J.D.B. Stillman: The Horse in Motion (1882)

30 April 2010, dusan

The book by J.D.B. Stillman, commissioned by Muybridge’s patron, the railroad baron Leland Stanford, was based on Muybridge’s now famous photographic studies of a horse galloping. But master and reluctant servant had fallen out, and the book was published under Stillman’s name, giving Muybridge negligible credit. The book contains detailed description of the studies into the motion of the horse (and other quadrupeds), with five of Muybridge’s photographs and ninety-one lithographs based on his photographs, plus line drawings. The book’s publication caused considerable embarrassment to Muybridge at the time, as his contribution to the scientific studies was now questioned by several authorities, but it is an important publication nonetheless.

The horse in motion as shown by instantaneous photography, with a study on animal mechanics founded on anatomy and the revelations of the camera, in which is demonstrated the theory of quadrupedal locomotion
Publisher J. R. Osgood, Boston, 1882
127 pages

View online (at Internet Archive)

Eadweard Muybridge: The Human Figure in Motion (1901–)

30 April 2010, dusan

The Human Figure in Motion. An Electro-Photographic Investigation of Consecutive Phases of Muscular Actions
First published in Philadelphia, 1901
Third impression
Publisher Chapman & Hall, London, 1907
277 pages

PDF (no OCR, updated on 2015-1-21)
Introduction (HTML)