A year ago I made a post about Pepper’s Ghost. It began with, “Who has not been scared
and at the same time excited by a ghost story or the inexplicable appearance of
an apparition. Fascination with ghosts and the afterworld have gripped
audiences for centuries. Our appetite for such titillation seems insatiable.
Ghost shows are nothing new. Writers, magicians, and lanternists have long used
the popular fascination with ghosts and apparitions for their advantage. From
its earliest inception the magic lantern has employed ghost figures to frighten
and to entertain audiences. Some of the very earliest magic lantern images in
the last part of the 17th century were of ghosts and demons. Calling forth such figures reached a
new height in the late 1700s and early 1800s largely due to two showmen and
their shows. The Fantasmagorie shows, popularized by Belgian showman Éttiene-Gaspard Robertson and
the Phantasmagoria shows of magician Paul de Philipsthal, called forth
apparitions onto the screen. Their shows ingeniously employed rear projection.
The lanternist was hidden from the audience behind the screen. In a darkened
room the images would appear on the screen as if from nowhere. By moving the
lantern, the figure could be made smaller or larger such that the ghosts would
appear and then menacingly approach the audience.”
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Now back to the
tale of ghost projection. Éttiene-Gaspard
Robertson certainly was aware of the work of Eckartshausen and
created his own ghost effects. The image below is the frontispiece from Robertson’s
Mémoires Récréatifs,
Scientifiques Et Anecdotiques (1831) and shows the impact of the
appearance of apparitions on an audience.
The second illustration from a book published in 1811 shows a ghost
projection with the lanternist hidden behind the screen.
Those wanting to learn more about ghost shows and
Phantasmagoria entertainment should read Mervyn Heard’s book Phantasmagoria,
The Secret Life of the Magic Lantern.
I have put a number of prints and broadsides relating to the
Phantasmagoria on my web site.
Hello,
ReplyDeleteDoes the first engraving in this post comes from the book Aufschlüsse zur Magie aus geprüften Erfahrungen über verborgene philosophische Wissenschaften und verdeckte Geheimnisse der Natur ?
Do we know the artist who engraved it ?
Thank you