Christine Burgin | Further Reading Library
Margaret Watts Hughes: Sound May Be Seen
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Author: Hughes, Margaret
The acclaimed Welsh singer and philanthropist Margaret Watts Hughes (1842–1907) was one of many inventors of her day fascinated by the visual documentation of sound. By singing into her self-designed "eidophone", the vibrations of her voice would etch out patterns onto a disc: an artistic rendering of the scientific principle of standing-wave resonance. This title presents selections from Hughes’ original 1891 publication “Voice Figures” and a rare surviving set of her glass slides.Her “eidophone” comprised a tube attached to a chamber covered in rubber, or “diaphragm.” Hughes covered a glass slide with grains of sand or coarse pigment, then saturated it with water or milk. Her “Voice Figures,” as she called them, ranged from primitive patterns to designs resembling flowers, seashells and other natural phenomena. While Hughes valued her discovery for both its scientific and spiritual implications, leaders of the Theosophical movement saw her work as a means of making visible the invisible world.
ISBN 9780997645668. Christine Burgin | Further Reading Library. hb. 88 pages. 45 colour, 6 b/w ills. 17.8 x 12.1 cm.
available
The acclaimed Welsh singer and philanthropist Margaret Watts Hughes (1842–1907) was one of many inventors of her day fascinated by the visual documentation of sound. By singing into her self-designed "eidophone", the vibrations of her voice would etch out patterns onto a disc: an artistic rendering of the scientific principle of standing-wave resonance. This title presents selections from Hughes’ original 1891 publication “Voice Figures” and a rare surviving set of her glass slides.Her “eidophone” comprised a tube attached to a chamber covered in rubber, or “diaphragm.” Hughes covered a glass slide with grains of sand or coarse pigment, then saturated it with water or milk. Her “Voice Figures,” as she called them, ranged from primitive patterns to designs resembling flowers, seashells and other natural phenomena. While Hughes valued her discovery for both its scientific and spiritual implications, leaders of the Theosophical movement saw her work as a means of making visible the invisible world.
ISBN 9780997645668. Christine Burgin | Further Reading Library. hb. 88 pages. 45 colour, 6 b/w ills. 17.8 x 12.1 cm.
available