Eadweard Muybridge
1830, Kingston-on-Thames–1904, Kingston-on-Thames
This photographic plate depicting an elephant walking (or running or both—the subject is still being debated) is one of hundreds of plates of domestic and wild animals whose movement photographer Eadweard Muybridge captured on film for the first time in history. Starting as a landscape photographer, he later devoted his life to motion studies, extending them to men, women, and children from all classes of society, including people with physical and cognitive disabilities. Muybridge’s technique of shooting and subsequently projecting the sequence of images through a zoopraxiscope—his own invention, which was a predecessor of the movie projector—earned him an important place in history. However, it is not only for his contribution to the relatively short history of the role of technology in the study of nature that his work is included in this exhibition. The philosophical implications of his life’s work are important for the concept of evolution, demonstrating time and matter in motion.