Mathew Lippincott’s blog on design and DIY aerospace
December 31st, 2009

Why I Made a Mutoscope (design rationale)

The finished mutoscope

I signed it in stamped aluminum

There are many reasons to love mutoscopes, from nostalgia to mechanical beauty, but any expensive niche medium competing with less expensive and widely available systems must have a design rationale and purpose in it’s own right beyond the purely aesthetic.  Within the context of the art world mutoscopes have a place as more than a curiosity- they are a solution to a real problem facing animators like Fernando.

Fernando Renes is an animator but his drawings don’t move.  All of his animations are digital movies of static drawings one degree removed from his works on paper.  If you want to see his work, you’ll have to go to a gallery or museum showing them, because Fernando’s income is dependent on the sales of limited editions his animations.  He can’t just post a video to YouTube, it would devalue the work of his collectors.  Online and in print there are plenty of stills from his work, but you can’t see any reproduction of his finished pieces anywhere outside of a gallery.

This is problematic for Fernando and other animators in the fine art world, as well as for the art world in general.   Painters can be known by their prints- I don’t have to fly to Paris to have seen the Mona Lisa- because prints don’t devalue the originals.   But animators’ drawings don’t move, only the movies of their drawings do (Harry Smith, Stan Brackage, and other film scratchers excepted).  The “original” is always a print, and the number of prints must be severely limited to control their value so the artist can make a living.

Animators are therefore marginalized within the fine art world.  Their work is the hardest to see, so fewer people know of them than artists in other media.  Critics, students, and art lovers can’t sit with the work and come to know it they way they can when good prints exist.  As a result, the entire field lacks a sense of history and development.

Large-scale mutoscopes can address this problem for Fernando and other animators that draw animations frame by frame.  A mutoscope is a circular flip book with it’s pages radiating out from a central binding, played in a mechanical player.  Traditionally they were used for photo reproduction of short peep show movies.  The Mutoscope for Fernando is for original drawings, and so must be  substantially larger (4″ x  3″ drawing area) than a traditional mutoscope (1 7/8″ square).   The Mutoscope for Fernando can accept reels of original drawings from 500 to 2500 frames in length, or 30 seconds to 3 minutes, playing back at 8-16 frames per second.

By drawing directly into mutoscope reels, Fernando can make his original drawings move, creating an original object bearing his mark as an artist that is also an animation.  Since it is an original,  “prints” may be made from it- movies of the machine in action- that have the same relationship that paintings bear to prints.  My hope is that mutoscopes can bring the same level of study and distribution to Fernando’s animation that paintings currently enjoy, strengthening the art world and widening his audience.

December 14th, 2009

Oh, Done. (forgot to tell the internet)

Lots more to come, but I finished the Mutoscope 2 weeks ago… been totally buried in work. Now in Oberlin, OH for one more week, Philly next weekend, then Wellesley/Boston ’till 30th, New Years in New York, Portland, OR on Jan 5th.

Mutosocope in Fernando Renes Studio

November 12th, 2009

See the Mutoscope Tonight (and RC Blimps!)

Should’ve posted this on Monday.  I’ll be at the Make NYC event tonight in Manhattan with my mutoscope, fully loaded with Fernando Renes latest animation.  Thanks to Obra Social Caja Madrid for sponsoring the Mutoscope.

Make: NYC meeting 16
Thursday, November 12th, 6:30PM
Bug Labs
598 Broadway at Houston, 4th floor
New York, NY 10012

November 8th, 2009

A Mutoscope, nearly finished

Fernando Renes’ animation finally came back from the printer’s last weekend, and Molly helped me bind it into a mutoscope reel.  since my last post everything has been re-built except the projector (I’m re-building the projector today to cut down on light leaks and get better contrast).  The machine is not quite done, but I felt a wave of success on Thursday night, showing it to Fernando, and then Josiah and Taiwon. Taiwon says, “its like how TV works, I like it.” Kids are the best critics.

Taiwon & Josiah w the mutoscope

Taiwon & the mutoscope

a shot from "Anxiety", Fernando's animation

the credits, projected 24" x 32"

May 17th, 2009

What the Butler Saw

In 1894 Herman Casler, a former engineer for Edison, brought to market a motion picture machine that avoided expensive and dangerously flammable nitrate film. Nothing more than a circular flipbook with a gear attached, the Mutoscope was immediately put to use filling bars and arcades with one to two minute doses of penny-per-play peep shows. In England the machine was known by the name of it’s earliest soft-core feature,“What the Butler Saw.” Middle Class Moralizers went bonkers, even though the names were racier than the content.

I saw my first Mutoscope in the fall of 2007, when Janine and I visited the Museum of the Moving Image in Queens. I loved the machine for a mechanical elegance directly embodying the process of animation. In a film machine the photo medium and the motion mechanism are separate, but the Mutoscope relies on the picture medium itself for the motion mechanics. In an age of bits, I was enthralled by the ambiguous line between player and content found in the Mutoscope.

Now I’m building an unusually large one for Fernando Renes. When I first went into his studio and saw stacks of 13,000 page-animations all watercolored onto 11″x 13″ paper I knew they needed a more appropriate container than some home-burned DVD. It took a year to get the project going, but now it is. I’ll post more as I work. My machine owes it’s origins to the card design of the Kinora, and the innovations of a mid-century pinball mogul. More on that later.

kinora-the_sphere_oct1911_pg14_thekinora_barry-anthony

Fernando loves making home movies, so the Kinora is appropriate place to start, being the first truly affordable home movie machine ever sold. In 1909 a Kinora home camera that printed directly onto punch paper monoprint reels was released. Although I’ve found no evidence, I bet the Butler saw a whole lot more than made it into wide distribution.  Two things sell video players- porn, and the promise of a better golf swing.

Read more on motion portraiture and advances in flipbook technology in this article I copied from History of Photography Volume 13 Number 1, January/March 1989. Stephen Hebert wrote it, he’s definitely the expert on this topic.

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