Notes from the Underground Part Five — Escaping Muybridge's Curse (Can We?)
But this is rooted in the "magical" (at least in the "poetic"), not in the "scientific."
Given that we tend to credit animation with the status of "Art," we have to understand that "ordinary science" has very little to do with Art if by "Art" we understand an activity that deals with the whole of human experience, including (especially) all our subjectivity.
To draw/animate a walking figure demands a lot more than merely relying on the mechanics of the figure "out there." It demands that we connect with how we ("I") see and experience "it," bereft of assumptions, in connection with how that walking "figure" appears to us ("I") as if for the first time.
That would be Art.
"More than anything else, cinema consists of the eye for the magic that which perceives and reveals the marvelous in whatsoever it looks upon." Maya Deren
And:
"The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and science." Albert Einstein

Who would today dare challenge the deconstruction of the walking of a figure offered us by the Muybridge plates, their way of breaking down the flow into a series of "logical" steps, frozen moments in time, building blocks with which, from which, we can safely "recreate" the societally approved impression of a walking/moving figure?
This convention reinforces our societal models, it conforms to what we are expected to believe our reality is made of and looks like.
However, this dissecting of motion has nothing to do with our lived experience, it is an act of faith ("ontologizing" as phenomenology would call it) based on a world that is taken for granted, an act of faith, which is challenged at all times by the evidence of our own senses!
But and this is at the very core of all my articles in this present series we are "hooked on mediated experience" and can hardly connect with the evidence of our own senses.
What we (can) see does not agree with what we expect to see, with what we believe in, and the belief and the expectations almost always win out ("almost always" because "the real" has a way of not behaving totally according to our expectation; there always are cracks in our protective shell).
The problem with this "faith" in an objective world is very serious but seldom perceived as such: we are now culturally conditioned into believing in an "abstraction," constantly glossing over and dismissing our more ambiguous "lived experience," so much so that it takes often arduous training and/or severe psychological shock to find ways by which we can reconnect with our own vision, ways by which we can come (back) to our own senses.
There is a huge difference between the naive construction based on the idea of the appearance of reality (as in animation based on Muybridge's plates), and the direct apprehension of "the appearing as it appears."























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