Sunday

Eadweard J. Muybridge, pioneer of motion photography and Google Doodle recipient

 Eadweard J. Muybridge, Google Doodle recipient
English photographer Eadweard J. Muybridge was a motion picture pioneer. (Eadweard Muybridge / SFMOMA / April 9, 2012)

Eadweard J. Muybridge, pioneer of motion photography and Google Doodle recipient, was so unique that he couldn't stick with his given name, Edward.  And that was long before the days of Metta World Peace (Ron Artest) and Lady Gaga (Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta).

The English photographer was an original whose stunning accomplishments were dimmed -- at least for a time -- by sordid, bloody happenings in his personal life.


Muybridge, born 182 years ago today in England, changed his name from Edward James Muggeridge because he wanted to adopt the original Anglo-Saxon form of his name, according to Encyclopedia Brittanica. Answers.com says, in fact, that he wanted to
match the spelling of King Edward (962-79) as shown on the ancient Kingston coronation stone, re-erected in his hometown of Kingston in the 1850s.

Showing the extent of his chutzpah, Muybridge also used the pseudonym Helios -- Greek god of the sun -- on many of his photos, as well as for the name of his studio and as the middle name of his child. He later came to believe that child was not his, but more about that later.


Muybridge gained worldwide fame in the late 1860s with his panoramic photos of Yosemite. But it was his attempts to set photos into motion that made him a legend. 


He was hired by railroad baron Leland Stanford in 1872. The wealthy racehorse owner wanted to prove that, as a horse is trotting, there's a point at which all four of the animal's legs are off the ground at once.  This was apparently a
contentious issue, says Answers.com.  Muybridge tried to capture the moment with his camera, but lack of shutter speed got in his way.

Then a much-more-serious event interfered with his work on the project.  He was
arrested and prosecuted in 1874 in the slaying of Harry Larkyns, the drama critic for the San Francisco Post.

Muybridge had married Flora Stone in 1872; she was 22 years his junior. While Muybridge was off taking pictures in the U.S. Northwest, apparently Flora and Larkyns began an affair. 


The Muybridges welcomed a son, Florado Helios Muybridge, in April 1874.  The photographer later
found a picture among his wife's belongings that had the words "Little Harry" written on the back, according to a 2010 article by We Love D.C. about an extensive exhibition of Muybridge's work at the Corcoran.

Muybridge believed Larkyns was the father of the baby. In October 1874, Muybridge shot and killed Larkyns.  


The murder trial was juicy.  Muybridge's lawyer entered a plea of insanity against his wishes, but the jurors ultimately acquitted Muybridge. They found that the killing was justifiable homicide. 


After the trial, Muybridge went to work taking photos in Central America for two years.  While he was away, Flora died and Florado was placed in an orphanage. 


Life went on for Muybridge, who resumed his attempt to photograph Stanford's
horses in motion.  Using 12 to 24 cameras and a shutter he had developed with an exposure of 2/1000 of a second, Muybridge succeeded in capturing the motion of the horse -- proving Stanford's firmly held notion.

He then gave a series of lectures, "Science of Animal Locomotion," in the U.S. and Europe with the help of his lantern-like device the
Zoopraxiscope.  As Art Daily describes it, Muybridge "projected his images of suspended motion to create the illusion of movement."  It is this point to which many trace the origin of cinema.

Next, at the University of Pennsylvania, Muybridge studied movement, photographing animals and people with banks of cameras. The human models were often
naked, or nearly so, running, carrying buckets of water or pouring  water on one another, walking down stairs.  It was a "visual compendium of human movements," Britannica says, for artists and scientists.

Muybridge retired to England in 1894 and died May 8, 1904. His work is said to have influenced artists such as
Francis Bacon and Thomas Eakins, film pioneer Thomas Edison, high-speed photographer Harold Eugene Edgerton and filmmaker John Gaeta (whose slow-motion sequence in "The Matrix" features Keanu Reeves dodging bullets).

Friday

Today is Richard Scarry's 92nd birthday, born on June 5, 1919 in Boston, Massachusetts.

Richard Scarry Google Logo


Today is Richard Scarry's 92nd birthday, born on June 5, 1919 in Boston, Massachusetts. He lived through the Great Depression by publishing over 300 books with total sales of over 100 million units worldwide.
He is well known for his children books including Best Word Book Ever.
He died at the age of on April 30, 1994 in Gstaad, Switzerland.
For more about Richard Scarry, see his Wikipedia page.
I should also note that the inside pages of Google have a different version of the logo, it looks like this:
Richard Scarry Google Doodle Small
Forum discussion at Google Web Search Help and Google Blogoscoped Forums.

Tuesday

Latest Charles Roger Hargreaves Google Logo For 2011

Google Logo Logo Latest Charles Roger Hargreaves 2011. Various Google logo today May 9, 2011 unique, funny, creative and interesting. Unique Google Logos is taken from the book Mr Men and Little Miss series by Roger Hargreaves who today commemorates anniversary 76.

Charles Roger Hargreaves is an author and illustrator of children's books English. Books Mr Men and Little Miss series, intended for children readers. Story book 'simple, funny and silly, with bright, attractive illustrations, has become part of popular culture for more than 25 years, with sales of more than 85 million worldwide in 20 languages.

Roger Hargreaves started his career as a writer to follow a career in advertising, and he became creative director at an advertising company in London. As a writer, most famous creations is the Mr Men, with the first book 'Mr Tickle', written in 1971. Roger Hargreaves wrote and illustrated 43 books Mr Men. Meanwhile, Little Miss series begin until 1981, with books such as Little Miss Naughty and Little Miss Bossy. Roger Hargreaves wrote and illustrated 30 books Little Miss Series.

Here are 16 logo Google recalled Roger Hargreaves on May 09, 2011:

Roger Hargreaves Little Miss Chatterbox
Roger Hargreaves Mr Happy
Roger Hargreaves Mr Rush
Roger Hargreaves Little Miss Curious
Roger Hargreaves Mr Messy
Roger Hargreaves Little Miss Maggic
Roger Hargreaves Little Miss Tiny
Roger Hargreaves Mr Bump
Roger Hargreaves Mr Dizzy
Roger Hargreaves Mr Forgetful
Roger Hargreaves Mr Funny
Roger Hargreaves Mr Slow
Roger Hargreaves Mr Tickle
Roger Hargreaves Little Miss SunShine
Roger Hargreaves Little Miss Shy

Roger Hargreaves is married to Christine. They have four children: Adam, Giles and her twin Sophie and Amelia. During the 1970s and 80s Roger Hargreaves also wrote many other children's books, such as Timbucktoo and John Mouse series. Roger Hargreaves died in 1988 aged 53 (May 9 1935-11 September 1988). Today, Google Logo Birthday Roger Hargreaves 76.

Martha Graham 117's Birthday

Animation by Ryan Woodward

Martha Graham (May 11, 1894 – April 1, 1991) was an American dancer choreographer regarded as one of the foremost pioneers of modern dance, whose influence on dance can be compared to the influence Stravinsky had on music, Picasso had on the visual arts, or Frank Lloyd Wright had on architecture. Graham was a galvanizing performer, a choreographer of astounding moves. She invented a new language of movement, and used it to reveal the passion, the rage and the ecstasy common to human experience. She danced and choreographed for over seventy years, and during that time was the first dancer ever to perform at The White House, the first dancer ever to travel abroad as a cultural ambassador, and the first dancer ever to receive the highest civilian award of the USA: the Medal of Freedom. In her lifetime she received honors ranging from the key to the City of Paris to Japan's Imperial Order of the Precious Crown. She said, "I have spent all my life with dance and being a dancer. It's permitting life to use you in a very intense way. Sometimes it is not pleasant. Sometimes it is fearful. But nevertheless it is inevitable." [Read more on Wikipedia]

Martha Graham, shown here with Bertram Ross

Israel Independence Day