GARDEN OF TIME-LAPSE
films by John Nash Ott
JOHN NASH OTT
The John Nash Ott Collection spans decades of Ott’s prolific filmmaking hobby-turned-career, including episodes of his weekly 1950s television series How Does Your Garden Grow?, elements from his self-distributed educational films on a range of topics including the benefits of full-spectrum light, and Kodachrome time-lapse footage of flowers blooming that he brought with him for his lectures at garden clubs across the country.
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Dr. John Nash Ott (October 23, 1909 – April 12, 2000) was a photographer and cinematographer who developed many modern photographic practices, including time-lapse photography and full-spectrum lighting.
Initially, Ott's interest in time-lapse movie photography, mostly of plants, was just a hobby. Starting in the 1930s, Ott bought and built more and more time-lapse equipment, eventually building a large greenhouse full of plants, cameras, and even self-built automated electric moving camera systems (the first movie camera motion control systems ever built) for moving the cameras to follow the growth of plants as they developed. He even time-lapsed his entire greenhouse of plants and cameras as they all worked, a virtual symphony of time-lapse movement. His work was featured on an episode of the second incarnation of the request TV show, You Asked For It, in the late 1950s.
GARDEN
Spider Flower, 1950
Strawberries, 1953
Water Lily​, 1952
Roses, 1950s
Ragweed, 1957
Pink Hibiscus​, 1956
Phlox, 1950s
Pink Geranium, 1955
Pepper, 1953
Eggplant, 1953
Caliandra, 1957
Calceolaria, 1951
Dahlias, 1952
Tuberous Begonias, 1952
Marigold and Lantana​, 1955