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Exhibition
But the Museum “Prehistory of Film” offers much more: There are 14 different stations of topics where the visitor cannot only see the historical artefacts, but can try himself the model- replicates of the exhibits and discover optical phenomena.
On the second floor you get to know something about “the moving picture and the early technologies”. Maybe known by everyone: the thumb cinema. This “cinema for the pocket” was of course already very close to the scenic sequences of a picture. On this floor you can also find the different stages of development leading to this object. Zoetropes, wheels of life and thaumatropes are excellent examples to show how the optical delusion gained in dynamic and depth. In the third part of the museum, which is already located in the dome of the tower, the visitor can see peep-boxes, early photography and, of course, the world biggest “walk-in“ Camera Obscura! The peep-box was for a long time the “historical television” which spread news, but also showed pictures of landscapes, cities and natural disasters. The principle of the Camera Obscura was already described by Aristotle in the fourth century before Christ. During the centuries it was built in many different ways. A Camera Obscura for journeys, for example, – which gave the traveller the opportunity to draw sketches without any talent – was very popular. The presentation of the Camera Obscura at the projection surface in the dome of the tower is the grand finale of both an entertaining and an instructive visit to the Museum “Prehistory of Film”.
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| © Mülheimer Stadtmarketing und Tourismus GmbH, Stand: 06.09.2010 | www.camera-obscura-muelheim.de | ||||