A Conversation for Ask h2g2

Flying horses???

Post 1

bronsdad

Visiting a castle on Arran (Scotland) recently, I noticed all the paintings of horses galloping depicted them as flying with all their legs in the air.

I know that the prevailing thought in early days was that when a horse was galloping , either all its legs was raised or it was pushing of with all four. I also think that that this was dispelled when high speed photography showed the true movement of horses galloping.

Does anybody know if this was the case and when this was discovered and by whom?

Thanks, BD2.


Flying horses???

Post 2

Zak T Duck

The person who did the photographs was a man called Eadweard Muybridge, and the photographs proved that at one point during a gallop, horses do lift all its legs off the ground at once.

There's something about it here:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/muybridge_eadweard.shtml


Flying horses???

Post 3

bronsdad

Thanks!

Obviously i got it all back to front and now you mention it I seem to remember a recreation of this experiment on television some time ago.

BD2.


Flying horses???

Post 4

A Super Furry Animal

I went to see "Stubbs And The Horse" at the National Gallery a couple of weeks ago, and in his early paintings of horse races and hunts this is how he painted the horses. It seemed to be the accepted way before photography proved otherwise.

I think he kinda figured that it looked wrong though, as he stopped painting horses on the move fairly early on, and did them in standing groups. And usually side on at that, as he was rubbish at perspective too.

RFsmiley - evilgrin


Flying horses???

Post 5

I'm not really here

Having looked at the image on that link, they only seem to lift all their legs off when they are underneath them, rather than when they are all stretched out.


Flying horses???

Post 6

Xanatic

From what I understand, the results from photographs were more or less ignored, as it just didn't look right on a painting.


Flying horses???

Post 7

Still Incognitas, Still Chairthingy, Still lurking, Still invisible, unnoticeable, missable, unseen, just haunting h2g2

It's like jumping up off all four limbs at once.I have great respect for horses.I could never do that.smiley - smiley


Flying horses???

Post 8

Gnomon - time to move on

Horses were always drawn with all four legs off the ground, stretched out (front legs stretched forward, back legs backward). When photos showed this to be wrong, painters started painting the horses in the correct arrangement with all four legs tucked in under the horse and off the ground, but it just didn't look right, so in modern pictures, they use a sort of a compromise with one or two legs stretched out.


Flying horses???

Post 9

A Super Furry Animal

Well, there's also a compromise position, which painters don't seem to have mastered, as there are intermediate positions for the legs between *all tucked up under the body* and *stupidly looking like they're trying to fly*.

But strangely, people stopped painting horses at about the same time.

RFsmiley - evilgrin


Flying horses???

Post 10

I'm not really here

Why bother to paint, when you can just take a photo? smiley - biggrin


Flying horses???

Post 11

Xanatic

Yeah, and then use the painting function in any decent photo editing programme smiley - smiley


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