Cameras Were Invented in the 10th Century and, Believe It or Not, You've Seen the Pictures | The Communication Blog

Monday, December 27, 2010

Cameras Were Invented in the 10th Century and, Believe It or Not, You've Seen the Pictures

By James London Devasher


Believe it or not, the camera is almost 1,000 years old. Problem is, film was not invented until 1884. But that didn't stop people from making pictures.

The Camera Obscura

Naturally, those first "cameras" were not the cameras of today, with their auto-focus, telephoto lens, motor driven film advance, f-stops and all that.

In fact, most of us would be hard pressed to guess that the were cameras at all.

The camera obscura was a basically large dark box with a hole in one side for light to shine into. The light shining through this hole would project an upside down image of the world on the other side of the box. You made have done something similar in grade school to "view" a solar eclipse without injuring your eyes.

Most of the boxes were big enough that the artist could actually sit completely inside them -- though their were some "portable" models to choose from.

Then the artist could simply trace the picture onto canvas or paper.

An Arab Invention

Abu Ali Al-hasen Ibn Alhasen, an Islamic mathematician is usually credited with the invention of this drawing box but the idea behind it was mentioned by earlier scholars, including Aristotle.

A Vast Collection of Pictures

Many, many artists from the 10th century right up to today have used this technique. Today artists typically use a device that projects a photograph onto the painting surface with lights and lens -- but the general idea is exactly the same.

So -- if you have seen any paintings at all from the 10th century onward, chances are very good that you have seen at least one - probably many - of these "photos."

Believe it or not.




About the Author:



The Communication Blog
Bookmark and Share

No comments:

Post a Comment

 

The Communication Blog Copyright © 2009