis Jenkins in 1896 – and
brought to Edison by the Kinetoscope agents Raff & Gammon. Not at all someone to
miss a commercial opportunity, especially with his own patent securely in place, this
failure on Edison’s part is highly unusual. What lies behind it? Was the whole moving
picture project entirely motivated by W. K. L. Dickson, and did Edison simply accede
to the interest of a most valued employee? Most writers on the Kinetoscope, even
severe critics like Gordon Hendricks, have not sufficiently examined Edison’s
attitudes towards his invention and what they may mean both for its slow introduction
and for its meaning within his inventive accomplishments.
Birt Acres (1852? - 1918)50
In early 1895 the middle-aged and middle-class Birt Acres quit a respectable job
working as a production manager at the photographic firm of Elliot and Son in
Barnet, north London, to devote himself entirely to pursuing his moving picture
inventions. A brief and unhappy collaboration with the electrical engineer Robert W.
Paul did produce the first celluloid films taken in Great Britain, intended for pirate
Kinetoscopes being made by Paul. By June, after an acrimonious end to this
partnership, Acres was working with Ludwig Stollwerck in Cologne, for whom he
filmed the opening of the Kiel Canal, the first films taken in Germany. The
Elektroskop, a small-screen viewer that allowed several patrons to watch a film
simultaneously, was developed by Acres for Stollwerck specifically as an automat
device that would overcome some of the perceived disadvantages of the Edison
Kinetoscope, principally that the Elektroskop could be seen by several people at
once. The apparatus exhibited two films consecutively, one running right to left in the
machine while the second film rewound on a separate but parallel mechanism; after
a mirror shifted the optical path of the rear-projection machine to the alternate film
band, this second band ran from the left side of the machine to the right side while
the first band rewound. Although the Elektroskop showed films that were
considerably longer than the 42-foot loops of the Edison Kinetoscope, and had a
larger viewing screen, it seems not to have been mechanically robust and was only
rarely exhibited. Its name lingers on in some early technical literature, but the
Cologne showing listed below is its only verifiable public exhibition. Simultaneous
with this show, Acres was finishing the development of his Kinetic Lantern projection
device, which was demonstrated for several photographic societies between 10 and
15 January, 1896 and then used in his own public exhibition at Piccadilly Circus,
London.
Woodvill Latham (1837 - 1911), Gray Latham (1867 - 1907), and Otway Latham
22
(1868 - 1906)51
Kinetoscope exhibitors from the summer of 1894, Gray and Otway Latham were
interested in exhibiting boxing films, for which the capacity of the Kinetoscope was
enlarged so that a machine could show a complete “round” of boxing almost a
minute long. According to their father Woodville, his sons were following advice from
their customers as they began to develop a machine to project films onto a screen;
according to the brothers, the suggestion came from their father after they
complained that they could not accommodate the crowds who wanted to see their
Kinetoscope boxing matches. Their Eidoloscope projector,52 developed with some
help from W. K. L. Dickson and a former Edison mechanic, Eugene Lauste, made its
debut in a press preview on 21 April 1895, the first known public projection of moving
pictures on celluloid strips in America. Thomas Edison called the apparatus, which
used 2 inch wide film and had no intermittent movement, nothing more than “a
rearranged Kinetoscope” and threatened to sue. The Latham camera – and later the
projector, when it acquired an intermittent movement in May 1896 – incorporated
space for an extra loop of film to help reduce the tension on the long celluloid bands
used in the apparatus, which was itself patented as an element of their invention,
and the “Latham loop” later played a significant legal role in the work of the Motion
Picture Patents Company beginning in 1908. Early films produced with their own
camera included boxing films, a horse race, dancing girls, scenes of Niagra Falls and
a film of waves breaking on the beach near Atlantic City, New Jersey.
The Latham film enterprise opened to the public in a small storefront theatre at 156
Broadway, New York, on 20 May 1895. One newspaper report noted that spectators
at this projected entertainment acted much as they would at ringside of an actual
fight.53 The exhibition later moved to a storefront on Park Row; in late August they
presented a week of films at the Olympic Theatre in Chicago and then moved to
Kohl & Middleton’s Clark Street Dime Museum before moving on to the Cotton
States Exposition in Atlanta. Although a few further exhibitions lingered on into 1896,
the Eidoloscope was not a successful apparatus, for reasons that have never been
adequately explained. Both Charles Musser and Gordon Hendricks suggest that the
company was under-funded and faced rising costs and debts. This may well be true,
but given the vivid pictures of crowded Kinetoscope parlours – and, indeed, earlier
Anschütz exhibitions – that inhabit the same era and cultural milieu it is hard to
understand just why the Eidoloscope could not have earned enough money to be
self-financing. Was the apparatus so technically poor that it was rejected by the
public? Not according to news reports of the earliest fight films shown in New York in
Spring 1895. Was there some kind of profligacy behind the scenes in the production
23
company? The reasons that the Latham apparatus did not find a more substantial
role during 1895 are important, because a clear idea of why it failed to do so would
cast a sharper and more penetrating light on how their colleague pioneers came to
find a success that eluded the Lathams.
Max and Emil Skladanowsky (1863 - 1939; 1866 - 1945)54
Members of a family long involved in touring mechanical and optical shows, the
Skladanowsky brothers developed an apparatus using two bands of film 54mm wide
tht projected alternate frames from each band at about 8 frames per second to
produce on screen a merged image apparently running at about 16 frames per
second, which they called the Bioskop. The huge and solidly-constructed projector
was booked as an attraction for the month of November 1895 at the Wintergarten
Theatre in Berlin, and installed in the “kleine Bühne” of the Wintergarten, from where
it was expected to move to major variety theatres in Paris and probably London. The
only additional 1895 exhibition, however, was in Hamburg although the apparatus
was used in several cities in Germany and Scandinavia in 1896.
The Skladanowsky family were magic lantern showmen, and were long used to
touring mechanical theatres or optical attractions. The moving picture apparatus was
developed as their novelty act for the 1895-96 season: it was large and bulky, a
unique machine that was incapable of being easily replicated and manufactured. It
was made to suit their own skills as showmen, and to introduce moving pictures to
the audiences at the theatres where they had been known previously and to which
they would return with a new act. Their film system, with its projection of alternate
frames, was a hand-made operation equally incapable of commercialisation. With
the Skladanowsky Bioskop of 1895 the story of pre-1896 moving picture projection
closes a circular pattern and returns to the hand-crafted one-off presentations of the
showman/magician Leopold Ludwig Döbler of 1847. Although the apparatus of
Skladanowsky and Döbler is technologically quite different, both showmen conceived
of their moving picture presentations in the same way: as that year’s new touring
programme. There is no evidence in the design of the apparatus from either
showman, and particularly not from the Skladanowskys, that any further use of the
moving picture inventions was intended beyond their own touring season. Although
the Skladanowskys were present in the midst of the rising tide of cinematographic
projection apparatus and exhibitions, and much later exploited this to enlarge their
vision of the Bioskop and its purposes, they initially had a very limited approach to
introducing public exhibitions of moving pictures.
24
Louis and Auguste Lumière (1864 - 1948; 1862 - 1954)55
Another attempt at moving pictures that was motivated by the Edison Kinetoscope
was that of the Lumière brothers, responsible with their father Antoine for a large and
successful business of making photographic plates and emulsions. Work on their
Cinématographe was advanced enough to apply for a patent 13 February 1895,56
and the first public exhibition of the apparatus came on 22 March of the same year,
just eight days before a supplement to the original patent made some improvements
in the mechanism. The Cinématographe featured a claw movement where a pair of
pins inserted in perforations on both sides of the film pulled a single frame into place.
The device was run by a crank, and the claw was regulated at first by being mounted
on a circular plate, later on an ovoid cam inside a frame. Using celluloid films
deliberately the same size as those found in the Kinetoscope, the Lumière moving
picture apparatus was the first designed as a multipurpose device, capable of acting
as a camera, printer, or projector. Even more remarkably, it was a tidy, elegantly
neat and lightweight portable device, measuring just 13 inches high (including the
upper film holder), 5 inches deep and 7 ½ inches wide. It weighed only 4 Kg. (8.8
pounds). The Lumières ordered the first group of 25 Cinématographes from the
Paris mechanic Jules Carpentier on 14 October 1895, and the order was complete
by the end of January, 1896, even though many details in the apparatus still needed
modification for a production model. This was about a third of the time it took Edison
to get the first 25 Kinetoscopes from an outside supplier.57 One of the early films for
the Cinématographe, Partie d’ecarte, presents the same subject as one of the
entertainment sequences made by Ottomar Anschütz for the Schnellseher in 1891.
Perhaps the most noticeable dimension of the Cinématographe is how different it is
physically and materially from all of the prior attempts at moving pictures in the
1890s. As noted above, it combined all of the functions necessary to have a
complete moving picture system, and was very portable. Looking at the development
of cinematographic apparatus after the Lumière Cinématographe, the invention from
Lyon does not seem outstandingly remarkable; looking at all of the preceding moving
picture machines and all of the contemporary 1895 apparatus, the Cinématographe
is nothing less than astounding. In its day, it was the Swiss watch of moving picture
machines, an iPod when everything else in sight was a 1950's living room console
hi-fi. It is probably possible to narrow the original purposes behind the Lumière
interest in moving pictures by comparing it to what we already know about their
predecessors. The Cinématographe was not at all intended to be a new act for a
showman’s next season like the Skladanowsky Bioskop: everything about the
25
Lumière apparatus points to simplicity and ease of use by any amateur photographer
and no Lumière family member was a professional showman.58 The
Cinématographe also was not intended to exhibit the artistic work of a single
photographer, like the Schnellseher of Anschütz or the Zoopraxiscope of Muybridge;
nor did it support the work of a single filmmaker or studio like the apparatus of the
Lathams. Indeed, the plethora of contributors who made up the corpus of “Lumière
films” across three years, and the ease with which the Cinématographe became an
article of trade when it became available for sale are remarkable indications of the
universality of its design and the advanced simplicity of its construction. The more
one compares the Cinématographe to the contemporary devices of 1895 and earlier
(and to many of those of 1896 and later) the more astounding and nonpareil the
apparatus becomes.59 It was in the true sense of the word an incomparable machine.
Why? For what purpose was the Cinématographe developed? The pattern that was
undoubtedly in the minds of the Lumière brothers was the extraordinary success that
George Eastman achieved with his popular Kodak camera using a roll-film system.
The Lumière Cinématographe was clearly intended for widespread use by the public
as a picture taking and exhibiting device; its function as a picture printer bridged the
technical gap between taking a film on a photographic negative and projecting it on a
photographic positive print. The long-established Lumière business of devising
photographic emulsions and manufacturing plates would then be extended to
providing the raw film stock that would supply a new generation of filmmakers just as
Eastman supplied a new generation of snapshot photographers with roll film and
processing in the expanded market created by his Kodak system.60
Part 3: A Chronology of Moving Picture Exhibition Before 1896
This chronology is by definition incomplete. Not only because exhibitions of the
Choreutoscope and its relatives in magic lantern culture are not recorded, embedded
as they are in exhibitions where other visual elements were the dominant attraction,
but also because very little research has concentrated on “moving picture” work
before 1895. Nonetheless, this chronology usefully collates the known exhibitions
from 1847 onwards, and provides at the least an outline of activity which can be a
starting-point for further examination. It also provides something of a ‘prequel’ to the
chronology of cinema invention and experimentation which I published a decade ago
in Film History, Vol. 7 No 2 (Summer 1995).
[Add European Kinetoscope dates; esp. Stollw erck book]
1847:
16 January – 24 February: Leopold Ludwig Döbler, Josephstadt Theatre, Vienna. 36 perform ances of
26
his Phantaskop.
ca. 7 March: Leopold Ludwig Döbler, the Theatre in Brünn. Two perform ances of his Phantaskop in
this week.
22 March: Leopold Ludwig Döbler, Josephstadt Theatre, Vienna, with his Phantaskop. [Likely one
week of perform ances.]
5 May: Leopold Ludwig Döbler, Royal Court-Theatre, Munich, with his Phantaskop.
Undated: Döbler perform ances likely with his Phantaskop in Olm ütz, Ham burg, Budapest, Graz.
1848:
4 & 5 March: Leopold Ludwig Döbler, Bohem ian National Theatre, Prague, two benefit perform ances
with his Phantaskop.
Undated: Döbler perform ances likely with his Phantaskop in Prague, Brünn, Stuttgart, Vienna (private)
and Klafterbrunn (private).
1853:
21 April: Franz Freiherr von Uchatius, at a m eeting of the Naturwissenschaftliche Branch of the
Im perial Academ y of Science, Vienna, with his second m odel projecting phenakistiscope.
12 July: Franz Freiherr von Uchatius, at his hom e for a half-dozen or m ore guests, likely including
Leopold Döbler and his wife Elise, with his second m odel projecting phenakistiscope.
1870:
5 February: Henry Heyl with his Phasm atrope, as part of the Ninth Entertainm ent of the Young Men’s
Society of St. Mark’s Evangelical Lutheran Church at the Academ y of Music, Philadelphia. Som e 1500
persons saw three subjects, a couple dancing a walz, a m an m aking a speech, and an acrobat.
16 March: Henry Heyl with his Phasm atrope, at the Franklin Institute, Philadelphia.
1879:
late Autumn: Eadweard Muybridge, debut of the Zoogyroscope at the hom e of Leland Stanford. Over
the next weeks the apparatus was exhibited several tim es for Stanford and his guests.
1880:
16 January: Eadweard Muybridge at the hom e of Leland Stanford with his Zoopraxiscope.
20 January: Eadweard Muybridge at the hom e of Leland Stanford with his Zoopraxiscope.
21 March: Eadweard Muybridge at the hom e of Leland Stanford with his Zoopraxiscope.
4 May: Eadweard Muybridge at the San Francisco Art Association with his Zoopraxiscope, the public
debut of the apparatus, following a “press preview.”
Undated: further Muybridge lectures in California and on the East coast, with his Zoopraxiscope.
1881:
26 September: Eadweard Muybridge in Paris, at a reception arranged by Etienne-Jules Marey with his
Zoopraxiscope, the first exhibition of the apparatus outside the US.
26 November: Eadweard Muybridge in Paris, at a reception for around 200 guests including m any
artists, arranged by the painter J. L. E. Meissonier, with his Zoopraxiscope.
14 December: Eadweard Muybridge at the Cercle de l’Union Artistique, Paris, with his Zoopraxiscope.
Undated: Muybridge lectures with the Zoopraxiscope, San Francisco area, Spring 1881.
1882:
13 March: Eadweard Muybridge at 5 p.m . at The Royal Institution, Alberm arle Street, London, for an
invited audience including royalty and figures from the worlds of literature and science, with his
Zoopraxiscope. Due to the intense dem and, a second show was organized for the sam e evening.
16 March: Eadweard Muybridge at the Royal Academ y of Arts, Burlington House, London, with his
Zoopraxiscope.
18 March: Eadweard Muybridge at the Savage Club at Lansdown Hall, London, with his
Zoopraxiscope.
4 April: Eadweard Muybridge at the Society of Arts, London, with his Zoopraxiscope.
5 April: Eadweard Muybridge at the South Kensington Science and Art Departm ent [later Science
Museum ], with his Zoopraxiscope.
8 May: Eadweard Muybridge at The Royal Artillery Institution, W oolwich, with his Zoopraxiscope.
27
5 June: Eadweard Muybridge at the Liverpool Art Club, with his Zoopraxiscope.
8 June: Eadweard Muybridge at the private residence of John J. Atkinson, with his Zoopraxiscope.
30 July or 1 August: Eadweard Muybridge at the Casino Theatre, Newport, Rhode Island, with his
Zoopraxiscope.
19 October: Eadweard Muybridge at the Society of Arts of the Institute of Technology, Boston,
Massachusetts [later MIT] with his Zoopraxiscope.
23 - 24 & 26 - 28 October: Eadweard Muybridge at Union Hall, Boston, with his Zoopraxiscope. Daily
shows for the public at 8 pm with m atinees on W ednesday and Saturday, adm ission 50 cents, children
25 cents.
17 November: Eadweard Muybridge at the Turf Club, New York, with his Zoopraxiscope.
28 November: Eadweard Muybridge at the National Academ y of Design, New York, with his
Zoopraxiscope.
22 December: Eadweard Muybridge at the National Academ y of Design, New York, with his
Zoopraxiscope.
Undated: Muybridge lectures with the Zoopraxiscope: Eton College; additional Am erican lectures.
1883:
9 January: Eadweard Muybridge at the Union League Club, New York, with his Zoopraxiscope.
12 February: Eadweard Muybridge at the Academ y of Fine Arts, Philadelphia, with his Zoopraxiscope,
for an audience largely of art students.
13 February: Eadweard Muybridge at the Franklin Institute, Philadelphia, with his Zoopraxiscope.
15 February: Eadweard Muybridge at the Academ y of Music, Philadelphia, with his Zoopraxiscope.
16 February: Eadweard Muybridge at the Academ y of Fine Arts, Philadelphia, with his Zoopraxiscope,
for an audience of Philadelphia artists and socialites.
20 or 21 September: Eadweard Muybridge at the New Bedford High School, New Bedford,
Massachusetts, for art pupils and local citizens, with his Zoopraxiscope.
Undated: Muybridge lectures with the Zoopraxiscope: Photography Section of the Am erican Institute,
New York; Cooper Union, New York; additional Am erican lectures.
1884:
8 February: Eadweard Muybridge at Association Hall, Philadelphia, with his Zoopraxiscope.
1885:
April 30: Eadweard Muybridge at the Scientific Society of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia,
with his Zoopraxiscope.
Undated: Muybridge lectures on his work to students at the University of Pennsylvania.
1887:
19, 20, 21 March: Ottom ar Anschütz at the m ezzanine of the Culture Ministry, Unter den Linden 4,
daily from 12 noon to 3 pm under the auspices of Culture Minister von Goslar, for invited audiences of
scientists, politicians and photographers, with his Schnellseher. First public dem onstration of the
Schnellseher.
c. mid-June to mid-September: Schnellseher of Ottom ar Anschütz exhibited daily to a paying public in
sm all groups at Stadtbahnbogen No. 21 of the Exhibition Park (Ausstellungspark), Berlin.
September: Ottom ar Anschütz at the convention of natural scientists (Naturforscherversam m lung),
W iesbaden, with his Schnellseher.
September: Eadweard Muybridge with his Zoopraxiscope in Albany, New York.
3 October: Ottom ar Anschütz at the Verein zur Pflege der Photographie und verwandter Künste,
Frankfurt am Main, with his Schnellseher. Dem onstrated twice, accom panied by a short lecture.
10 - 15 October: Schnellseher of Ottom ar Anschütz exhibited to the public at the auditorium of the
polytechnic, Frankfurt a. M.
December: Eadweard Muybridge with his Zoopraxiscope in Pittsburgh, PA, at the studio of sculptor
and painter Thom as Shields Clark.
December: Eadweard Muybridge with his Zoopraxiscope at the Art Institute, Chicago.
Undated: Anschütz Schnellseher: Kunstgewerbehalle, Dresden.
Undated: Muybridge lectures: Union League Club, New York; the Studio of W illiam Merritt Chase, New
York; Milwaukee, W I; Madison, W I; Minneapolis, MN; St. Louis, MO; Denver, CO; others.
28
1888:
25 February: Eadweard Muybridge at the New England Society, Orange, New Jersey, with his
Zoopraxiscope.
February: Perm anent installation of the Schnellseher in a room at the photographic studios of Ottom ar
Anschütz, Charlottenstrasse 59, Berlin. Dem onstrated frequently in 1888-1892, there seem to have
been various m odels of Schnellseher in occasional use at Anschütz’s studio headquarters until about
1902.
4 May: Eadweard Muybridge in Orange, New Jersey, with his Zoopraxiscope.
21 June: Eadweard Muybridge at Milwaukee College, Milwaukee, W isconsin, with his Zoopraxiscope.
Undated: Anschütz Schnellseher: Photography Exhibition, Brussels; Photography Exhibition, Florence.
Undated: Muybridge lectures with the Zoopraxiscope:
1889:
8 May: Eadweard Muybridge at The Royal Society, Burlington House, London, with his Zoopraxiscope.
early August: Schnellseher of Ottom ar Anschütz begins regular exhibitions at the prem ises of C. B.
Richards & Son, photographic suppliers, at 3 East 14 th Street, New York, New York. The exhibitions
continued at least until the end of Novem ber.
15 August: Schnellseher of Ottom ar Anschütz exhibited at the Photographic Exhibition at the
Königlichen Kriegsakadem ie, Dorotheenstraße, Berlin.
between 19 and 24 August: Eadweard Muybridge at the Photographic Convention of Great Britain, St.
Jam es’s Hall, London, with his Zoopraxiscope. One lecture as part of the convention series.
week before 27 September: Eadweard Muybridge at the Mayor’s Conversazione and at The Art
Gallery, Newcastle-on-Tyne, with his Zoopraxiscope. Two exhibitions.
28 October: Eadweard Muybridge at the Literary and Philosophical Society, Sheffield, at The Music
Hall, Surrey Street, with his Zoopraxiscope.
7 November: Eadweard Muybridge at the Bristol Naturalists’ Society, at The Victoria Room s, Bristol,
with his Zoopraxiscope.
21 November: Eadweard Muybridge at the Natural Science Society of W ellington College, Crowthorne,
Berkshire, with his Zoopraxiscope.
27 November: Eadweard Muybridge at the Mechanics’ Institution and Literary Society, Leeds, with his
Zoopraxiscope.
2 December: Eadweard Muybridge at the Assem bly Room s, Bath, under the auspices of the Mayor
and the Presidents and Officers of the local scientific and arts societies, with his Zoopraxiscope.
mid-December: Eadweard Muybridge at The Royal Institution, London, with his Zoopraxiscope.
Undated: Anschütz Schnellseher: Hunting, Fishing and Sports Exhibition, Kassel; Exhibition for Photo
Dealers and Manufacturers, Boston, Massachusetts; Photography Exhibition, St. Petersburg;
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
1890:
8 January: Eadweard Muybridge at St. George’s Hall, Liverpool, with his Zoopraxiscope. As part of a
day’s program m e of five divers lectures sponsored by som e 20 societies.
16 January: Ottom ar Anschütz dem onstrates an im proved m odel of his Schnellseher at the
Photographic Association, Berlin. [This was the drum m odel.] He also dem onstrated on the earlier
Schnellseher an “entirely new” kind of chronophotograph, which he called “Sprechende Porträit”, or
“Speaking Portraits”.
early January: Ottom ar Anschütz gives a private dem onstration of his new “Speaking Portraits” to the
fam ily of Kaiser W ilhelm .
3 February: Eadweard Muybridge at the Scientific Society, Ipswitch, at the Lecture Hall, Tower Street,
with his Zoopraxiscope.
11 and 13 February: Eadweard Muybridge at the Belfast Natural History and Philosophical Society, at
the Hall of the YMCA, with his Zoopraxiscope.
12 and 14 February: Eadweard Muybridge at the Royal Dublin Society, at Leinster House, Kildare
Street, Dublin, with his Zoopraxiscope.
17 February: Eadweard Muybridge at the Photographic Society of Ireland, Antient Concert Room s,
Dublin, with his Zoopraxiscope.
27 February: Eadweard Muybridge at the Glasgow Philosophical Society, Queen’s Room s, Glasgow,
with his Zoopraxiscope.
12 and 14 March: Eadweard Muybridge at the Natural History and Microscopical Society, Town Hall,
29
Birm ingham , with his Zoopraxiscope. A course of two lectures.
21 and 22 April: The new drum -shaped Schnellseher of Ottom ar Anschütz, which allowed five
sim ultaneous viewers, dem onstrated for Josef Maria Eder at the k. k. Graphischer Lehr- und
Versuchsanstalt, Vienna.
13 and 20 October: Eadweard Muybridge at the Midland Institute, Birm ingham , with his Zoopraxiscope.
November: Schnellseher of Ottom ar Anschütz exhibited daily from 10 am to 8 pm for an adm ission of
30 kreuzer, in a local at Parkring 2, corner of W ollzeile, Vienna. Probably the drum -form m odel.
27 November: Eadweard Muybridge at Kinnaird Hall, Dundee, with his Zoopraxiscope, as part of a
series of six Arm istead Lectures.
Undated: Muybridge lectures with the Zoopraxiscope: W arrington Literary and Philosophical Society;
Hull; Portsm outh; School of Military Engineering, Chatham ; The Royal College or Surgeons, London;
The Royal Geographical Society, London; The Royal Zoological Society, London; South Kensington
Museum , London; University of Oxford, Charterhouse School; Cheltenham ; Clifton; Eton School;
Hailebury; Marlborough; Rugby; Tiverton; Uppingham ; others.
1891:
21 March: Eadweard Muybridge at the Urania Theatre, Berlin, with his Zoopraxiscope.
May: Eadweard Muybridge in Munich with his Zoopraxiscope.
18 July - December: Schnellseher of Ottom ar Anschütz at the Hall for Science and Medicine, daily
from 10am to 9 pm , at the Electrical Exhibition, Frankfurt a. M. Debut installation of the autom at m odel
m ade by Siem ens & Halske. Precise figures for 18 July to 25 August record 14,858 viewings at 10 Pf.
each; over 17,000 viewings to 31 August.
27 July: Georges Dem enÿ presents his Phonoscope at the Académ ie des Sciences, Paris. Main
subject was a disk of a m an speaking words and phrases.
July: Schnellseher of Ottom ar Anschütz at the International Photography Exhibition, Brussels. [possibly
drum -form Schnellseher.]
December 6: Georges Dem enÿ dem onstrates his Phonoscope at the Conservatory of Arts, Paris,
before an audience of 1200 people. Thirty diapositives were shown.
Undated: Anschütz Schnellseher exhibitions and installations: Photography exhibition, Am sterdam ;
exhibition by Stanislaw Jurkowski in W arsaw; various exhibitions in Berlin.
Undated: Muybridge lectures with the Zoopraxiscope: French Academ y, Rom e; International Society of
Artists, Rom e; Naples; Turin; various universities in Switzerland and southern Germ any; Berlin (July).
1892:
June and July: Schnellseher of Ottom ar Anschütz returns in its autom at m odel to Stadtbahnbogen No.
21 at the Exhibition Park, Berlin. 16,618 viewings in July and 17,271 in August.
Early June: two Schnellsehers of Ottom ar Anschütz installed as a perm anent attraction at Crystal
Palace, south London. The installation fluctuated between 2 and 12 m achines, and rem ained in
operation until March 1894.
July: Two Schnellsehers of Ottom ar Anschütz installed at the International Exposition of Photography,
Paris.
8 August: Twenty-five Schnellsehers of Ottom ar Anschütz arrive in New York City. W ithin a m onth, five
were installed at the Eden Musee on 23 rd Street, another at Koster & Biall’s Music Hall at 34 th Street
and Broadway, 12 were in use at the Am . Inst. Dur. Prdkts., and two were shipped to Boston.
28 October: Em ile Reynaud gives the first perform ance of his Pantomimes lumineuses at the Théâtre
Optique of the Musée Grevin, 10, Boulevard Montm artre, Paris. The exhibition closed for renovations
on 28 February 1894. See also: 1 January 1895.
22 December: A Schnellseher-Parlour with 12 Anschütz m achines opens at No. 425, The Strand,
London. The exhibition continued here and later at various Charing Cross addresses, until March
1894.
Undated: Anschütz Schnellseher installations, from shipping records: Hohenzollern Gallery, Berlin;
Zoological Garden, Berlin (4 m achines); Ham burg (2 m achines); Leipzig Garden, Berlin (2 m achines).
1893:
May - October: Schnellsehers of Ottom ar Anschütz installed in the Electricity Building and in an open
air passage to the Midway Plaisance at the W orld’s Colum bian Exhibition, Chicago, where there was
no m ention of the Schnellseher and the cases were labelled “Greatest W onder of the W orld”, leading
to confusion with the Edison Kinetoscope, widely anticipated at the fair but not exhibited. This
30
installation was seen by a young Thom as Arm at.
9 May: The Edison Kinetoscope m akes its public debut in a dem onstration at the Departm ent of
Physics of the Brooklyn Institute, Brooklyn, New York. Four hundred guests heard a lecture by George
M. Hopkins and viewed the apparatus.
1894:
14 April: An Edison Kinetoscope parlour opened with ten m achines by George and Andrew Holland,
adm ission 25 cents to see a row of 5 m achines, at 1155 Broadway, New York City.
17 May: An Edison Kinetoscope parlour opened with ten m achines by George and Andrew Holland at
the Masonic Tem ple, 148 State Street, Chicago. Two further parlours open in July, at 255 W abash
Avenue and 57 State Street.
1 June: Edison Kinetoscope parlour opens in the phonographic showroom of Peter Bacigalupi in San
Francisco.
8 July: Edison Kinetoscope installed at the am usem ent park in Eagle Rock, New Jersey.
9 August to 23 September: Edison Kinetoscopes are installed on the excursion steam er “Republic”
which runs from Philadelphia to Cape May, Delaware.
19 September: Edison Kinetoscope exhibited in the telegraph office of the Petit Parisien, 20 Boulevard
Montm artre, Paris.
1 October: Edison Kinetoscope parlour with ten m achines opened by Michel and Eugene W erner at 20
Boulevard Poissonnière, Paris.
6 October: Edison Kinetoscope parlour opens at the Colum bia Phonograph Musical Palace, 919
Pennsylvania Avenue, W ashington, D. C. The inventor C. Francis Jenkins sees the Kinetoscope here.
17 October: Edison Kinetoscope parlour opened by Edison’s agents Maguire and Baucus at 70 Oxford
Street, London.
3 November: Schnellseher of Ottom ar Anschütz exhibited at the Swedish Photographic Exhibition,
Stockholm . The Edison Kinetoscope was exhibited here on 4 February 1895.
10 November: Edison Kinetoscope parlour opened by Thom as Tally at 206 South Spring Street, Los
Angeles.
10 November: Edison Kinetoscope parlour opened in Austin, Texas.
11 November: Edison Kinetoscope parlour opened by Charles Urban at 101 W oodward Avenue,
Detroit, Michigan.
12 November - c. 1 December: The Phantoscope projector of C. Francis Jenkins opens at the Pure
Food Exposition, W ashington, D. C.
25 November: the Projecting Electrotachyscope of Ottom ar Anschütz dem onstrated at the Grand
Auditorium of the Post Office Building, Artilleriestrasse, Berlin. The m orning audience was invited by
Culture Minister von Goslar, the afternoon dem onstration was a benefit for the Photographic
Association of Berlin.
26 November: Edison Kinetoscope parlour opens at 1436 Broadway, New York. In continuous
operation from 10 am until Midnight. There are now at least five Kinetoscope locations in New York:
1155 Broadway, 39 Park Row, 144 East 14 th Street, 158 East 125 th Street, 1436 Broadway.
29 - 30 November: the Projecting Electrotachyscope of Ottom ar Anschütz exhibited to the public at the
Grand Auditorium of the Post Office Building, Atilleriestrasse, Berlin.
30 November - 29 January 1895: Edison Kinetoscope parlour opened by J. C. W illiam son and George
Musgrove, in association with the Macm ahon brothers at 148 Pitt Street, Sydney, Australia.
5 December: Edison Kinetoscope parlour and sales office opened by Michel W erner at 6-8 Place de
l’Opera, Paris.
13 December: Edison Kinetoscope installed by owner Jam es Joyce at the Clarendon Hotel, Port
Jervis, New Jersey.
16 December: Edison Kinetoscope opens in the Panoram a of Lauritz Vilhelm Pacht in Copenhagen.
17 December: Two Edison Kinetoscopes open in the Panopticon of Oswald Stoll in Philharm onic Hall,
St. Mary Street, Cardiff, W ales.
27 December: Edison Kinetoscope parlour opened by Karel van Egm ond and H. F. Degens in the
Reguliersbreestraat, Am sterdam .
28 December: Schnellseher of Ottom ar Anschütz is exhibited by Karl Eisenlohr at the Exposicio
Im perial in the Avenida Palace Hotel in Lisbon.
Undated: Edison Kinetoscopes shipped to 54 additional Am erican and Canadian cities. See Hendricks
(Note 45) p. 64.
31
1895:
1January: the Pantomimes lumineuses of Em il Reynaud reopens after renovation of the apparatus and
the painting of new picture bands at the Théâtre Optique of the Musée Grevin, Paris. The exhibition
continued until 1901.
20 January: Edison Kinetoscope opens in Mexico City, Mexico with a reception for President General
Dias and his wife.
4 February: Edison Kinetoscope opens at the Palace of Industry, Valhalla W ay, Stockholm .
22 February – 30 March: public exhibition of the Projecting Electrotachyscope of Ottom ar Anschütz in
afternoon and evening screenings for an adm ission of 1.- and 1.50 Marks in the auditorium of the old
Reichstag Building, Leipziger Strasse, Berlin.
6 March: Edison Kinetoscope opened by George Georgiades at the Tabacaria Neves, Lisbon,
Portugal.
13 March: Edison Kinetoscope opens at the rue Halodem ande, Lausanne, Switzerland.
16 March - 8 June: Edison Kinetoscope parlour with five m achines opened by the Macm ahon brothers
at the Haunted Swing Prem ises, Bourke Street East, Melbourne, Australia.
20 March: Edison Kinetoscope opens at the Centralhof concert hall, Münster.
22 March: Lum ière Ciném atographe dem onstrated for the Société d’Encouragem ent pour l’Industrie
Nationale, 44, rue de Rennes, Paris. One film was shown, La sortie des ouvriers de l’usine Lumiere.
23 March - c. 5 April: Edison Kinetoscope exhibited in Utrecht, The Netherlands.
17 April: Lum ière Ciném atographe dem onstrated at the Sorbonne, Paris.
21 April: the Latham Eidoloscope (Panopticon) is dem onstrated for the press at 35 Frankfort Street,
New York.
21 April: Edison Kinetoscope opens at via Rom a 2, Turin.
5 May: Edison Kinetoscope opens in a bar at the Place de Cataluna, Catalogne, Spain.
11 May - 13 October: thirty Schnellsehers of Ottom ar Anschütz exhibited at the Italian Exhibition,
Ham burg. There were 2348 viewings of the Schnellsehers in their first five days of exhibition, and
56,645 viewings during the exhibition.
16 May: Edison Kinetoscope parlour with 5 m achines opens in a house at Gänsem arkt 2, Ham burg.
20 May: the Latham Eidoloscope projects their boxing film Young Griffo - Battling Barnett in a
converted shopfront at 156 Broadway, New York City.
29 May: the Projecting Electrotachyscope of Ottom ar Anschütz opens at Carl Henckel’s Concert Hall,
Ham burg.
30 May: Edison Kinetoscope opens at the Salon Edisson [sic.], Carrera de San Jeronim o, Madrid.
1 June: Edison Kinetoscope parlour opens at via Vittorio Em anuele 151, Palerm o.
10 June: Lum ière Ciném atographe is dem onstrated for those attending the Congres des Sociétés
Françaises de Photographie at chez Berrier & Millet, Place Bellecour, Lyon.
11 - 17 June: Edison Kinetoscope exhibited by the Macm ahon brothers at the Albion Cham bers, View
Street, Bendigo, Australia. 5 m achines.
12 June: Lum ière Ciném atographe projects film s taken at the Congres des Sociétés Françaises de
Photographie for the closing banquet of the m eeting at chez Berrier & Milllet, Place Bellecdour, Lyon.
July - August: twelve Schnellsehers of Ottom ar Anschütz are exhibited at the Lubeck Exhibition,
Lubeck. There were 10,152 viewings of the apparatus during the exhibition.
11 July: Lum ière Ciném atographe dem onstrated for the Revue général des sciences pures et
appliquées, Paris.
26 August - 21 September: Latham Eidoloscope opens for one week at the Olym pic Theatre, then
transfers to Kohl & Middleton’s Clark Street Dim e Museum for three weeks in Chicago.
24 August: Phonoscope of Georges Dem eny is exhibited in Ludwig Stollwerck’s new Autom at Hall in
Cologne. The exhibition m ay have lasted as long as a week.
21 September: Lum ière Cinem atographe dem onstrated for fam ily and friends by Louis Lum ière at La
Ciotat.
29 September – c. 15 October: Phantoscope of C. Francis Jenkins and Thom as Arm at exhibited using
Kinetoscope film s at the Cotton States Exhibition, Atlanta, Georgia.
1 November - 30 November: Bioskop of Max and Em il Skladanowsky exhibited at the Sm all Stage
(Kleine Bühne) of the W intergarten Theatre, Martin Luther Strasse, Berlin.
10 November: Lum ière Ciném atographe dem onstrated for the Association Belge de Photographie,
Brussels.
12 November: Lum ière Ciném atographe dem onstrated for m em bers of the Cercle Artistique et
Litteraire, Brussels.
32
13 November: Lum ière Ciném atographe dem onstrated at the Musée de Physique of the University of
Löwen, Löwen, Belgium .
18 December - 23 December: Bioskop of Max and Em il Skladanowsky exhibited at the Concerthaus
Ludwig, Ham burg.
23 December - c. 31 December: Elektroskop of Birt Acres exhibited at the autom at-parlour of the
Deutsche Autom aten-Gesellschaft, Königin-Augusta-Halle 17-21, Cologne. Two film s by Birt Acres
were shown, the 1895 Derby and a Three-Part Serpentine Dance.
28 December: Lum ière Cinem atographe exhibited to the public at the Salon Indien, in the cellar of the
Grand Café, 14 Boulevard des Capucines, Paris.
Undated: Edison Kinetoscopes shipped to 64 additional Am erican and Canadian cities; see Hendricks
(Note 45), pp. 68-9.
33
NOTES
1. Henry Hopwood, author of Living Pictures. Their History, Photo-Production and Practical W orking
(London, 1899: The Optician & Photographic Trades Review) worked in the British patent office. His
book had a second edition, revised and updated by R. B. Foster in 1915 and a reprint edition by the
Arno Press in 1977. Dr. Karl Forch, who worked in the Germ an patent office, was the author of Der
Kinematograph und das sich bewegende Bild. Geschichte und technische Entwicklung der
Kinematographie bis zur Gegenwart. (W ien und Leipzig, 1913: A. Hartleben’s Verlag). Other early
authors also frequently took an encyclopedic, nuts-and-bolts approach to their subject, for exam ple
Cecil M. Hepworth, Animated Photography. The ABC of the Cinematograph. (London, 1897: Hazell,
W atson & Viney, Ltd.)[2nd edition, 1900; reprint edition, Arno Press, 1976].
2. In doing so, one of the potentially m ost valuable links between pre- and post-cinem atographic
practices was irretrievably lost, since these early authors (especially Hepworth) would have had direct
contem porary experience of the content and techniques of m agic lantern shows and early m oving
picture presentations, which, if included in the invention narrative would have set the writing of film
history off on an entirely different course a hundred years ago.
3. A few exam ples, in a non-exhaustive survey of the literature, would include: the populist volum e on
Le Cinéma in the Encyclopédie par l’image of Librarie Hachette (Corbeil, 1925: Hachette), which
valorises Lum ière and turns the Mutoscope of AM&B into a Gaum ont apparatus; Ernest Coustet, Le
Cinéma (Corbeil, 1921: Librarie Hachette), which valorises Marey and Dem enÿ on the way to Lum ière,
m issing Stam pfer while explaining Plateau and m issing Anschütz but m entioning Muybridge; Joseph
Gregor, Das Zeitalter des Films (W ien-Leipzig, 1932: Reinhold-Verlag), which opens with the sentence
“Film is as old as m ankind” in deploying an analysis of rhythm and m ovem ent in prehistoric cave
paintings, Greek sculpture, Baroque painting, Mozart sym phonies, etc., as precursors of cinem a; Terry
Ram saye, A Million and One Nights (New York, 1926 Sim on & Schuster), whose m anuscript was
generously checked for “errors” by none other than Thom as Alva Edison him self; F. A. Talbot, Moving
Pictures. How They are Made and W orked (London, 1912: W illiam Heinem ann [second edition,
1923]), who talked extensively to Robert Paul but not to Birt Acres.
4. On Döbler, see both W erner H. A. Debler, Leopold Ludwig Döbler, 1801 - 1864. W iener
Hoftaschenspieler und Zauberprofessor aus einem alten Schwäbisch Gmünder Geschlecht
(Schwäbisch Gm ünd, 2001: Einhorn-Verlag Eduard Dietenberger Gm bH) and Robert Kaldy-Karo,
Ludwig Döbler, genius des biedermeier (Horitschon, 2001: Verlag novum [im Auftrag des Museum s
für Unterhaltungskunst und des Institutes Kadotheum , Vienna]).
5. In particular am ongst several new studies of varying quality on aspects of Muybridge’s work, see
Stephen Herbert, ed., Eadweard Muybridge. The Kingston Museum Bequest (Hastings, 2004: The
Projection Box).
6. The key works here are Laurent Mannoni, with Marc de Ferrière le Vayer and Paul Dem eny,
Georges Demenÿ. Pionnier du cinéma (Douai, 1997: Ciném athèque française, Musée du ciném a /
Éditions Pagine / Université Lille 3), and Laurent Mannoni, “Glissem ents progressifs vers le plaisir.
Rem arques sur l’oeuvre chronohotographique de Marey et Dem enÿ”, in 1895, No. 18 (Été 1995), pp.
11 - 52.
7. In particular the introductory essay in Charles Musser, Edison Motion Pictures, 1890 - 1900. An
Annotated Filmography. (W ashington, D. C. / Pordenone, 1997: Sm ithsonian Institution Press / Le
Giornate del Cinem a Muto).
8. This is m y own work, and should not be characterized as “very good.” Be that as it m ay, it contains
m uch new inform ation on pre-1896 exhibition: Deac Rossell, Faszination der Bewegung. Ottomar
Anschütz zwischen Photographie und Kino (Frankfurt am Main / Basel, 2001: Stroem feld / Roter
Stern).
34
9. John M. Staudem eier, S. J., Technology’s Storytellers. Reweaving the Human Fabric. (Cam bridge,
MA / London, 1985: The Society for the History of Technology / The MIT Press), p. 168. This useful
and influential book is a thoughtful analysis of the articles published over twenty years by the Society
for the History of Technology in its journal Technology and Culture.
10. ibid., p. 168.
11. In fact, the very idea that the cinem a was an “em erging technology” in 1895-96 is already
som ething of a break with its tradition of being “discovered” or “invented” by Thom as Edison, Max
Skladanowsky, the Lum ière brothers, or (fill in here your favourite figure: W ordsworth Donisthorpe?
Eadweard Muybridge? Victor von Reitzner?). A corollary to André Gaudreault’s objection to lum ping a
variety of optical and showm anly devices into a bin called “pre-cinem a” is of course the idea that the
cinem a evolved over a long period of tim e through the com plex interaction, in fits and starts, of
num erous separate strands of work, each with its own public, technical, optical and social interactions.
12. The entire issue of the “projection” of a m oving im age across space and, often, across the
audience, versus the “illum ination” of an adjacent surface which is then seen, often from outside the
apparatus, like a peep-show through a lens or watched in the open, is one of several spurious
distinctions which have crept unexam ined into the historical lexicon. Contem porary m oving im age
m edia, whether theatrical film , television, com puter-based stream ing video, Im ax projection, or other
platform s, provides innum erable exam ples of both “projected” technologies and “illum inated”
technologies which share the sam e content with the sam e com m unicative purposes. W ith a m om ent’s
reflection, these current m edia form s should wholly dispense with the im probable distinctions brought
to the idea of “projection” and “illum ination” at the origins of m oving pictures by early 20 th century
historians. W hen Bertrand Tavernier, who should know better, argued vociferously at a press
conference for the com ing Centenery of cinem a at the 1991 Cannes Film Festival that Edison was the
precursor of television, whilst only Lum ière was the inventor of the cinem a, he was not at all engaged
in historical analysis, but rather in the m ost disruptive kind of international cultural politics. In fact, this
was precisely the kind of pointless scholastic argum entation that has polluted and distorted the field of
early cinem a history for generations. Michael Frizot’s recent attem pt to valorize Marey as the essential
inventor of cinem a by logically deducing the essence of cinem a from a sm all set of propositions
related to his scientific work is another exam ple of this kind of purposeless distortion of the historical
record. See: Michel Frizot, “Les opérateurs physiques de Marey et la réversibilité ciném atographique”,
in François Albera, Marta Braun, and André Gaudreault, eds, Arrêt sur image, fragmentation du temps
/ Stop Motion, Fragmentation of Time (Lausanne, 2002: Editions Payot), pp. 91 - 102.
13. The sketches are reproduced in Laurent Mannoni, et. al., Georges Demenÿ [Note 6], p. 80. The
m eeting is discussed on pp. 78-9.
14. One of the oddities of the received narrative of cinem a invention is its lack of any understanding of
the concepts involved in technology transfer, and its rather astounding lack of use of the m any
contacts, both direct and indirect, between inventors c. 1885 - 1896. This is due in part to the atom ised
(nationalised) way in which traditional histories have been written. Even m y own international
chronology of activities published in Film History (V. 7, No. 2 [Sum m er 1995]) fails in this regard. It
turns out, on exam ination, that not only m ajor experim enters in large cities but even the m ost
seem ingly isolated figures were in touch with som eone else in som e way, or had direct access to work
undertaken elsewhere. I will look at this topic thoroughly in a future essay.
15. For a brief introduction to early m oving slides for the m agic lantern, see Deac Rossell, “The Magic
Lantern and Moving Im ages before 1800", in: Barockberichte 40-41 (2005), pp. 686 - 693. For a
categorization of different types of m echanical lantern slide, see John Barnes, “Classification of m agic
lantern slides for cataloguing and docum entation”, in: Magic Images. The Art of Hand-Painted and
Photographic Lantern Slides (London, 1990: The Magic Lantern Society of Great Britain), pp. 75-84.
16. A good introduction to the phantasm agoria show is found in Laurent Mannoni, Le grand art de la
lumière et de l’ombre. Archéologie du cinéma (Paris, 1994: Editions Nathan), pp. 135-168 (English
edition: The Great Art of Light and Shadow [Exeter, 2000: University of Exeter Press], pp. 136-175).
See also Mervyn Heard, “Paul de Philipsthal & the Phantasm agoria in England, Scotland, and Ireland”;
35
Part One: Boo!, New Magic Lantern Journal Vol. 8 No. 1 (October 1996), pp 2-7; Part Two: Shoo!,
NMLJ, Vol. 8 No. 2, pp. 11-16; Part Three: Phew!, NMLJ Vol. 8 No. 4, p. 6-13. Also, Mervyn Heard,
Phantasmagoria: the Secret Life of the Magic Lantern (Hastings, 2006: The Projection Box).
17. [Stephen Herbert], entry “Choreutoscope”, in David Robinson, Stephen Herbert and Richard
Crangle, eds., Encyclopaedia of the Magic Lantern (London, 2001: The Magic Lantern Society), p. 66.
For brief but accurate background on the elusive Beale which supplem ents the above entry, see
Gerard L’E. Turner, “Presidential Address. Scientific Toys”, British Journal for the History of Science,
20 (1987), p. 392.
18. There is som e evidence that both of the two figures them selves would disagree with this
statem ent. Anschütz certainly thought that he was personally in com petition with Muybridge, who
rem ained a m uch m ore celebrated public figure, and he continually acted at the photographic societies
as if he were in direct aesthetic and personal com petition with Muybridge, particularly over his
reputation as an artistic photographer.
19. A valuable recent article on the printed reproduction of photographs is Helena E. W right,
“Photography in the printing press: the photom echanical revolution”, in: Bernard Finn, ed., Presenting
Pictures (London, 2004: National Museum of Science and Industry). For a thorough survey, see Luis
Nadeau, Encyclopedia of Printing, Photographic, and Photomechanical Processes. A Comprehensive
Reference to Reproduction Technologies. Vol. I: A - L, Vol. 2: M-Z. (New Brunswick, Canada, 1989:
Atelier Louis Nadeau [P.O. Box 1570, Station “A”, Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada, E3B 5G2]).
20. Interestingly, both also shared the sam e flaw of possessiveness about their work which ultim ately
led each of them , separately, to fail in establishing their otherwise viable m oving picture system s.
Anschütz was possessive about his im ages, as well as his public reputation as an established
photographer, and failed to provide the kind of popular, action-filled im ages that would have helped
establish his Schnellseher. Edison was not at all possessive about the photographic content of his
Kinetoscope, but he was very possessive about its m anufacture and about the necessity of it
rem aining a single-viewer peepshow apparatus, convinced that this was his only route to a profitable
system with m ultiple sales of apparatus. He therefore failed to grasp the idea of projection and m assaudience perform ance, and his Kinetoscope system failed.
21. There are two recent studies of Döbler, see Note 4. They take slightly divergent views towards
Döbler’s Phantaskop and its exhibition, so both m ust be exam ined carefully. Neither book fully
researches the Döbler exhibitions, which range across central Europe to St. Petersburg, and there is
still significant work to be done on his m oving picture projections.
22. Poggendorff, Annalen der Physik und Chemie, Bd. 40 (1837), p. 547.
23. Ludwig Döbler, patent application of 5 January 1847, Beschreibung einer neuen Laterna magica,
welche bewegliche Figuren an der W and hervorbringt, genannt. Archiv der Technischen Universität
W ien. Döbler’s patent was granted on 23 January 1847 and ran for two years. Privilegien-Register No.
4829 v. 23. Jänner 1847.
24. Theaterzettel [Josefstadt Theater, W ien], 1 Februar 1847, cit. nach W erner H. A. Debler (Note 4),
p. 301.
25. op. cit., pp. 309-12. See also: Robert Kaldy-Karo, Ludwig Döbler, genius des biedermeier
(Horitschon, 2001: Novum Verlag), pp. 192-205.
26. Nonetheless, it is likely that in principle Döbler was touring with this apparatus in public use
throughout the period January 1847 – late Spring 1848. Kaldy-Karo is too conservative in judging
m any of these shows to have been given without the Phantaskop. The case of Döbler’s shows in
Prague in February and March, 1848, is typical. A surviving program m e for a special benefit
perform ance at the Bohem ian Court Theatre for the retiring theatre director Edouard Tauwitz clearly
indicates the Phantaskop and its full program m e in use. I have therefore included this show in the
chronology at the end of this article, as I have also included another benefit for the choristers of the
36
sam e theatre given one day earlier. It would seem to m e to take som e very close reasoning to explain
just why the Phantaskop would not have been used in the exhibitions Döbler gave in Prague that
began on 4 February and ended with these March benefit perform ances, shows which were financially
successful for both the theatre and Döbler. I have also included the Munich perform ance in the
chronology since the reviewer for the sold-out show (Kaldy-Karo, op. cit., p. 199), rem arked that a
closer description of Döbler’s optical effects “would be left for one of our physicists”. This im plies to m e
the use of the Phantaskop since dissolving view technology would not need scientific explanation and
was well understood by this date. More research is necessary here to clarify the situation.
27. The best m aterial on the stroboscopic projectors of Uchatius is to be found in the two recent works
on Döbler, as both are at pains to distinguish Döbler’s invention and work from the m isreported work
of Uchatius. See Note 4. For a wider view of his career, but not a m odern one, the standard
biographical article is Erich Kurzet-Runtscheiner, “Franz Freiherr von Uchatius”, in Blätter für
Geschichte der Technik 4 (1938), pp. 40-65.
28. Franz Uchatius, “Apparat zur Darstellung beweglicher Bilder an der W and”, in: Sitzungsberichte
der kaiserlichen Akademie der W issenschaften, W ien, Naturwissenschaftliche Klasse, 1853, Bd. 10,
pp. 483-4.
29. Franz Uchatius, op. cit., (Note 28), p. 485.
30. Am ong m any m istaken accounts of the relationship between Döbler and Uchatius can be counted
F. Paul Liesegang in his Dates and Sources (London, 1986: Magic Lantern Society [orig: Zahlen und
Quellen, 1926), p. 36, and m yself in the entry on Uchatius in the Encyclopedia of the Magic Lantern
(London, 2001: Magic Lantern Society), p. 313.
31. Heyl is definitely a subject for further research. The principal article rem ains Thom as Coulson,
“Philadelphia and the Developm ent of the Motion Picture”, in: Journal of the Franklin Institute 262 (July
1956), pp. 1-16. Charles Musser is also good on Heyl; see The Emergence of Cinema (Note 44), pp.
45-48. This is one of the few places where Laurent Mannoni is in error in The Great Art of Light And
Shadow (Note 16), p. 261-262; he describes six poses printed three tim es each for a total of 18
im ages on each disk. But the disk illustrated in Musser (p. 46) clearly has 16 im ages.
32. Henry R. Heyl, US Patent 195,603 issued Septem ber 25, 1877, Improvement in devices for
inserting metallic staples. Heyl assigned his patent to George W . Heyl, and the patent was defended in
the Federal courts a decade later against an infringer, George P. Crawford. See: Crawford v.
Heysinger, 123 U. S. 589 (1887). Exam ples of the stapler survive in both public and private
collections. The wire binding procedure was developed with August Brehm er, who returned to
Germ any and founded the business that today produces Heidelberg presses, whose m anaging
director recently said of the work of Heyl and Brehm er: “The invention of the wire binding m achine was
to the book binding business what the flatbed cylinder press and the typesetting m achine were to book
printing.”
33. The standard biographical works on Muybridge are Robert Bartlett Haas, Muybridge, Man in
Motion (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1976: University of California Press) and Gordon Hendricks,
Eadweard Muybridge. The Father of the Motion Picture (New York, 1975: Grossm an Publishers), who
between them cover m any of the Am erican lectures. For Europe, the only source is Stephen Herbert’s
essay “Projecting the Living Im age” in his catalogue of the Muybridge m aterials at the Kingston
Museum , see Note 5. Herbert is also far better on the Zoopraxiscope than any previous author, and
this book reproduces a portion of every surviving Zoopraxiscope disk. W orking m ostly with these
sources, and also som e others, is a rem inder that a m odern biography/study of Muybridge is badly
needed.
34. The term Zoogyroscope was used only between Autum n 1879 and Sum m er 1880. This was only a
change of nam e and not a change of design or construction in the apparatus.
35. Stephen Herbert, Eadweard Muybridge. The Kingston Museum Bequest (Note 5), p. 110-111.
37
36. Here, the essential reference to the work of Anschütz is m y own, see Note 8. Previously
unpublished m aterial from m y research notes has also been used for this article and the chronology.
37. Anschütz was always ready to “prove” that his own im ages were of higher quality (i.e., showed
m ore detail with better gradations of exposure) than those of anyone else, which is why the
photographic associations alm ost always saw series of horses or athletes so that they could be
com pared with — and pronounced superior to — the im ages produced by Muybridge, Marey, or
others. It is logical that Anschütz would be one of the first people to see, either in Germ any or England,
a Kinetoscope, in which the Edison Barber Shop Scene was regularly one of the earliest subjects
shown. But the trouble with dating the Anschütz series later than the Edison production, which is
consistent with Anschütz’s personality and form , is that this Edison subject was first photographed in
late 1893; Anschütz m ade no verifiable series photographs after 1890-91, and later claim ed that his
cam era was dam aged in its m ove from Lissa to Berlin. Given the striking sim ilarity of his series to the
very well known Edison film (re-photographed in January 1895), I am loathe to date this Anschütz
series before the Edison film . At the sam e tim e, it is without doubt that the Anschütz Skatspieler (Card
Players) predates both the early Lum ière and Méliès film s, and it would put a rather different
com plexion on this early Edison title if indeed the Anschütz disk was m ade first. W e do not yet know
the subjects of the disks which were shipped to the US with the Schnellseher in 1892.
38. Georges Dem enÿ, French patent 219,830, Appareil dit Phonoscope reprodusant l’illusion des
mouvements de la parole et de la physionomie par vision directe ou par projection au moyen d’une
Lumière. Application 3 March 1892.
39. The Phonoscope was also displayed at the International Exposition of Photographhy at the Palais
des Beaux-Arts in Paris from 20 April 1892, in an exhibit on the work of the Station Physiologique
which included a Marey single-plate chronophotographic cam era, a Marey film cam era, and exam ples
of the Station’s photographic work. It is indeterm inate whether the Phonoscope was actually operated,
or was just installed as an exhibit. In either case, Dem enÿ reported that this display resulted in “an
avalanche of propositions” from various “Barnum s” wanting to exploit his invention. See Laurent
Mannoni, ”Glissem ents progressifs vers le plaisir. Rem arques sur l’oeuvre chronophotographique de
Marey et Dem enÿ” (Note 6), p. 22.
40. The Anschütz “Sprechende Porträts” som ehow disappeared from the secondary literature in the
20 th century. Apart from two datable presentations in January 1890, they were evidently dem onstrated
elsewhere because press reports appeared in the sam e period in the Berlin newspapers. The
technical differences between the two system s – interm ittent illum ination with a Geissler tube for
Anschütz and interm ittence through a shutter for Dem enÿ, a sim pler option – are not decisive in
separating a line of descent between these two devices. W ith Dem enÿ’s known interest in
com m ercialising chronophotographic m ovem ent, it seem s m ost likely that he would have been well
aware of the work of Anschütz and his m any exhibitions. For m ore inform ation on the Anschütz
“Sprechende Porträts”, see Deac Rossell, Ottomar Anschütz (Note 8), pp. 56-58.
41. The m ost com prehensive (and very beautifully designed) work on Reynaud is Dom inique Auzel,
Emile Reynaud et l’image s’anima (Paris, 1992: Du May [& Centre National des Lettres]).
42. A successful early optical-interm ittent projector was designed and sold by John Nevil Maskelyne
from 1896; it was still in use for specialist scientific purposes in 1905. Other apparatus was suggested
by Paul Mortier (1897) am ongst m any others. The apparatus of Em il Mechau (1912) was produced in
over 500 exam ples through 1934. The idea of optical-interm ittent projection with a continuously
m oving film band is currently used in the Im ax system , introduced in 1967, where once again the lack
of strain and wear on the film band was the principal m otivation for its revival.
43. Perhaps the m ost surprising elem ent of this influence of existing m agic lantern technology (and,
ultim ately, practise) on cinem atographic technology (and practise) is the alm ost com plete absence of
any discussion about the relationship between the magic lantern and early cinem a in the historical
literature ---- at least until very recently. Is this because m uch of the first work in the revitalised field of
“early cinem a” looked to other, m ore easily digested, narrative predecessors? John L. Fell’s sem inal
publication Film and the Narrative Tradition (University of Oklahom a Press, 1974) finds siginficant
38
im ports into early cinem a from the theatre, Victorian m elodram a, com ic strips, photographic records,
and sheet m usic, but does not discuss m agic lantern culture. In his equally significant edited work,
Film Before Griffith (University of California Press, 1983), am ongst 29 articles from 28 authors, only
two m ake extended forays into pre-1896 practices, as the writers im ply with unanim ity that there was
no precedent influence worth discussing before the invention of the cinem a itself. Indeed, as recently
as 1996 Jens Ruchatz published an entire m onograph arguing precisely this point; see Zur Kritik der
Archäologie des Kinos (Universität Siegen, MuK, Heft 101/102).
44. For the work of Edison and his colleagues on the Kinetoscope, Charles Musser is excellent in both
The Emergence of Cinema. The American Screen to 1907 (New York, 1990: Charles Scribner’s Sons
[= History of the Am erican Cinem a, Vol. 1]) and Edison Motion Pictures, 1890 - 1900 (W ashington,
D.C./Pordenone, 1997: Sm ithsonian Institution Press/Le Giornate del Cinem a Muto). A good m odern
general biography of Edison is Paul Israel, Edison: A Life of Invention (Sydney, London, etc., 1998:
John W ylie & Sons, Inc.).
45. See the work of Charles Musser, Note 44. Also see Gordon Hendricks, The Kinetoscope (New
York, 1966: The Beginnings of the Am erican Film ). On the developm ent of the celluloid im age carrier,
see Paul Spehr, “Unaltered to Date: Developing 35m m Film ”, In: John Fullerton & Astrid Soderbergh
W idding, eds., Moving Images: From Edison to the W ebcam (Sydney, 2000: John Libby Co.).
46. Charles Musser, “Kinetoscope”, in: Richard Abel, ed., Encyclopedia of Early Cinema (London and
New York, 2005: Routledge), p. 358. The com m ercial risk of exhibiting the Kinetoscope is supported
by the experience of Ludwig Stollwerck, who controlled the apparatus in Germ any; his enterprises
could m ake no profit from the m achine, largely as its initial price was too high. See Martin
Loiperdinger, Film & Schokolade. Stollwercks Geschäfte mit lebenden Bildern (Frankfurt a. M./Basel,
1999: Stroem feld/Roter Stern [=KINtop Schriften 4]).
47. This is the case even when the problem s with the workm an contracted to m ake the m achines, and
an illness of W . K. L. Dickson, is taken into account. For details, see Hendricks, The Kinetoscope
(Note 45) pp. 28-36.
48. Cecil W ray, Improvements in or relating to the Kinetoscope, British Patent 182 of 3 January 1895.
W ray was an electrical engineer and cinem a pioneer who later developed the widely-used
Kineoptoscope accessory which could be m ounted in the norm al slide stage of a m agic lantern and
was m arketed by Riley Brothers.
49. Henri Joly, Photozootrope à un ou plusieurs oculaires, French patent 251,549 of 8 Novem ber
1895. Joly was a cinem a pioneer responsible for several early cam eras and projectors, including the
Ciném atographe Joly-Norm andin which was in use at the Bazar de la Charité during the disastrous fire
of 4 May 1897.
50. Birt Acres has been poorly served by film historians. The extensive m aterial on his early work with
Robert W . Paul in the writings of John Barnes has several errors and m ust be read with great care,
although it is essential. See John Barnes, The Beginnings of the Cinema in England, 1894 - 1901 (5
volum es; Exeter, 1998: Exeter University Press). The Stollwerck m aterial is excellently and uniquely
exam ined in Martin Loiperdinger, Film & Schokolade. Stollwercks Geschäfte mit lebenden Bildern
(Frankfurt a. M./Basel, 1999: Stroem feld/Roter Stern [=KINtop Schriften 4]); see esp. pp. 71 - 108.
51. The work of the Latham s is well-described in Charles Musser, The Emergence of Cinema (Note
44) and Gordon Hendricks, The Kinetoscope (Note 45).
52. At first called the Panoptikon.
53. New York W orld, 28 May 1895, p. 30, cit. nach: Musser, Emergence of Cinema (Note 44), p. 99.
54. The m ost detailed, if verbose, treatm ent of the Skladanowsky work is Joachim Castan, Max
Skladanowsky oder der Beginn einer deutschen Filmgeschichte (Stuttgart, 1995: Füsslin Verlag).
Castan is particularly good on the later politics of the Skladanowsky legacy in Europe in the 1930s and
39
1950s. An accurate concise account is in Deac Rossell, Living Pictures. The Origins of the Movies
(Albany, 1998: State University of New York Press).
55. The Lum ière work has not been well-treated by historians, and despite a vast literature hardly any
book can be recom m ended without reservation. A good early account is Georges Sadoul, Histoire
général du cinéma. 1: l’Invention du cinéma 1832 - 1897 (Paris, 1946: Éditions Denoël). A m odern
com pilation is Bernard Chardère, Le roman des Lumière (Paris, 1995: Éditions Gallim ard). An
excellent study of the film s is Michellle Aubert and Jean-Claude Seguin, La Production
cinématographique des freres Lumière (Paris, 1996: Bibliothéque du film [BIFI]/Éditions Mem oires de
ciném a). A proper theoretical fram ework for the ideas expressed here is found in Deac Rossell, “Die
soziale Konstruktion früher technischer System e der Film projektion”, in: KINtop 8 (1999), pp. 53 - 82.
56. Louis and Auguste Lum ière, Appareil servant à l’obtention et à la vision des épreuves
chronophotographiques, French patent 245,032 of 13 February 1895.
57. And througout the m odification process Louis Lum ière at the factory in Lyon was continually
rem inding Carpentier in Paris of the urgency of completing the order. Before all 25 m achines had been
delivered, Lum ière ordered 200 m ore Ciném atographes from Carpentier. The entire process is welldocum ented in Jacques Rittaud-Hutinet, ed., Letters. August and Louis Lumière (London / Boston,
1995: faber and faber).
58. Further, the way in which the Ciném atographe travelled around the world taking film s and
exhibiting them under the hand of assorted em ployees from the Lum ière factory and by fam ily friends
from Lyon in 1896 - 1899 is thoroughgoing evidence of not just its ease of use but also of its purpose
as a m oving picture system to be used by anyone.
59. Further devices that form the context surrounding the Lum ière Ciném atographe include the
Kinesigraph of W ordsworth Donisthorpe, a large floor-standing m achine operated by long levers
derived from textile m achinery; a cam era with sixeen lenses and various separate projectors of Louis
Aim é Augustin le Prince; the m assive first m odel chronophotographic cam era and separate projector
of Ernst Kohlrausch; several m odels of sem i-portable boxlike Marey chronophotographic apparatus; a
bulky com bined cam era and projector by Victor von Reitzner; the Dem enÿ Phonoscope, which stood
on a wooden stand 172cm high and was itself 70cm wide and 70 cm deep.
60. I have written elsewhere in m ore detail from this perspective on the business purposes of the
Lum ières and their Ciném atographe. See the works in Notes 54 and 55.