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@howardglee on YT #artlust

Howard Lee’s Picket Fence Animation – Nods to 19th Century Animation & Muybridge’s Dark Past 🎨🎞️

Howard Lee’s picket fence animation drawing is more than just a clever visual trick—it’s a direct nod to the early animation tests of the 19th century, where artists experimented with motion, light, and visual perception.

One of the key inspirations behind these tests was Eadweard Muybridge, the pioneering photographer known for his motion studies of animals and humans. Muybridge’s sequential photographs laid the groundwork for modern animation—but he also had a dramatic, dark backstory.

🔹 Who Was Muybridge?

Famous for his 1870s motion studies, including the iconic horse galloping sequence.
Used multiple cameras to capture movement frame by frame—a technique echoed in Howard Lee’s precise fence slats creating an illusion of motion.
But outside of art, Muybridge is infamous for murdering his wife’s lover. He was acquitted on the grounds of "justifiable homicide," adding a twisted layer to his legacy.
🔹 Why Howard Lee’s Work Connects:

Lee’s animation taps into this history of early visual experimentation.
His picket fence piece plays with perception and sequential frames, much like Muybridge’s experiments, but with a modern, smooth illustrative twist.
It’s a blend of art history, optical illusion, and the darker human stories behind innovation.
📜 Art and animation have long histories tangled with unexpected narratives—and Lee’s piece reminds us how past and present always intersect.

💬 What do you think about connecting historic art techniques to modern media? Drop your thoughts below!

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#HowardLee #AnimationHistory #Muybridge #ArtAndMurder #VisualTrick #PicketFenceAnimation #ArtLust

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