
The image just above is an aniÂmatÂed GIF, a forÂmat by now oldÂer than most peoÂple on the interÂnet. Those of us who were surfÂing the World Wide Web in its earÂliÂest years will rememÂber all those litÂtle digÂging, jackÂhamÂmerÂing roadÂworkÂers who flanked the perÂmaÂnent announceÂments that varÂiÂous sites — includÂing, quite posÂsiÂbly, our own — were “under conÂstrucÂtion.” CharmÂing though they could be at the time, they now look imposÂsiÂbly primÂiÂtive comÂpared to what we can see on today’s interÂnet, where high-resÂoÂluÂtion feaÂture films stream instanÂtaÂneousÂly. But techÂnoÂlogÂiÂcalÂly speakÂing, we can trace it all back to what this parÂticÂuÂlar aniÂmatÂed GIF depicts: the phenakistisÂcope.
InventÂed simulÂtaÂneÂousÂly and indeÂpenÂdentÂly in late 1832 by BelÂgian physiÂcist Joseph Plateau and AusÂtriÂan geomÂeÂtry proÂfesÂsor Simon Stampfer, the phenakistisÂcope was a simÂple wheel-shaped device that could, for the first time in the hisÂtoÂry of techÂnolÂoÂgy, creÂate the illuÂsion of a smoothÂly movÂing picÂture when spun and viewed in a mirÂror: hence the derivaÂtion of its name from the Greek phenakistiÂcos, “to deceive,” and ops, “eye.”
When it caught on as a comÂmerÂcial novÂelÂty, it was also marÂketÂed under names like PhanÂtasÂmasÂcope and FanÂtasÂcope, which promised buyÂers a glimpse of horse-ridÂers, twirling dancers, bowÂing arisÂtoÂcrats, hopÂping frogs, flyÂing ghouls, and even proÂto-psyÂcheÂdelÂic abstract patÂterns, many of which you can see re-aniÂmatÂed as GIFs in this Wikipedia gallery.
EvenÂtuÂalÂly, accordÂing to the PubÂlic Domain Review, the phenakistisÂcope was “supÂplantÂed in the popÂuÂlar imagÂiÂnaÂtion: firstÂly by the simÂiÂlar Zoetrope, and then — via EadÂweard MuyÂbridge’s ZoopraxÂisÂcope (which proÂjectÂed the aniÂmaÂtion) — by film itself.” MuyÂbridge, preÂviÂousÂly feaÂtured here on Open CulÂture, did pioÂneerÂing motion-phoÂtogÂraÂphy work in the eighÂteen-sevÂenÂties that’s now conÂsidÂered a preÂcurÂsor to cinÂeÂma. UnderÂstandÂing what he was up to is an imporÂtant part of underÂstandÂing the emerÂgence of movies as we know them. But the most instrucÂtive expeÂriÂence to start with is makÂing a phenakistisÂcope of your own, instrucÂtions for which are availÂable from the George EastÂman MuseÂum and artist Megan Scott on YouTube. The finÂished prodÂuct may not hold anyÂone’s attenÂtion long here in the age of NetÂflix, but then, the age of NetÂflix would nevÂer have arrived had the phenakistisÂcope not come first.
RelatÂed conÂtent:
How AniÂmatÂed CarÂtoons Are Made: A VinÂtage Primer Filmed Way Back in 1919
The Trick That Made AniÂmaÂtion RealÂisÂtic: Watch a Short HisÂtoÂry of RotoÂscopÂing
Was a 32,000-Year-Old Cave PaintÂing the EarÂliÂest Form of CinÂeÂma?
Based in Seoul, ColÂin Marshall writes and broadÂcasts on cities, lanÂguage, and culÂture. His projects include the SubÂstack newsletÂter Books on Cities and the book The StateÂless City: a Walk through 21st-CenÂtuÂry Los AngeÂles. FolÂlow him on the social netÂwork forÂmerÂly known as TwitÂter at @colinmarshall.
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