in the
Presidio of San Francisco Muybridge's influence extended to many artists and beyond, including efficiency expert
Frank Gilbreth, entrepreneur
Walt Disney, Nobel-Prize chemist
Ahmed Zewail, and the
International Society of Biomechanics. • Many of Muybridge's photographic sequences have been published since the 1950s as artists' reference books.
Cartoon animators often use his photos as a reference when drawing their characters in motion. • In the 1964 television series hosted by
Ronald Reagan,
Death Valley Days,
Hedley Mattingly was cast as Muybridge in the episode "The $25,000 Wager". In the story line, Muybridge invents the zoopraxiscope for his patron, former Governor Leland Stanford (Harry Holcombe), a race-horse owner. Muybridge's assignment is to determine by the use of multiple cameras whether all four hooves of a horse are briefly off the ground while trotting.
Diane Brewster was cast as Muybridge's wife, the former Flora Stone, who was twenty-one years his junior (half his age). •
Jim Morrison makes a reference to Muybridge in his poetry book
The Lords (1969), suggesting that "Muybridge derived his animal subjects from the Philadelphia Zoological Garden, male performers from the University". • The filmmaker
Thom Andersen made a 1974 documentary titled
Eadweard Muybridge, Zoopraxographer, describing his life and work. • The composer
Philip Glass's opera
The Photographer (1982) is based on Muybridge's murder trial, with a
libretto including text from the court transcript. • Muybridge is a central figure in
John Edgar Wideman's 1987 novel
Reuben. • Muybridge's work figures prominently in
Laird Barron's tale of
Lovecraftian horror, "Hand of Glory". • Since 1991, the company Optical Toys has published Muybridge sequences in the form of movie
flip books. • In 1993, the music video for
U2's "
Lemon", directed by Mark Neale, was filmed in black and white with a grid-like background as a tribute to Eadweard Muybridge. • The play
Studies in Motion: The Hauntings of Eadweard Muybridge (2006) was a co-production between Vancouver's
Electric Company Theatre and the
University of British Columbia Theatre. While blending fiction with fact, it conveys Muybridge's obsession with cataloguing animal motion. The production started touring in 2010. In 2015, it would be adapted into a feature film. • The Canadian poet
Rob Winger wrote ''Muybridge's Horse: A Poem in Three Phases'' (2007). The long poem won the
CBC Literary Award for Poetry and was nominated for the
Governor General's Award for Literature, the
Trillium Book Award for Poetry, and the
Ottawa Book Award. It expressed his life and obsessions in a "poetic-photographic" style. • A 17-minute documentary about Muybridge, directed by Juho Gartz, was made in 2007 and was awarded "Best Documentary" in the
Helsinki film Festival "Kettupäivät" the following year. • To accompany the 2010 Tate exhibition, the BBC commissioned a TV programme, "The Weird World of Eadweard Muybridge", as part of
Imagine, the arts series presented by
Alan Yentob. • A short animated film titled ''
Muybridge's Strings'' by
Kōji Yamamura was released in 2011. • On 9 April 2012, the 182nd anniversary of his birth, a
Google Doodle honoured Muybridge with an animation based on the photographs of the horse in motion. • Writer
Josh Epstein and director
Kyle Rideout made the 2015 feature film
Eadweard, starring
Michael Eklund and
Sara Canning. The film tells the story of Muybridge's motion experiments, social reactions to the morality of photographing nude figures in motion, work with sanitarium patients, and (fictional) death in a duel. • Muybridge appears as a character in
Brian Catling's 2012 novel,
The Vorrh, where events from his life are blended into the fantasy narrative. • Czech theatre company
Laterna Magika introduced an original play based on Muybridge's life in 2014. The play follows his life and combines dancing and speech with multimedia created from Muybridge's works. • Five frames depicting Annie G, a horse photographed by Muybridge, were encoded in bacteria's
DNA using
CRISPR genetic technology in 2017, 90% of which proved recoverable. • In her book
River of Shadows,
Rebecca Solnit tells Muybridge's story in an exploration of what it was about 19th-century California that enabled it to become a centre of cultural and technological innovation. •
Exposing Muybridge (2021) is a documentary film biography that specifically highlights Muybridge's use of image manipulation and "
photographic truth" throughout his career. •
The First Film (2015) references Muybridge in discussion of early cinema leading to the work of
Louis Le Prince. • Muybridge and his
Animal Locomotion collection are mentioned in the 2022 film
Nope. Emerald "Em" Haywood claims that the jockey riding the horse in those photographs was one of her ancestors. • The interactions of Muybridge and Larkyn are briefly presented in the first episode of the ZDF's documentary series
Time: A Journey Through Thousands of Years ==See also==