The
house of the eldest famous Lumière is quite the museum, with technological
progression and familial timeline laid out in the lower floor and some examples
of their work alongside a historic bedroom on full display upstairs. The
museum covered everything from the older daguerreotype-esqe plate-based
photography up to somewhat modern film cameras, both single shot and multi
shot. Of note was one of the earlier examples of a multi shot camera, somewhat
similar to the “obsolete technology” of the disposable camera (or really any
other modern film camera), shaped like a rifle with a full stock and set of
sights. Some of the Lumière family’s work on color photography was showcased,
apparently having taken a backseat to the film technology. There was also a
wonderful viewing gallery of some of the films the brothers had created, my
personal favorite being “Machine À Damer Jonage”, a short display of some early
ancestor of the modern steamroller during the construction of an embankment
near the Rhône River. Unlike most of the other films, this was an accidental
technical documentary, as the type of compaction machine they used has not been
preserved, or at least not publicly. The first film, called something along the lines of "workers leaving the factory" was filmed at the nearby factory, the remains of which were also accessible, though not terribly intact.
It was intriguing getting to see all of the variations of cameras in the museum. Obviously getting to see the Lumieres’ camera inventions was interesting, but seeing things like the multishot camera, essentially a “camera gun” added some context to what the Lumieres wanted to accomplish, as well as a spark of interest as I’m sure many have probably never seen or heard of such inventions.
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