I found this work very interesting as it was presented as photography and in more practical ways of showing movement.
'There are no such things as moving images, they are an illusion created by our brains'.
The work was displayed on two floors the bottom showing movement in practical ways and the other floor showing movement within photography and still life pictures.
I sneakily took a few videos to demonstrate how movement was shown through the exhibition.
When looking around at the photography work which was displayed in thick black frames with a cardboard boarder which was quite thick with the image in the centre. Each photograph had an explanation and a bar code that you could scan with your phone for extra information on the work. Displaying old work with a twist of modern technology. Whilst viewing the work quite a few images I had seen before such as Harold Egerton 'Milk drop coronet 1957'. Photography can speed up or slow down time. High-speed and time lapse photography enables us to see events too fast or too slow for the naked eye, revealing a hidden world of extraordinary beauty.
Harold Egerton was the first to take high-speed colour photographs and was a pioneer of multi-flash and microsecond imagery.'In many ways, unexpected results are what have most inspired my photography'- Harold Egerton.
Another image by this photographer exhibited which I found interesting is the one below, this image show each stage of movement but all in the same frame making ti seem like the man has multiple arms this shows a different type of movement, unlike the milk drop and capturing that movement this image is meant to look like the man wasn't stationary whilst the picture was being taken.