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Katsudō Shashin. Katsudō Shashin consists of a series of cartoon images on fifty frames of a celluloid strip and lasts three seconds at sixteen frames per second. [1] It depicts a young boy in a sailor suit who writes the kanji characters "活動写真" (katsudō shashin, "moving picture" or "Activity photo") from right to left, then turns to the viewer, removes his hat, and bows. [1]
Katsudō_Shashin_(1907).webm (WebM audio/video file, VP8/Vorbis, length 3.5 s, 320 × 240 pixels, 220 kbps overall, file size: 95 KB) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
Katsudō Shashin. According to Natsuki Matsumoto, the first animated film produced in Japan may have stemmed from as early as 1907. Known as Katsudō Shashin (活動写真, "Activity Photo"), from its depiction of a boy in a sailor suit drawing the characters for katsudō shashin, the film was first found in 2005.
According to the article, Katsudō Shashin (活動写真?, Moving Picture), or the Matsumoto fragment, refers to a Japanese animated film speculated to be the oldest work of animation in Japan. Its creator is unknown; evidence suggests it was made sometime between 1907 and 1911, possibly predating the earliest displays of Western animation in ...
Events in 1907 in animation. ... Date unknown – Katsudō Shashin, the oldest known work of animation from Japan. Its creator is unknown. [1] [2] Births. January.
Katsudō Shashin (1907) By 1897, German toy manufacturer Gebrüder Bing had a first prototype of their toy kinematograph, [2] which they presented at a toy convention in Leipzig in November 1898. Soon after, other toy manufacturers in Germany and France, including Ernst Plank, Georges Carette, and Lapierre, started selling similar devices.
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Katsudō Shashin is a filmstrip speculated to be the oldest work of animation in Japan. Three seconds long, it depicts a boy who writes "moving picture" in Japanese script , removes his hat, and waves.