Abstract
The article reflects on the visualization of the city in the late 1890s and early
1900s, with reference to English animated photography and film: two media that are
intimately related in terms of technology but worlds apart in terms of form. While
both animated photography and film shared an elective affinity with the city, each
was drawn to the urban environment for different reasons. Anima-photographers were
particularly concerned with the movement and pace of the city and endeavoured to
capture the `true motion' of such a dynamic space. Film, by contrast, began to probe
the `optical unconscious' of urban space as a way of drawing out its undisclosed
potential. Consequently, concerns with rendering `true motion' gave way to an
appreciation of modernity's `vernacular relativity', especially in the form of
montage. It was this shift that enabled filmmakers to re-engineer space and time,
developing all manner of editing techniques with which to rearticulate the world.
Hence the revolutionary potential of film. To demonstrate the significance of this
shift, two recent projects that rework animated photographs taken in the 1890s and
1900s are explored: Patrick Keiller's
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