“We live in an environment where there are moving images constantly around us. But in 1897, this was startling and new and completely revolutionary. It was a different way of looking at the world.”
In 1939, MoMA acquired a treasure trove of thirty-six reels of 68mm nitrate prints and negatives made in cinema’s very first years. Everything that survived of the Biograph film company lives on those reels, including a rare bit of moving image footage of Queen Victoria.
For the latest edition of How to See, The Museum of Modern Art opened the doors to their film archives in Hamlin, Pennsylvania to learn more about the incredible quality and clarity of this newly discovered nineteenth-century movie, and the efforts archivists make to preserve such irreplaceable snapshots of history. Curator Dave Kehr joins the discussion to help viewers look at the early film with the same awe-inspired, expanded view of the world of its first audiences.
This video is must-watch for any cinephile to appreciate just how amazing and innovative early pioneers in film truly were. Check it out!
