My latest book is all
about a magic show, and while I was making it I got really interested in the
history of magic and how illusions are made. So that’s what this post is about.
When I was
small I used to long for something magical to happen: for the biscuit bear I’d
just baked to come to life, to find a mysterious lamp-post or cupboard full of
fur coats that would transport me to another world (I was obsessed with Narnia),
to make a potion & find it actually worked, for my cat to talk.
But I never seemed to find the magic that I was looking for. My cat never spoke a word to me, my potions made nothing happen and all I ever found round the other side of the lamp-post …was the other side of the lamp-post.
Here is my cat C1973.
In a basket. I’m the one holding the bicycle
|
But I never seemed to find the magic that I was looking for. My cat never spoke a word to me, my potions made nothing happen and all I ever found round the other side of the lamp-post …was the other side of the lamp-post.
A likely-looking lamppost |
But why this
yearning to witness magic?
When magic
happens in books and films it seems so easy. We’re used to seeing magic
whooshing out of Harry Potter’s wand and extraordinary transformations
happening onscreen and on the page. And with the dark arts of cameras and
drawing and special effects anything is possible. But what about Real Life
Magic?
Harry summons
his patronus
|
Real-life
magic is harder. Real-life magic is really hard work. Real-life magic is
putting in more practice than anyone would ever believe to make something seem
effortless.
Here are some acrobats doing something that looks just about
impossible. But I suspect that this feat has been achieved not with magic but
with an astonishing amount of practice, skill and hard work. (Plus nerves of
steel.)
So one ingredient of magic is a lot of hard work, invisibly
hidden away. But magic tricks done by magicians use the way our brains and
vision work so that our brains are helping the illusion to happen – our brain
is being the magician’s assistant.
And since our brain is being the magician’s assistant, the
magician won’t have to distract or misdirect us necessarily, but will want to
be directing our attention towards the magical effect…which means we do the
magic – in our heads, with our story-telling brains.
Our vision is constantly trying to make a story it can
understand about the world – to work out what is going on so we can predict
what might happen next, and we know what to do. Optical illusions are a great
way to see this in action.
Here’s a grey bar on top of a grey gradient. Look at the
grey colour on the bar, and what happens if I cover the gradient background,
first the top:
The grey bar that seemed to have such a definite shading
from light to dark at first – has gone flat. Which it was all along. Our eyes
couldn’t help attempting to construct an image using our ideas of relative
light and shade.
Here’s an invisible triangle – what can you see? Can you see
its edges? Is it really there? To our eyes, a triangle is a better idea of what
might happen than a non-triangle.
With optical illusions you can see your eyes and brain at
work constructing the world.
Let’s say a magician makes
a card disappear and shows you that it had, then produces it out of someone’s
ear. He’s shown show both sides of his hand after the disappearance – but you
can’t see both sides at the same time, so have you seen there’s no card? Your brain
invents a story, and the story you see is the card has vanished. The story is
not that the magician has practiced flipping a card round his hand more times
than you can imagine so he or she can do it with supernatural unbelievable
skill. Remember those acrobats: what they do is incredible, magical – but we
know how they did it – an incredible amount of working at it.
When your brain’s story & the evidence don’t match, you
either change your view of what’s going on, or call it magic… The fascinating
thing about magic is it reveals how our brains work: how we are storytelling
all the time, constructing stories, taking shortcuts and filling in the gaps.
Arthur C Clarke famously said “Any sufficiently advanced
technology is indistinguishable from magic.” The history of magic really runs
parallel with technological innovations. For example, making a ghost appear on
stage wasn’t possible until the invention of plate glass – in big sheets. The
Pepper’s Ghost Illusion meant hiding a huge sheet of glass in front of the
stage, angled to reflect a figure hidden below the stage – when they were
illuminated with a strong light they’d magically appear. Nobody watching was
expecting to see huge sheets of hidden plate glass – so they didn’t see it –
and Pepper’s Ghost was a sensation.
But back to books.
Books are masters of disguise – they can be like so many
things. A book can be like a door, a museum, a time-machine, a theatre show.
Chris Riddell
showing how books are like doors
|
Every reading of a picture book is like putting on a new
performance. When I made the Bad Bunnies’ Magic Show I wanted to make a book
that was like a theatre performance, and I wanted the reader to be the
audience.
At first I wanted the bunnies’ magic tricks to be proper
pop-up paper-engineering, because playing around with pop-ups is such a lot of
fun. I managed to make a cabinet that could make Lovely Brenda appear and
disappear.
Here’s the
Brenda Cabinet in action. It’s a fold-up thing called a tetraflexibook
|
But I realised the transformations I wanted to happen would
be really complicated to engineer - and
the complicatedness of the mechanisms might limit their visual impact. So as
often happens – I found that less is more, and just cutting into the page edge
with a magical sort of shape could be all the magic I needed.
Here is Cadabra
doing some knife throwing
|
and a
bird-to-beast transformation.
|
The bunnies’ plan is foiled |
and here they are being blasted. |
So, to return to my childhood hunt for real magic – what it
would mean to see something truly inexplicable and magic happen? What if my cat
did start talking to me?
It would mean I’d have to rethink my entire world
model…which would be weird and exciting, but alas still hasn’t had to happen.
The Great Randi, Uri Geller and the
Spoons
Uri Geller is an illusionist who did a lot of spoon bending,
and explained that it was happening through the force of his mind.
James Randi (the Great Randi) was an incredible magician who
also put a lot of time into exposing the deceptions of fraudsters and
confidence tricksters. Randi studied Geller’s performances, and worked out
exactly how he was producing the illusion of a spoon bending to his will. Randi
could demonstrate spoon bending exactly like Uri Geller, but when he did it,
people said – “Oh that’s just a trick.” “But what about Uri Geller?” they might
be asked. The reply would be “Oh no - when
he’s
doing it, it’s magic.”
To me, magic shows the power of our story-telling minds.
Storytelling is how our brains are constructing our worlds. Storytelling is how
our brains construct our pasts and predict our futures – and decide what to
believe.
Mini Grey is the author and illustrator of "Biscuit Bear", "Hermelin", "Three By The Sea" and the inimitable "Traction Man" amongst others. Mini lives in Oxford with her family and cat Bonzetta.
"The Bad Bunnies Magic Show" is out now from Simon & Schuster
See more of Mini's work on her website here
"The Bad Bunnies Magic Show" is out now from Simon & Schuster
See more of Mini's work on her website here
14 comments:
A lovely post Mini!
Working as authors and illustrators of picture books is all about creating magic. As a boy I remember that feeling of being transported to other worlds through words and pictures, all those little details that send the imagination flying, and that is one element that drives my work. What a privilege to inspire kids travelling through imagination. Let's be the magicians of picture books!
Thanks for such a great guest post, Mini!
Loved you post, Mini, thanks!
It's really fun to think about magic as a kind of 'story'. Children are naturally disposed to believing and seeing the wonder in the world around them. Grown-ups sometimes need a bit of magic to remind them, perhaps. And sometimes, the simplest illusion is the most mind-bending. Thanks for this post, Mini!
Loved this post.
Thanks Garry! We've officially started the Picture Book Magicians Society! The other great thing about picture books is that quite a lot of work has to be done by the reader's imagination (which means the special effects budget can be quite low!)
Thank you indeed Jonathan - the history of magic is a fascinating topic that I've hardly touched on here!
Many thanks Jane!
I love the simple illusion. I remember being fascinated as a child at how our neighbour could detach his thumb and put it back on again...the oldest trick in the book...
Thank you Chitra!
A delightful blog post, Mini. I adore the idea of bunnies taking over the magic show. When I was very young my dad performed magic tricks at my birthday party and for one trick I had to be a pretend 'teapot' - I'll still swear I saw the tea literally flowing out of my fingers and filling the tea cup. You won't persuade me otherwise!!
Thanks Paeony! I love the strength of the magical tea illusion memory - how on earth did your dad do that I wonder.....?
Ha ha, I suspect the cup had a hidden hollow bottom/sides that my dad filled with water before the trick and released when I tipped my body/arm. Or maybe it really was magic, though I suspect it wouldn't take much to convince me something was magic. I remain sure I flew for a few moments whilst flapping my arms when jumping off a chair; plus I was afraid of pelicans behind the curtains because I'd once seen them hiding there (in Orpington?!); and I know I saw Santa one night whilst peeping out of the bedroom window!! So your Bad Bunnies could persuade me to believe anything!
This is a really good blog wish more people would read this, you offer some really good suggestions on Magician For Birthday Party. Thanks for sharing!
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