George Eastman Museum

George Eastman Museum

World's foremost museum of photography and cinema located in Rochester, NY on the historic estate of George Eastman, the pioneer of popular photography.

Artist Talk: Adam Ekberg

Artist Talk: Adam Ekberg

Lumière Cinématographe

Lumière Cinématographe

Пікірлер

  • @SwingBandHeaven
    @SwingBandHeavenКүн бұрын

    What an excellent look behind the scenes. Thank you so much for this and the clear explanation of things.

  • @OritMesilati
    @OritMesilati8 күн бұрын

    תודה שקד על סדנא קסומה שהייתי בה אתמול. תודה על לימוד של טכניקה חדשה על לימוד מרענן ומקצועי ועל דרך חדשה שגיליתי

  • @rltreasure
    @rltreasure9 күн бұрын

    Oh please give credit where is due! The French invented photography first.

  • @jmalmsten
    @jmalmsten11 күн бұрын

    I am curious about the unclusion of Star Wars in the examples. While I do already know that ILM used VistaVision Cameras for composited shots. I have always been intrigued about if they used the Technirama anamorphic process or if they stayed with the spherical VistaVision. According to what I have recently seen in released restoration footage online and a couple of old behind the scenes features, it does very much look like they opted to use the non Anamorphic process in camera. So I am a bit confused by Star Wars being here in the Technirama presentation. But, as the anamorphic bit was just an adaptor on the end of the lens system, most of the camera was a VistaVision camera. I guess ILM bought a bunch of decommissioned Technirama cameras and opted to not use the anamorphic adaptor. Mainly to keep the image as distortion neutral as possible on the negative.

  • @ewangent
    @ewangent13 күн бұрын

    The Red Shoes Technicolour is simply the most beautiful piece of cinematic art, I've ever seen recorded.

  • @skychoitw4034
    @skychoitw403414 күн бұрын

    Rubbish 🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬

  • @sterlingworrell5099
    @sterlingworrell509915 күн бұрын

    I studied with Professor Lee at UTK in the mid 1980s. His passion, talent, and humor for photography and life changed the course of my life. I cannot thank him enough for for the positive influence he had on me. I used to love seeing all these amazing pictures as he was making them.

  • @CobDaGOAT
    @CobDaGOAT20 күн бұрын

    Is there a way to turn the image back right side up like our brain does?

  • @Yalettaneedsstructure
    @Yalettaneedsstructure20 күн бұрын

    Martha we writers love you

  • @hebneh
    @hebneh24 күн бұрын

    It appears that the modern-day interviews of the two authors was shot in 2-strip Technicolor...well, not really, but it does appear that this was an intentional visual effect to mimic that look.

  • @chreynest
    @chreynest26 күн бұрын

    I have this fine book which I find myself going back to frequently

  • @rahandulcaspatal5276
    @rahandulcaspatal527628 күн бұрын

    Hello nice work .its work a normal red filter for camera ?

  • @rainscratch
    @rainscratchАй бұрын

    Fascinating presentation, thank you. I filmed many of my movies on a Canon 1014e with good old Kodachrome Super 8mm. Used to travel to Europe with half a suit case full of film cartridges and then took them all to my local massive Kodak complex in Coburg Australia to get them developed, picked up the next day.

  • @rainscratch
    @rainscratchАй бұрын

    13:40 The basic mechanism for cameras and projectors the intermittent movement, and shutter - one of the few technologies that remained basically unchanged throughout the glorious history of film - over 120 years.

  • @rainscratch
    @rainscratchАй бұрын

    In my collection I have many cameras, projectors of all descriptions, including a Vinten 35mm Normandy camera (still works) and a curious prototype vertical 35mm movie camera that seems to be from the late 1800s - made of wood with a pull down mechanism I've not seen in anything else. How can I submit some photos for your evaluation and possibly I can donate to the museum?

  • @rainscratch
    @rainscratchАй бұрын

    Great presentation - wish I lived in your country to come visit in person.

  • @rainscratch
    @rainscratchАй бұрын

    Great to see a real projector - a technical marvel that remained virtually unchanged in its operation for over 120 years! The fundamental difference between a film projector and a digital projector is a film projector depends on the interaction of a human, the projectionist, they depend on each other in a symbiotic technical and aesthetic operation. The Digital projector sits there in its black box and shuns physical engagement with a human projectionist throughout the screening.

  • @rainscratch
    @rainscratchАй бұрын

    20th C Fox had a beautiful 35mm print of Stormy Weather which I screened many times over 15 years ago. Unfortunately don't think it would exist now. The poster is a great example of artwork and litho printing from that era. Seems poster appreciation and values have dropped substantially recently due to those who even know or appreciate the film and the artistic merit of this poster art form are dwindling.

  • @rainscratch
    @rainscratchАй бұрын

    Played this back at .25 speed and it was still a bit fast to take in all the actions. Putting a vintage fragile poster in a tray of water would be the last thing I'd think was a good idea - but this video proved otherwise.

  • @FrankAndPhotoTutorials
    @FrankAndPhotoTutorialsАй бұрын

    Is that an original shoebox no.1 brownie??

  • @BRHSpartans
    @BRHSpartansАй бұрын

    If Tarantino is going to go out with a bang, his last film should be shot on 3 Strip.

  • @user-sm4sf4ff2i
    @user-sm4sf4ff2iАй бұрын

    Cheer~~~egg white, or the protein contained in it.

  • @paulwarner5395
    @paulwarner5395Ай бұрын

    Thank you for the video. I always loved the bug 70mm roadshow presentations in the day. Unfortunately today it's like going to the supermarket.

  • @robert1589
    @robert1589Ай бұрын

    So informative!

  • @robert1589
    @robert1589Ай бұрын

    thank you

  • @alhzbr.alazde.4830
    @alhzbr.alazde.4830Ай бұрын

  • @JJONNYREPP
    @JJONNYREPPАй бұрын

    This Rare Silent Print Headlines the Eighth Nitrate Film Festival. 18.4.24. Eisenstein's favourite director. Allegedly...good choice, the Griffith film, in this era of mass libertarian intolerance...

  • @andyrevo8081
    @andyrevo8081Ай бұрын

    This was a plethora of information! Great!

  • @frederick3467
    @frederick3467Ай бұрын

    not sure of the timing of this talk whilst they blow Gaza to bits

  • @clydebennish2106
    @clydebennish2106Ай бұрын

    Well said

  • @SlavaVeres
    @SlavaVeresАй бұрын

    This would be a very useful material for future researchers of Russian atrocities in Ukraine 🇺🇦 As Ukrainian myself I’m deeply ashamed that so many Ukrainians took part in the Holocaust.

  • @clydebennish2106
    @clydebennish2106Ай бұрын

    Thats what losers always say... lol

  • @BUY_YOUTUB_VIEWS_d0dd115
    @BUY_YOUTUB_VIEWS_d0dd115Ай бұрын

    You're a breath of fresh air on KZread

  • @TheStockwell
    @TheStockwellАй бұрын

    . . . and you're a fake account spammer. 🙄

  • @clydebennish2106
    @clydebennish2106Ай бұрын

    LMAO

  • @CameraEd1
    @CameraEd1Ай бұрын

    Interesting video. It is a shame that the baked in (very large) subtitles obscure the posters being restored. Why not use KZread's subtitles that can be turned on and off.

  • @richardlinks8575
    @richardlinks8575Ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for hosting and providing this very interesting presentation. I have a story to relate, which may be of interest to you and members of your foundation. Around 1973-74, I was employed by the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. One of my duties had to do with presenting various exhibitions, musical recitals and other arts events in our beautiful “Little Theater”, also known as the Florence Gould Theater, part of the California Palace of the Legion of Honor. During the fall of either 1973 or 1974, the Fine Arts Museums put together a very special event, centered around an exclusive showing of original 35 mm nitrate films on loan from Mary Pickford, who was still alive at that time. These were her own personal prints and of course, the entire series consisted of the projection of these remarkable prints of many of her classic films. Here’s the most interesting part! For the occasion, two arc-lamp projectors were installed in the small projection booth above the theater. The entire building was originally erected in 1924. The projectionist(s) placed fire extinguishers around the machinery, but one of the museum officials also instructed the staff to watch out for the chance that a fire Marshall might show up and not to let such a person enter the booth! Fortunately, no fire Marshall ever turned up! This was the only time during which I ever experienced what a nitrate film looked like. The incredible “velvety” look of nitrate film was simply unreal! It seemed almost to have an unusual three-dimensional quality to it. For that unique series, the Fine Arts Museums had also hired an organist, who accompanied the films with live music, played on a compact Wurlitzer organ. On opening night, a Rolls Royce pulled up and out of it came an elderly lady, accompanied by two men. I was standing in the reception area when she was escorted into the building. She quickly informed everyone within that area that she was the child actress in that evening’s offering. Unbelievable! What was even more interesting was that also appearing that evening was the silent film actor, Buddy Rogers, who was then still married to Mary Pickford. The older society ladies were literally swooning around the man. Mary Pickford was too ill to attend. What a great event! I hope you enjoyed my personal story!

  • @manojsuthar4809
    @manojsuthar48092 ай бұрын

    I made it and it worked. Good. Thanks for making this video

  • @zaydansayedofthegalaxies
    @zaydansayedofthegalaxies2 ай бұрын

    You mean Canadian, right?

  • @madeleine1138
    @madeleine11382 ай бұрын

    Thank you in 2024.

  • @sebastianferruzo5201
    @sebastianferruzo52012 ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing this!

  • @user-xk2jl7gc8k
    @user-xk2jl7gc8k2 ай бұрын

    the iodine is very expensive her in the philippines

  • @user-xk2jl7gc8k
    @user-xk2jl7gc8k2 ай бұрын

    i need iodine

  • @gregorkrause
    @gregorkrause2 ай бұрын

    8:52-11:05 heard of this from silent films on dvd.

  • @MehriJamshidi
    @MehriJamshidi2 ай бұрын

    It's great having a whole session here. This is a wonderful opportunity for me to attend this event. Thanks.

  • @MsElladog
    @MsElladog2 ай бұрын

    So, with those Vitaphone films that you have, do you also have their soundtracks, whether on the phono records that accompanied the projector prints or in any other forms?

  • @tr909love
    @tr909love2 ай бұрын

    Nowdays movies look like shit.

  • @michelp.vanwelkenhuyzen2623
    @michelp.vanwelkenhuyzen26232 ай бұрын

    Perfectly boring !

  • @s.w.2779
    @s.w.27792 ай бұрын

    No, Mr. Gustafson. The cinématographe Lumière has a film perforation pitch of 20 mm and the image size is NOT standard. It’s 20 by 25 mm. If your example differs, it was modified.

  • @frederick3467
    @frederick34672 ай бұрын

    nice talk, many thanks

  • @bahet1061
    @bahet10612 ай бұрын

    So, I was trying to figure out how to pronounce Cinématographe. I have figured it out. It is pronounced: Cine - mat - o - graph.

  • @hibbs1712
    @hibbs17122 ай бұрын

    Have you ever tried using fruit pectin or other non-animal derived “gelatin”??

  • @addygrubber5351
    @addygrubber53512 ай бұрын

    Very good

  • @danieltee7782
    @danieltee77822 ай бұрын

    WOW, this is beautiful! May I ask, what type of negative did you use? Wet plate process?