Animated comic sliders for magic lantern
The magic lantern was a popular entertainment technology in the 19th century used to project stories and comic scenes.
The images used in this video were digitised and animated from the original hand-painted glass slides held in the Rouse Hill Estate Collection. Since the 1860s they have entertained many generations in the house!
A digital performance of the comic slides was shown at Rouse Hill House & Farm during the Family Fair 2018.
Visitors, especially young children, found the large scale wall projections hilarious, watching them over and over again. Perhaps in much the same way as Rouse family members would have enjoyed the original sperm whale oil lantern projections in the 1860s.
The original magic lantern was last used to project a performance in the Arcade at Rouse Hill Estate twenty years ago. In 1998, under the direction of the curator Lynn Collins, Dr John Terry, a sixth generation member the Rouse family and a musician and composer, re-enacted an experimental multimedia event featuring the magic lantern and slides that he had first created in the late 1960s.
About the authors:
Megan Martin
Former Head, Collections & Access
Megan is the former head of Collections & Access at Sydney Living Museums. She has a particular interest in the working of the historical imagination, in teasing out the meanings of objects in museums collections and in crafting the stories that can be recovered/discovered through a close reading of those items of material culture.
Holly Schulte
Former Curator, Digital Assets
Holly is responsible for a range of collection related tasks with a focus on photography, digitisation and digital asset management. Her research interests address photography, collections, image making and associated technology.
Magic Lantern
Magic lantern at Rouse Hill Estate
The Rouse Hill House magic lantern is a mid-19th century example of a form of image projector which dates back to the 17th century
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