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Studies in Motion: The Hauntings of Eadweard Muybridge
January 17 – 28 (Monday - Saturday) at 7:30 pm
Sunday, January 29 at 4:00 pm
Frederic Wood Theatre
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, Canada

  ON THE SUBJECT:
   
 
the following articles are extracted from the Companion Guide to Studies in Motion: the Hauntings of Eadweard Muybridge
frames - muybridge

by Kevin Kerr
Playwright, Co-artistic Director – Electric Company Theatre

Many years ago when working on the first Electric Company play, I stumbled upon a video where an animator had assembled a large number of Eadweard Muybridge’s motion study photographs into short looping animations. These were not unlike what Muybridge himself would have shown with his clumsily named “zoöpraxiscope”: a souped up magic lantern that would project photographs in rapid succession and create the illusion of movement.

And then in the middle of it all appears the man himself: Muybridge, naked and walking

Muybridge’s images on the video were haunting. As they played out in complete silence I was privy to living moments of time that predated the advent of cinema. His cameras examined the movement of horses, livestock, dogs and cats, birds, wild animals, and most compellingly, humans. Women and men, usually nude, were presented performing “everyday” actions alongside movements that were ritualistic, comic, sensual, absurd, and even diseased and pathological. The variations seemed endless. There was a tension in the collected images: scientific, classical, elegant, erotic, startling, disturbing, and grotesque. And all were undeniably compelling especially as they were in fact short film clips that were one hundred and twenty years old. And then in the middle of it all appears the man himself: Muybridge, naked and walking. He’s in stark contrast to the predominantely young and beautiful bodies surrounding him: a shock of white bushy hair, enormous beard, muscular but still with the body of a man nearing sixty. In the video he’s walking up an inclined plane and down again. And up... and down. Over and over like Sisyphus, the character from Greek mythology doomed for all eternity to roll a stone to the top of a hill only to have it roll down the other side where he would follow it to begin the task all over again. Who was this guy?

But as they accumulated in front of me like the individual scenes of a longer movie I began to ask questions. I started to look for meaning, for story. I asked again, “Who was this guy?”

These little one second movies were deliberately designed to be without narrative. The backdrop was a mathematical grid, an abstract non-space with no defining feature to give a sense of “setting”. The actors were anonymous models, identified in the records only by a number so that there was nothing to indicate “character”. In fact most of the time the models appear nude so that there isn’t even “costume” to help us understand their social status or the period in which they live. The actions are limited to a single gesture or movement phrase – so short and isolated that they couldn’t be imbued with a specific “intention” or “goal” – there was no context to give the actions meaning - no place, no time, no costume, no character, no intention or goals. As these elements of narrative were missing, it must be assumed that narrative was not intended. But as they accumulated in front of me like the individual scenes of a longer movie I began to ask questions. I started to look for meaning, for story. I asked again, “Who was this guy?”

On the surface, the photos indicate a person committed to the emerging culture of modern science: understanding through controlled observation and rational analysis of our world, using the potential of technology to surpass the limits of our own senses to enhance our powers of perception. But stacked together they seemed to say something else.

This search for meaning not through the content, but through the context, defines our modern viewing culture. I began to think about our contemporary obsession with the image, our mediated culture where our information comes to us in isolated fragments that are arbitrarily juxtaposed with more isolated fragments. What was the missing narrative?

 

 

kevin kerr, photo by alex waterhouse hayward

 

 

Through photographs he wants to reveal a world hidden from the naked eye and, paradoxically, he hopes to erase the past images that have been burned into his memory

Eadweard Muybridge’s life was filled with the events of Victorian melodrama: adultery, jealousy, betrayal, murder, and an abandoned child. These events predate his obsession with stopping time and freezing motion and become the ghosts that haunt him in the fictional world of the play. He attempts to absolve himself from the dark and tragic consequences of his past actions by inventing a new world where action is neutralized by scientific analysis. He uses instantaneous photography to dissect time into its smallest possible fragments to reconstruct his life, his identity, and his legacy. Through photographs he wants to reveal a world hidden from the naked eye and, paradoxically, he hopes to erase the past images that have been burned into his memory.

It’s in our nature to search for meaning, and narrative is the framework in which we attempt to understand experience. Muybridge’s struggle to overcome the demons of his private history, led him to a place of obsession which seemed to exist outside narrative altogether. However, this obsession was the beginning of our modern mode of understanding – a narrative where the stories of science and art begin to diverge; where information is fragmented, mediated, and where observations through the filter of technology are trusted more than those that come directly through our physical senses. But ultimately the story will remain the same. Muybridge’s quest for understanding his physical world was ultimately a quest to understand his place in it; to understand the meaning of the actions in his life he turned his camera on the human animal in motion.

 
to download the complete companion guide to Studies in Motion, please click here
 

 

 
 
Studies in Motion: The Hauntings of Eadweard Muybridge is a co-production
with Theatre at UBC, Electric Company Theatre and the PuSh International Performing Arts Festival.
         
PuSh International Performing Arts Festival
 
Electric Company - Very Live Theatre
 
Theatre at UBC
         
This research was supported by a Grant from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

 

website design by Linda Fenton Malloy

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