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In 1787, English artist Robert
Barker was awarded a patent for
developing the perspective
techniques to give a continuous
painting the appearance of all-around
vision. His creation was
the Cyclorama, a 360° painting,
first displayed in a purpose-built
cylindrical building in Leicester
Square in 1793.
To view London From the Roof of
the Albion Mills, you stood on a
platform built to resemble a
rooftop, with the painting all
around you, just as if you were
standing atop the actual mills, just
blocks away. It was sensationally
popular, and cycloramas became
a major attraction in all the large
cities. You may still view one today
in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania at the
battlefield museum there.
It wasn’t long before
photographers were creating a
truncated version of the
cyclorama. Panoramic
photography used three or more
exposures to cover a viewing
angle that a single lens could not
encompass. Perfectly suited to
landscape photography, the
technique was often used to
document Civil War battlefields at
the end of fighting.
While Disneyland’s “CircleVision”
is the direct descendant of the
cyclorama, it was not the first use
of the motion picture camera in
this way. Surprisingly, the 1900
Paris Exposition featured a 10-
projector simulated balloon ride.
Patrons stood on top of a
projection room dressed like a
giant balloon basket, under a
huge prop balloon. The images
were projected on a full 360°
screen around them. Closed after
only a few days as a fire hazard
(the booth was unvented) the
exhibit had a prescient name –
Cineorama.
The first use of a 3-projector
panorama in a motion picture was
in 1927 (curiously, the same year
the anamorphic lens was
invented). French director Abel
Gance felt that the climax to his 5-
hour Napoleon needed a big
finish, so he shot the final scenes
with three cameras mounted over-
and-under, and was pleased to
see that his “polyvision” really
worked. No one would attempt it
again for 25 years.
Fred Waller was head of the
effects, and later, short subjects
departments at the Astoria, NY
studios of Paramount Pictures
during the 1920s & 30s. When he
noticed that pictures
photographed with very wide
angle lenses had a slight
impression of depth, he embarked
upon a quest to reproduce, as
nearly as possible, the full range
of human vision.
He succeeded - spectacularly.
Fred Waller
The man who accomplished this
was always something of a
prodigy. Born in 1896 in Brooklyn,
he was repairing his own bicycle –
and his friends’ – at the age of 4.
His father was the first commercial
photographer in New York, and
after a bout of teenage
pneumonia, Waller left Brooklyn
Polytechnic at 14 to join him, no
doubt to the relief of his physics
teachers who were forever losing
arguments with him.
While there, he invented many
labor saving devices he kept
secret, and patented the first
automatic printer/timer for still
photographs. When a shortage of
photo supplies during WWI led to
the closing of the business, he
opened an art studio for the
creation of silent film intertitles,
working exclusively for Famous
Players Lasky (later Paramount
Pictures).
In 1924 Fred joined Paramount
directly as head of Special Effects
at their east coast production
facility in Astoria, Queens. While
there, he produced a cyclone for
D. W. Griffith, a shipwreck for
Cecil B. DeMille, turned
Cinderella’s pumpkin into a coach
and four and in 1925 built the
studio’s first optical printer. He
was intrigued when he noticed
that just as a telephoto lens will
compress an image onto a plane,
a wide angle lens does the
opposite - gives a sense of depth –
without any cumbersome 3-D
apparatus. Thus began an intense
study of perception that would last
over a decade.
Paramount closed Astoria in 1927,
but Waller didn’t waste the hiatus
– he went into the boat business
and invented the water ski.
Returning to Paramount in 1929
as head of short subject
production, he became the
favorite director of Duke Ellington,
Bessie Smith and other major
black talent of the day. His
musical shorts were distinguished
by their creative camerawork and
high production value.
All the while, Waller was
continuing his study of perception.
He recognized that each human
eye sees two-thirds of the total
viewing angle, but we see in 3-D
only where the two eyes overlap –
directly ahead. Everything further
than a few dozen yards away is a
flat plane. Often found walking
around the house with toothpicks
stuck in the brim of his hat, he
conducted experiments that
surprisingly revealed that it was
peripheral vision – and not
straight ahead vision that
mattered most in spatial
perception. Subjects with this
center portion blocked navigated
a room full of furniture without
incident. Those with their
peripheral vision obscured (like a
horse wearing blinkers) fell about.
Only one facet eluded him – a
panoramic depiction of reality
would require an enormous flat
screen, perhaps hundreds of feet
wide.
About this time, Waller was
contacted by some exhibitors at
the 1939 New York World’s Fair.
For Eastman Kodak he provided
several multi-panel slide displays
for their Hall of Color. But it was
his first glimpse of the interior of
the theme building that made it all
come together. The Perisphere was
curved. Imagine Waller clapping
his hand to his forehead with the
1939 equivalent of “Duh!”
flickering across his mind. Human
vision is a curved – not a flat –
field.
Ready at last to turn his studies into
a practical motion picture system,
he set up shop in the carriage
house of boating pal David
Rockefeller’s Manhattan mansion.
His first generation system worked
– but was far from “practical”. It
used 11 (!) 16mm cameras to
shoot a combined hemispherical
image of 2 over 4 over 5 individual
films. Connected by external drive
belts which synchronized the
cameras, the “11-eyed monster”
was used for several test films
which revealed that the angle of
view was so large that the outside
cameras were photographing each
other. Waller called the contraption
the VITARAMA.
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