Le
Réalisateur
Le Prince de Galles (1892)
La Sortie des usines Lumière
(1895)
L'Arroseur arrosé
(1895)
La Voltige (1895)
Le Saut à la couverture
(1895)
Récréation
à la Martinière (1895)
Repas de bébé
(1895)
Querelle enfantine (1895)
La Pêche aux poissons
rouges (1895)
Promenade des congressistes
sur le bord de la Saône (1895)
Place des Cordeliers à
Lyon (1895)
Photographe (1895)
Partie de tric-trac (1895)
Partie d'écarte (1895)
La Mer (1895)
Le Maréchal-ferrant
(1895)
Lyon, place Bellecour (1895)
Lancement d'un navire à
la Ciotat (1895)
Les Forgerons (1895)
Enfants aux jouets (1895)
Départ en voiture
(1895)
Le Déjeuner du chat
(1895)
Le Débarquement du
congrès de photographie à Lyon (1895)
Discussion de m
Course en sac (1895)
La Charcuterie mécanique
(1895)
Chapeaux à transformations
(1895)
Bocal aux poissons-rouges
(1895)
Barque sortant du port (1895)
Baignade en mer (1895)
Ateliers de La Ciotat (1895)
Assiettes tournantes (1895)
Arrivée des congressistes
à Neuville-sur-Saône (1895)
L'Arrivée d'un train
à la Ciotat (1895)
Pont de la Tour (1896)
Melbourne (1896)
Mauvaises herbes (1896)
Démolition d'un mur
(1896)
Bains de Diane à
Milan, Les (1896)
Touristes revenant d'une
excursion (1897)
Scènes d'enfants
(1897)
Ronde enfantine (1897)
Retour d'une promenade en
mer (1897)
Repas en famille (1897)
Radeau avec baigneurs (1897)
Premiers pas de bébé
(1897)
Petit frère et petite
soeur (1897)
Menuisiers (1897)
Marché (1897)
Leçon de bicyclette
(1897)
Laveuses (1897)
Enfants au bord de la mer
(1897)
Enfant et chien (1897)
Embarquement pour le promenade
(1897)
Douche après le bain
(1897)
Concourse de boules (1897)
Barque en mer (1897)
Bal d'enfants (1897)
Bains en mer (1897)
Baignade en mer (1897)
Arrivée d'un bateau
à vapeur (1897)
La Vie et la passion de
Jésus-Christ (1898)
Un lourd chargement (1898)
Peinture à l'envers
(1898)
Lourdes (1898)
La Tour Eiffel (1900)
Pont d'Iéna (1900)
Inauguration de l'exposition
universelle (1900)
Danses espagnoles (1900)
Le Ring (1901)
Louis Lumière
Born: Besançon, France,
5 October 1864.
Died: Bandol, Var, France,
6 June 1948.
Auguste Lumière
Born: Besançon, France,
19 October 1862.
Died: Lyon, France, 10 April
1954.
The Lumière home is
now a museum at 1 rue du Premier Film, Lyon. |
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Often cited as the creator
of cinema, Louis Lumière, along with his close brother Auguste,
occupies a unique and pivotal position in the history of film. It
was the Lumière brothers who invented and patented (on 13 February
1895) the Cinematograph, the first device to photograph and project moving
images onto a screen. This was an invention which would revolutionise
communication and entertainment across the world within an incredibly short
time, making it a significant milestone in the development of modern civilisation.
Yet, ironically, the Lumières
regarded their invention as no more than a curiosity, something which would
be forgotten once its novelty value had worn off. Auguste was particularly
sceptical and very quickly lost interest in his new discovery. It
was left largely to Louis to explore the new medium and to exploit its
commercial potential.
Louis was the more artistically
minded of the two brothers – it was he who photographed and directed the
Lumières’ first films. Auguste was more a scientist, in the
traditional sense of the word, but also a very competent technician.
Both were looking for new products to sell in their Lyon-based photographic
business which they had inherited from their father, Antoine, and were
constantly engaged in research to refine techniques and invent new devices.
It was this research which
led to the creation of the Cinematograph, a sophisicated development of
Thomas Edison's Kinetoscope. The new device, which Auguste regarded
as a mere toy, was first demonstrated on 22 March 1895. This was
followed by the first public showing of a number of Louis’ short films
in Paris on 28 December 1895, a date which is often cited as marking the
birth of cinema.
La Sortie des usines Lumière
(1895)
L’Arrivée d'un
train à la Ciotat (1895)

To promote their new invention,
Louis Lumière made a number of films, using a documentary approach
to record actual scenes from everyday life rather than fictional dramas.
These include images of a train arriving at a station (L'Arrivée
d'un train en gare de La Ciotat) and of workers leave the Lumieres’
factories (La Sortie des usines Lumière).
The Lumières hired
cinematographers who were sent all over the world to record news events
and obtain a visual record of life in many different countries. Within
two years, the Lumières had built up a catalogue of around a thousand
films (mostly involving a single shot and running to under a minute).
Within a short time, the
Lumières gave up film-making to concentrate on developing further
cinematic products and techniques (including wide-screen, colour and 3D).
Although they remained sceptical about the future of cinema, their work
was to provide both the means and the inspiration for a whole new generation
of artists to develop and exploit the potential of the exciting new medium
of cinema.
Watch some of the Lumière brothers' first films on this DVD:
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