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Catalog Data

Maker:
Edison  Search this
Physical Description:
gelatin (overall material)
Measurements:
overall: 6 1/2 in x 35 mm; 16.51 cm x 1 3/8 in
Object Name:
film
Date made:
ca 1900
Description (Brief):
Strip of 35mm negative film, part of a motion picture of a boat sailing on a body of water. The museum acquired this piece of film with the Vitascope #2 movie projector, an early model of the film projector that Thomas Edison's company manufactured in the early 20th century. Though the title of this particular subject is unknown, it is most likely from a short Edison film of a yacht race around 1900.
Description:
The Early Cinema Film and Ephemera Collection [COLL.PHOTOS.000038] includes over 50 pieces of notable motion picture film and more than 80 posters, photographs and other ephemeral objects from cinema’s early days. The collection’s film is primarily short lengths of motion picture film donated by inventors or industry groups to mark technological innovation. Charles Francis Jenkins, the co-inventor of the Vitascope projector, donated a short length of film showing William McKinley’s inauguration. Wallace Goold Levison and E. H. Amet, two early motion picture innovators, gave pieces of film, news clippings and business cards to mark their achievements in the technological development of the medium. The Society of Motion Picture Engineers, the leading trade association for motion picture workers, made two donations of early motion picture film samples, including examples of Biograph and early color motion pictures. Sound cinema pioneer Eugene Augustin Lauste’s scrapbooks and photographs illuminate his work to improve the motion picture as well as the early days of the industry. A portion of the film collection represents the work of pioneers like Charles Urban and August Plahn to perfect a natural and vibrant color for projected film.
The Collection also helps to illuminate the rise of the motion picture industry as a cultural and business phenomenon through ephemera. Posters promoting some of the earliest film exhibitions, the films of silent Western star William S. Hart, the 1930 re-release of D.W. Griffith’s Birth of a Nation and features presented at Washington’s Trans-Lux theater illustrate the range of movie advertising from the earliest days of the cinema to the industry’s attempts to combat television competition in the 1950s. A group of photographs of theaters, 270 glass slides used to promote upcoming features and pieces of movie star memorabilia broaden the collection’s focus to that of cinema culture at its zenith of influence in American life.
This finding aid is one in a series documenting the PHC’s Early Cinema Collection [COLL.PHOTOS.000018]. The cinema-related objects cover the range of technological innovation and popular appeal that defined the motion picture industry during a period in which it became the premier form of mass communication in American life, roughly 1885-1930. See also finding aids for Early Sound Cinema [COLL.PHOTOS.000040], Early Color Cinema [COLL.PHOTOS.000039], Early Cinema Equipment [COLL.PHOTOS.000037] and the Gatewood Dunston Collection [COLL.PHOTOS.000021].
Location:
Currently not on view
Subject:
Motion Pictures  Search this
Entertainment, Film  Search this
Sailing Ships  Search this
ID Number:
2008.0095.084
Accession number:
2008.0095
Catalog number:
2008.0095.084
See more items in:
Work and Industry: Photographic History
Popular Entertainment
Photo History Collection
Early Cinema Film Collection
Data Source:
National Museum of American History
GUID:
http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746ac-64e9-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:nmah_1339151