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HISTORY OF

IT8 | Multimedia Systems Animation defined.. is an art form which, in its modern guise, appeared alongside the development of motion pictures. is a collection of images which are slightly different from one another which conveys motion. Early Examples of Animation  Cave Paintings  The earliest examples derive from still drawings, which can be found in Palaeolithic cave paintings, where animals are depicted with multiple sets of legs in superimposed positions, clearly attempting to convey the perception of motion. Early Examples of Animation (Continued)  Pottery of Persia  A 5,200-year old earthen bowl found in in Shahr-i Sokhta has five images painted along the sides. It shows phases of a goat leaping up to a tree to take a pear. However, since no equipment existed to show the images in motion, such a series of images cannot be called animation in a true sense of the word.

Early Examples of Animation (Continued)

 Egyptian Murals  An Egyptian mural, approximately 4000 years old, shows wrestlers in action. Even though this may appear similar to a series of animation drawings, there was no way of viewing the images in motion. It does, however, indicate the artist's intention of depicting motion. Early Examples of Animation (Continued)   is a device which creates the image of a moving picture. The earliest elementary zoetrope was created in China around 180 AD by the prolific inventor Ting Huan (丁緩).  Driven by convection Ting Huan's device hung over a lamp. The rising air turned vanes at the top from which were hung translucent paper or mica panels. Pictures painted on the panels would appear to move if the device is spun at the right speed. Early Examples of Animation (Continued)

 Zoetrope  The modern zoetrope contraption was produced in 1834 by William George Horner. The device is basically a cylinder with vertical slits around the sides. Around the inside edge of the cylinder there are a series of pictures on the opposite side to the slits. Early Examples of Animation (Continued)

 The magic lantern is the predecessor of the modern day projector. It consisted of a translucent oil painting and a simple lamp.  Some slides for the lanterns contained parts that could be mechanically actuated to present limited movement on the screen.  Originatd from China in the 16th century. Early Examples of Animation (Continued)

 was a toy in 1824 used in the Victorian era. It was a disk or card with two different pictures on each side that was attached to two pieces of string. When the strings were twirled quickly between the fingers the two pictures appear to combine into a single image.  The creator of this invention may have been either John Ayrton Paris or Charles Babbage. Early Examples of Animation (Continued)

 Phenakistoscope  was an early animation device, the predecessor of the zoetrope. It was invented in 1831 simultaneously by the Belgian Joseph Plateau and the Austrian Simon von Stampfer. Early Examples of Animation (Continued)

 invented by French scientist Charles-Émile Reynaud, was a more sophisticated version of the zoetrope.  It used the same basic mechanism of a strip of images placed on the inside of a spinning cylinder, but instead of viewing it through slits, it was viewed in a series of stationary mirrors around the inside of the cylinder, so that the animation would stay in place, and also provided a clearer image. Early Examples of Animation (Continued)

 The first flip book was patented in 1868 by a John Barns Linnet. This was another step closer to the development of animation. Like the Zoetrope, the Flip Book creates the illusion of motion. A set of sequential pictures seen at a high speed creates this effect. The (1894) is essentially a flip book in a box with a crank handle to flip the pages. END