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The station physiologique and Georges Demenÿ (1)

Georges Demenÿ (1850-1918) is known today as one of the founders of physical education in France and a key figure in the movement which saw physical education and sport as a means of national regeneration, both physical and spiritual. Marey took Demenÿ on as an aide in 1881 and a year later had him officially named his "préparateur", or assistant, at the Collège de France. Demenÿ would become indispensable in front of and behind the camera; he made and processed the bulk of the photographic experiments; he was put in charge of the dynamometers and odometers employed to measure force and distance, respectively, and he was responsible for deciphering and collating the complex data which these machines furnished.

By the spring of 1883, Demenÿ had a black “hangar” constructed for Marey as a backdrop for his photographic experiments at the rim of the outer oval of the Station Physiologique This was a shed 3 meters deep, fifteen meters long and four meters high. It was oriented so that the sun did not penetrate its depths but did illuminate the walking subject passing in front of it. He had the interior painted black but then darkened it further by covering the walls and floor with black velvet. This second hangar noir replaced an earlier version which was too shallow and let in too much sunlight that fogged the plates.

By the end of the summer of 1883 alternating black and white blocks, each one-half meter long, were placed along the track in front of the hangar.