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Auction /28 October 2022 /11 am ct

One Giant Leap for Mankind:
Vintage Photographs from the
Victor Martin-Malburet Collection

Information View Lots

Marking the 50th anniversary of the last human voyage to the moon, Wright and LAMA are pleased to present One Giant Leap for Mankind: Vintage Photographs from the Victor Martin-Malburet Collection, Celebrating the 50th Anniversary of Project Apollo (1961-1972).

This stunning collection comprises more than 300 original historic photographs from Project Apollo, the NASA program responsible for placing the first humans on the surface of the moon. Meticulously researched and collected over the course of 25 years by Victor Martin-Malburet, each image represents extraordinary feats of human exploration, imagination, and collaboration, and many of those being offered have never been published.

From the only photo of Neil Armstrong on the moon to a rare print of The Blue Marble – the most reproduced photograph in human history – to the first selfie in space, One Giant Leap bursts with unprecedented images that invite reflection on the evolving legacy of Project Apollo and its resounding impacts on art, science, and human potential.

The Apollo astronauts are often presented as great scientists and heroes, but rarely are they hailed as some of the most significant photographers of all time.

Victor Martin-Malburet

A World of 'Firsts'

, The first Original Seven Mercury astronauts wearing their first pressure spacesuits, Ralph Morse [Project Mercury], July 1960

100

The first Original Seven Mercury astronauts wearing their first pressure spacesuits, Ralph Morse [Project Mercury], July 1960

estimate: $2,000–3,000

result: $750

, First human-taken photograph from space: Blue Earth horizon and black sky of space from Friendship 7, John Glenn [Mercury Atlas 6], 20 February 1962

106

First human-taken photograph from space: Blue Earth horizon and black sky of space from Friendship 7, John Glenn [Mercury Atlas 6], 20 February 1962

estimate: $5,000–7,000

result: $3,750

, The first image of a US astronaut in orbit: John Glenn in weightlessness inside Friendship 7 during the first US orbital mission, NASA [Mercury Atlas 6], 20 February 1962

107

The first image of a US astronaut in orbit: John Glenn in weightlessness inside Friendship 7 during the first US orbital mission, NASA [Mercury Atlas 6], 20 February 1962

estimate: $1,200–1,800

result: $375

, The first photograph of a human being in outer space: Ed White over Hawaii during the first US spacewalk, James McDivitt [Gemini IV], 3-7 June 1965

118

The first photograph of a human being in outer space: Ed White over Hawaii during the first US spacewalk, James McDivitt [Gemini IV], 3-7 June 1965

estimate: $5,000–7,000

result: $3,250

, First US spacewalk: Ed White floating in zero gravity over the Earth (large format), James McDivitt [Gemini IV], 3-7 June 1965

120

First US spacewalk: Ed White floating in zero gravity over the Earth (large format), James McDivitt [Gemini IV], 3-7 June 1965

estimate: $6,000–8,000

result: $4,375

, The first human-taken photograph from outer space, James McDivitt [Gemini IV], 3-7 June 1965

124

The first human-taken photograph from outer space, James McDivitt [Gemini IV], 3-7 June 1965

estimate: $5,000–7,000

result: $2,500

, The historic first full-face portrait of a human being in space: Ed White in weightlessness at the pilot’s seat of the capsule, James McDivitt [Gemini IV], 3-7 June 1965

126

The historic first full-face portrait of a human being in space: Ed White in weightlessness at the pilot’s seat of the capsule, James McDivitt [Gemini IV], 3-7 June 1965

estimate: $3,000–5,000

result: $1,750

, First rendezvous in space, at 17,000 mph: Gemini VII spacecraft orbiting the Earth (large format), Thomas Stafford [Gemini VI-A], 15-16 December 1965

131

First rendezvous in space, at 17,000 mph: Gemini VII spacecraft orbiting the Earth (large format), Thomas Stafford [Gemini VI-A], 15-16 December 1965

estimate: $3,000–5,000

result: $1,250

, The first color photograph of the whole Planet Earth, NASA [Apollo 4], 9 November 1967

173

The first color photograph of the whole Planet Earth, NASA [Apollo 4], 9 November 1967

estimate: $3,000–5,000

result: $4,940

, The first human-taken photograph in lunar orbit: Crater Langrenus, Frank Borman [Apollo 8], 21-27 December 1968

191

The first human-taken photograph in lunar orbit: Crater Langrenus, Frank Borman [Apollo 8], 21-27 December 1968

estimate: $1,000–1,500

result: $390

, The first human-taken photograph from the surface of another world, Neil Armstrong [Apollo 11], 16-24 July 1969

249

The first human-taken photograph from the surface of another world, Neil Armstrong [Apollo 11], 16-24 July 1969

estimate: $10,000–15,000

, The first photograph of a human onto the surface of another world, Neil Armstrong [Apollo 11], 16-24 July 1969

253

The first photograph of a human onto the surface of another world, Neil Armstrong [Apollo 11], 16-24 July 1969

estimate: $4,000–6,000

result: $1,500

If you get great photos, they’ll live forever...Your key to immortality is in the quality of the photograph and nothing else.

Richard Underwood, NASA Chief of Photography

earthrise
noun

the rising of the earth above the horizon of the moon as seen from lunar orbit



One Giant Leap spans the first-ever earthrise taken by the robotic spacecraft Lunar orbiter I in August 1966 to the first earthrise witnessed by humans, captured by William Anders of Apollo 8 in 1968, to the last earthrise, shot by Ronald Evans of Apollo 17 in December 1972.

, The first Earthrise in the history of humankind, Lunar Orbiter I, 23 August 1966

146

The first Earthrise in the history of humankind, Lunar Orbiter I, 23 August 1966

estimate: $6,000–8,000

result: $3,250

, First Earthrise: the first color photograph of the first Earthrise witnessed by humans (original square Hasselblad frame format), William Anders [Apollo 8], 21-27 December 1968

192

First Earthrise: the first color photograph of the first Earthrise witnessed by humans (original square Hasselblad frame format), William Anders [Apollo 8], 21-27 December 1968

estimate: $8,000–12,000

result: $5,625

, First Earthrise: the first color photograph of the first Earthrise witnessed by humans (landscape format), William Anders [Apollo 8], 21-27 December 1968

193

First Earthrise: the first color photograph of the first Earthrise witnessed by humans (landscape format), William Anders [Apollo 8], 21-27 December 1968

estimate: $8,000–12,000

result: $4,375

, First Earthrise: the extremely rare unpublished color photograph of the first Earthrise witnessed by humans, William Anders [Apollo 8], 21-27 December 1968

194

First Earthrise: the extremely rare unpublished color photograph of the first Earthrise witnessed by humans, William Anders [Apollo 8], 21-27 December 1968

estimate: $5,000–7,000

result: $4,375

, First Earthrise: the first color photograph of the first Earthrise witnessed by humans (large format), William Anders [Apollo 8], 21-27 December 1968

206

First Earthrise: the first color photograph of the first Earthrise witnessed by humans (large format), William Anders [Apollo 8], 21-27 December 1968

estimate: $12,000–18,000

result: $7,500

, Magnificent Earthrise, John Young [Apollo 10], 18-26 May 1969

229

Magnificent Earthrise, John Young [Apollo 10], 18-26 May 1969

estimate: $5,000–7,000

result: $3,000

, Earthrise and LM Eagle, Michael Collins [Apollo 11], 16-24 July 1969

284

Earthrise and LM Eagle, Michael Collins [Apollo 11], 16-24 July 1969

estimate: $4,000–6,000

result: $1,500

, LM Eagle and Earthrise Michael Collins [Apollo 11], 16-24 July 1969

285

LM Eagle and Earthrise Michael Collins [Apollo 11], 16-24 July 1969

estimate: $4,000–6,000

result: $3,500

, The first and only Earthrise ever photographed after trans Earth injection, Michael Collins [Apollo 11], 16-24 July 1969

286

The first and only Earthrise ever photographed after trans Earth injection, Michael Collins [Apollo 11], 16-24 July 1969

estimate: $6,000–8,000

result: $2,750

, Crescent Earthrise, Pete Conrad or Alan Bean [Apollo 12], 14-24 November 1969

296

Crescent Earthrise, Pete Conrad or Alan Bean [Apollo 12], 14-24 November 1969

estimate: $2,500–4,000

result: $625

, CSM Casper and Earthrise, Charles Duke [Apollo 16], 16-27 April 1972

372

CSM Casper and Earthrise, Charles Duke [Apollo 16], 16-27 April 1972

estimate: $2,000–3,000

result: $563

, Last Earthrise, Ronald Evans [Apollo 17], 7-19 December 1972

425

Last Earthrise, Ronald Evans [Apollo 17], 7-19 December 1972

estimate: $4,000–6,000

result: $1,625

The Photography of Another World: The Artistic Heritage of Apollo (1961-1972)

Victor Martin-Malburet

This essay was featured as the introduction for the exhibition catalog accompanying Lune: Du Voyage Réel aux Voyages Imaginaires at Galeries Nationales du Grand Palais, Paris, April –July 2019. Translated from its original French. 

Before the invention of photography, men relied on language, writing, painting and other means of representation to report on historical events or pioneering explorations. It has been almost two hundred years since photography has allowed us to seize the light of these events and freeze them over time. It is also photography that has allowed astronomy to develop, by capturing light information hitherto unavailable and by establishing close ties with space from its inception.

In May 1961, Alan Shepard became the first American to enter space, while President Kennedy announced that the US “should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to the Earth.” The most disruptive period of exploration in the history of mankind was launched, which was to conclude by the landing of six Apollo missions from July 1969 to December 1972. The astronauts brought back treasures from their voyages to the unknown: samples of lunar rock, scientific data, historic words, and photographs.

In our digital age, it is often difficult to remember that the Golden Age of Space Exploration and its extraordinary technical achievements corresponded to a time when photography was still analog, requiring light-sensitive chemistry, film and photographic papers. Paper was still the preferred medium for the dissemination of images and their scientific study. Each film exposed in space was developed, once the mission returned to Earth, by the photographic technology laboratory of the Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston. Duplicated in the form of a “master” — according to the operative terminology — the precious original film was immediately archived and preserved for future generations. From the “masters,” the photographs were printed, numbered and analyzed by NASA specialists. These prints, final products of the photographic chain, were documents for study, presentation and communication.

Aesthetic evidences and historical artifacts bearing negative numbers, legends, logos from NASA, quality control stamps and print marks from its photographic laboratories, these photographs constitute the visual legacy of an era that saw man leave the limits of his planet for the first time, explore another world and initiate the process of space colonization – as well as a new period in the history of photography.

...these photographs constitute the visual legacy of an era that saw man leave the limits of his planet for the first time, explore another world and initiate the process of space colonization – as well as a new period in the history of photography.

While explorers and photographers had hitherto remained confined within the limits of Earth, the first astronauts benefitted from entirely new sensory experiences and lighting conditions: in space, the notion of horizontality and verticality disappears with gravity, there is no longer day or night, and nothing filters the sunlight…Each of the photographs brought back by these privileged voyagers was the occasion of a new revelation, and some of them are among most famous in the history of the discipline.

However, the public was not aware of all their images: after each mission, NASA’s Public Affairs Office (or PAO, which managed the information and the communication of the agency) released only a selection of the photographs taken by the astronauts for publication (preferably those which had a strong impact and celebrated the mission’s success), getting them out of context. Intended for scientific circulation and publication in the medias and history books, many of these PAO photographs have become icons and belong to our visual culture. Constantly reused and reinterpreted, they are among the most reproduced images in history.

As for the unreleased photographs, they were accessible only to accredited researchers in the archives of the various NASA centers (in particular the Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston). For thirty years, until their progressive online publication on the Internet (websites of the Lunar and Planetary Institute and the Apollo Lunar Surface Journal), these “unreleased photographs” remained almost unknown to the general public, like the spectacular Hasselblad panoramic views taken in orbit and on the surface of the Moon. This selection resulted in partial understanding of the agency’s photographic achievements.

On the other hand, NASA also did not take the opportunity offered at the time to create a narrative on space flight, as had done the explorer-photographers who had travelled to the American West or to Antarctica. Most of the time, there was no indication as when in the mission the photograph was taken and the photograph was not credited to the astronaut who took it but to NASA itself. By combining the photographs published at the time and the “unreleased” photographs and by placing them in their original context, it is possible to better apprehend the wealth of NASA’s photographic heritage and to bestow a new reading of man’s first forays into the cosmos.

The Moon In the Lens

As in other areas, NASA was at the forefront of photographic technology. Its space photographic technology division was founded in close partnership with Kodak, Hasselblad and Zeiss. For all these firms, the extraordinary exploits of NASA and its astronauts were an incomparable source of publicity and their best engineers collaborated to manufacture films, cameras and lenses adapted to the extreme constraints of space.

Everything was put in place so that the astronauts, even in a state of weightlessness and wearing a bulky space suit, could capture precision images in space. Hasselblad cameras were modified and automated to speed up and facilitate shooting. They were fitted with high resolution 70mm medium format films, specially designed by Kodak on a very fine Estar polyester support allowing to take more pictures per film. The emulsion was also specially adapted for the vacuum of space. On the Moon itself, a removable mechanism (a contribution to photography of Neil Armstrong) made it easier for astronauts to fix the Hasselblad on their chest and operate the camera while engaging in other activities. Finally, a glass reseau plate engraved with a grid of crosses placed just in front of the film allowed scientists to subsequently extract information on lunar distances.

Within the photographic technology division, specialized personnel were responsible for qualifying cameras and films for spaceflight and provided “quality control” at all stages of the photographic chain. Thanks to the work of this division, the photographs taken during Project Mercury, Gemini and Apollo have been characterized by their unity, since Alan Shepard’s first mission into space and President Kennedy’s decision to land men on the Moon in May 1961 until Eugene Cernan’s last step on the lunar surface in December 1972.

If photography proved to be a fundamental tool in reaching and exploring the Moon, NASA quickly realized that it was an exceptional asset to promote its space program and impose the lunar goal to the Americans and the rest of the world. (The Space Race with the Soviets was to mobilize 4% of the federal budget for ten years and the combined efforts of 400,000 engineers and workers.) The beauty of the images from space would justify the voyage itself. 

The beauty of the images from space would justify the voyage itself. 

At the start of the space program, stylized images of astronauts or rocket liftoffs illustrated the newspapers. The public was passionate about astronauts, real stars who were under contract with LIFE Magazine. On February 20, 1962, John Glenn became the first human to take photographs in space and the first American to orbit the Earth on board Friendship 7. Taking these first shots from orbit was an experiment as no one knew for sure that weightlessness would even allow an astronaut to move, see and breathe. The priority was to bring him back alive. But Glenn’s photographs appeared in color in LIFE and National Geographic and revealed to the people of Earth the beauty of space.

“It was great to be able to bring home some of these images to people who couldn’t be up there in orbit and see those kind of things,” remembered Gordon Cooper, who circled the Earth twenty-two times during the Mercury Atlas 9 mission in May 1963 and validated the use of Hasselblad cameras for taking pictures in space. “I think NASA finally swung around to realizing the importance of photography; even the diehards finally came around, admitting it had about the greatest impact of anything going.”

Each mission provided new firsts to be photographed for posterity, and the astronauts were trained to photography by NASA and Hasselblad specialists, who reviewed their pictures taken from their T-38 planes or on vacation. They were also advised by LIFE or National Geographic photographers covering the space program on the ground, like Ralph Morse or Dean Conger. While artists of the time favored black and white (color prints were very expensive and the photographers had no control over their films which were sent directly to Kodak), the astronauts, supported by the best laboratory technicians and photo developers at NASA, extensively used color.

From then on, sublime images were created, like the photographs of Jim McDivitt showing his colleague Ed White floating freely in space during the Gemini IV mission in June 1965 (first American Extravehicular Activity). These photographs, the very first showing “man in space,” appeared on front pages of newspapers around the world, marking a turning point in the race with the Soviets. 

Scientists and pilots by training, the astronauts found in photography the best medium for transcribing to the rest of humanity the magic and exaltation of space travel...

The astronauts competed to bring back the best shots from the unknown and “get another cover of LIFE." NASA chief of photography Richard Underwood kept telling them, “You know, when you get back, you’re going to be a national hero… But those photographs, if you get great photos, they’ll live forever. Your key to immortality is in the quality of the photographs and nothing else.”

Scientists and pilots by training, the astronauts found in photography the best medium for transcribing to the rest of humanity the magic and exaltation of space travel, the profundity of their experience in space, their perception of the unreal beauty of another world and the meaning of their exploration of the unknown.

The Photography of Another World

The exploration of this new world, the Moon, combined with the most sophisticated photographic technology of the time and the inspiration of the astronaut-photographers of NASA, was at the origin of an absolutely new visual vocabulary. Between December 1968 and December 1972, twenty-four astronauts from the Apollo 8 and Apollo 10 to 17 missions were the only humans in history to leave the gravitational field of planet Earth and travel to the Moon.

From their spacecraft in lunar orbit, they spent precious moments to observe a world hitherto only dreamed and imagined. They photographed the visible face from Earth with a resolution and an angle of view radically different from those from Earth, revealing ghostly landscapes of craters, plains, and mountains whose appearance was threatening or appealing depending on the inclination of sunlight. The photographs of the terminator, dividing line between the light and dark part of a planetary body, were particularly striking.  The astronauts captured on film the dramatic moonscape of the far side, eventually unveiling to earthlings the secrets and the three dimensions of this yet familiar celestial companion; notably a tortured landscape, unlike the visible face, with a surface bombarded by meteorites and very few lunar Seas.

They also photographed a full Moon as it cannot be seen from Earth (since the Moon only shows us one face) and returned pictures showing other lunar hemispheres. They saw the Earth for the first time as a sphere in space. For their eyes only, the Home Planet became a celestial body like any other, the only island of life in the middle of the dark void of space. 

They saw the Earth for the first time as a sphere in space. For their eyes only, the Home Planet became a celestial body like any other, the only island of life in the middle of the dark void of space.

Few visions in the history of mankind were as exhilarating and moving as the Earth rising over the lunar horizon. The photographs of the new lunar world and its hidden side were already fascinating, but the photographs of the “spaceship Earth” were an unexpected revelation from the voyage.

Finally, the twelve astronauts who explored the surface of the Moon wrote a new page of human history. Five hundred million people on Earth followed live on television Neil Armstrong’s first step on the Moon during the Apollo 11 mission. It was “a step towards immortality,” wrote Wernher von Braun, the scientific genius behind Project Apollo, “for man now showed that he could land on other heavenly bodies and that he could live and work there.”

As a new gravity took hold on them, astronauts discovered and photographed a raw and virgin world, with canyons, mountains, plains but also a strange dust. A world whose sky is black in broad daylight because it is the sky of space; but it is a black sky devoid of stars for the Sun shines so brightly on the lunar dust that its radiation masks the light of other stars, except the Earth. A shrunk world where the horizon seems very close (the Moon’s diameter is almost four times smaller than that of the Earth which could contain fifty Moons in volume). A world with an absolute clarity (there is no atmosphere to filter or soften sunlight). A colorless world, with only shades of gray depending on the inclination of the Sun’s rays. A desolate and lifeless world where the absence of vegetation, erosion or human structure causes the explorer to completely lose the notions of distance, scale or horizon: “You stand there and you just say, I can’t believe what I’m looking at,” said Eugene Cernan, Apollo 17 astronaut and the last man on the Moon. A world where the notion of time itself is clouded since the lunar day and night each last fourteen Earth days.

In this unreal world, only one beacon reassured the unadapted human brains: the Planet Earth, always still and serene in the lunar sky, as if it was watching over its explorers. According to Cernan: “Looking back at the Earth is your identity with reality. It’s home. It’s where family and love and life really is, viewed from a vantage point a quarter of miles out in space where reality itself is almost a dream, a dream in which you are a very vulnerable character. I wonder what it would have been like to walk on the Moon and not have the Earth in the sky.”

 “Looking back at the Earth is your identity with reality. It’s home. It’s where family and love and life really is, viewed from a vantage point a quarter of miles out in space where reality itself is almost a dream, a dream in which you are a very vulnerable character." —Eugene Cernan

In this disorienting and dangerous world, the astronauts themselves looked like aliens with their bulky spacesuits and their gold-plated visors. The one-sixth gravity made their movements awkward and slow, as well as aerial; their photographs recorded unusual poses for our earthly eyes.

On foot or on board the Lunar Rover, they explored unknown lands. At each of their stops, called “stations,” they set up scientific experiments or collected rock samples, documenting their activities thanks to the Hasselblad camera mounted on their chest. These stations were also an opportunity to take panoramic shots. “We had practiced and practiced these panoramas back on Earth,” recalled Charles Duke of Apollo 16. “I would set up facing one direction and click. Then I would move in 20 or 30 degrees increments around in a circle, stabilize before each photograph, and squeeze.”

The individual frames making up the panoramic mosaics were later printed and assembled to form the final image. Initially made so that scientists on Earth could reconstruct the location and geological characteristics of the stations, these panoramas reveal the surreal beauty of the landscapes of the Moon. During the last three lunar missions, the astronauts also used a telephoto 500mm lens to detail the topography of the landscape, creating composite images of the places they could not explore.

The photographs of the astronauts, still studied today by geologists and planetologists, offered valuable data and a long scientific legacy to the agency. But their impact far exceeds the scientific framework. From the point of view of their social and historical impact, these images can be compared to those of the great American photographers Mathew Brady, Margaret Bourke-White, Dorothea Lange, and Ansel Adams. When published in the turbulent period of the late 1960s and early 1970s, the photographs of the astronauts immediately transcended terrestrial, cultural, and political barriers. It’s still the case today, and they continue to be a great source of prestige for NASA. Their penetration into the collective unconscious and their ability to communicate about the exploits of the American space agency are fascinating.

When published in the turbulent period of the late 1960s and early 1970s, the photographs of the astronauts immediately transcended terrestrial, cultural, and political barriers.

In contrast, the Soviet space program, whose officials did not understand that extraordinary space achievements required extraordinary photographs, occupies a reduced place in our collective memory, despite its great firsts; so much so that we can wonder whether NASA landed on the Moon not only thanks to its rockets, of course, but also thanks to its photographs.

Art has always celebrated the power of exploration and the triumph of human genius. Today, the talent of 19th century explorer-photographers is recognized. They produced new images of superior technical quality, which were also the expression of their perception and of their interpretation vis-a-vis the landscapes they discovered. The astronaut-photographers, for their part, “transported the human intellect and the human vision, the human mind, 380,000 km away from home. That was the importance,” reminded Frank Borman, Commander of the Apollo 8 mission. At the crossroads of scientific investigation and creative inspiration, the photographs of the astronauts are an expression of human curiosity, of man’s desire to explore, to question its origins and to push its limits. And they have changed our understanding of the human condition and our place in the universe.

Looking Good: Selfies & Portraits in Space

, Portrait of Mercury Original Seven Scott Carpenter, the second American in orbit, NASA [Mercury Atlas 7], 29 November 1961

108

Portrait of Mercury Original Seven Scott Carpenter, the second American in orbit, NASA [Mercury Atlas 7], 29 November 1961

estimate: $800–1,200

result: $438

, Thomas Stafford in weightlessness with floating camera on board Gemini IX-A, Eugene Cernan [Gemini IX-A], 3-7 June 1966

141

Thomas Stafford in weightlessness with floating camera on board Gemini IX-A, Eugene Cernan [Gemini IX-A], 3-7 June 1966

estimate: $1,200–1,800

result: $750

, The iconic portrait of the first explorers of another world: astronauts Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins and Buzz Aldrin, NASA [Apollo 11], May 1969

233

The iconic portrait of the first explorers of another world: astronauts Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins and Buzz Aldrin, NASA [Apollo 11], May 1969

estimate: $1,500–2,500

result: $1,125

, The historic first full-face portrait of a human being onto another world: Neil Armstrong inside Eagle after the historic moonwalk, Buzz Aldrin [Apollo 11], 16-24 July 1969

281

The historic first full-face portrait of a human being onto another world: Neil Armstrong inside Eagle after the historic moonwalk, Buzz Aldrin [Apollo 11], 16-24 July 1969

estimate: $2,500–4,000

result: $1,500

, Buzz Aldrin’s gold-plated sun visor reflects the photographer and the LM Eagle: Cover of LIFE and National Geographic (large format), Neil Armstrong [Apollo 11], 16-24 July 1969

291

Buzz Aldrin’s gold-plated sun visor reflects the photographer and the LM Eagle: Cover of LIFE and National Geographic (large format), Neil Armstrong [Apollo 11], 16-24 July 1969

estimate: $10,000–15,000

result: $3,250

, The first Moon selfie: Pete Conrad fully reflected in Alan Bean’s visor, Pete Conrad [Apollo 12], 14-24 November 1969, EVA 2

306

The first Moon selfie: Pete Conrad fully reflected in Alan Bean’s visor, Pete Conrad [Apollo 12], 14-24 November 1969, EVA 2

estimate: $2,500–4,000

result: $2,250

, The Apollo 13 crew back on Earth aboard USS Iwo Jima after the most perilous journey of Project Apollo, NASA [Apollo 13], 17 April 1970

325

The Apollo 13 crew back on Earth aboard USS Iwo Jima after the most perilous journey of Project Apollo, NASA [Apollo 13], 17 April 1970

estimate: $800–1,200

result: $188

, Alan Shepard and the US flag at Fra Mauro Base, Edgar Mitchell [Apollo 14], 31 January - 9 February 1971, EVA 1

332

Alan Shepard and the US flag at Fra Mauro Base, Edgar Mitchell [Apollo 14], 31 January - 9 February 1971, EVA 1

estimate: $2,000–3,000

result: $625

, David Scott with the 500mm Hasselblad camera in hand, station 10, James Irwin [Apollo 15], July 26 - August 7, 1971, EVA 3

359

David Scott with the 500mm Hasselblad camera in hand, station 10, James Irwin [Apollo 15], July 26 - August 7, 1971, EVA 3

estimate: $1,000–1,500

result: $375

, Portrait of Charles Duke at Plum Crater, John Young [Apollo 16], 16-27 April 1972, EVA 1

376

Portrait of Charles Duke at Plum Crater, John Young [Apollo 16], 16-27 April 1972, EVA 1

estimate: $2,000–3,000

result: $1,750

, The last man on the Moon posing next to the Lunar Rover, Harrison Schmitt [Apollo 17], 7-19 December 1972, EVA 3

417

The last man on the Moon posing next to the Lunar Rover, Harrison Schmitt [Apollo 17], 7-19 December 1972, EVA 3

estimate: $2,000–3,000

result: $938

, The first selfie of mankind: the first color photograph of the full face of Planet Earth from space, ATS III, 10 November 1967

174

The first selfie of mankind: the first color photograph of the full face of Planet Earth from space, ATS III, 10 November 1967

estimate: $6,000–8,000

result: $5,250

A New World: The Lunar Surface

• 
• 
• 
• 
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Lot 115
The first close up view of another world: moment of impact on the lunar surface as seen by the first crash-lander, Ranger VII, July 1964
estimate: $800–1,200

The Wide Angle: Space Panoramas

Of particular visual significance are the extremely rare panoramas that Apollo astronauts were tasked with creating. Made both in lunar orbit and on the lunar surface, these composite series were made at great pains to the astronauts; they were wearing helmets, the cameras were mounted on the chests of the spacesuits, and, without the benefit of a viewfinder, crews were trained how to point, shoot, turn slightly, point and shoot again until a panorama of overlapping photographs was generated that could later be hand-assembled into David Hockney-like panoramic collages. During the last three missions they even used a telephoto lens to shoot distant features.

One Giant Leap for Mankind

Preview / Chicago
21 – 28 October 2022
10 am – 4 pm, Mon – Fri

Auction / Chicago 
28 October 2022
11 am central

Additional Information
info@wright20.com
312 563 0020

“On the evening of July 20, 1969, when Neil Armstrong set his foot on the lunar surface, several hundred million people witnessed on their television screens an epoch-making step in the evolution of man. The importance of this event can only be compared with that moment in evolution when aquatic life came crawling up onto the land.

Since the dawn of history man had been chained to this planet. No matter what the species of Homo sapiens would accomplish, it seemed to be preordained to share the ultimate fate of its earthly abode — extinction. With the flight of Apollo 11 the fateful chain was broken. For man now showed that he could land on other heavenly bodies and that he could live and work there. This first step of a manned landing on another planet in our solar system marks the beginning of man’s long-dreamed-of journey into outer space. In time, this journey will take man to other, more distant planets and perhaps eventually to other planetary systems as well. When this is achieved, sometime during the five billion years remaining to life on Earth, the human race will have achieved immortality.”

—Wernher von Braun, chief architect of the Apollo Saturn project


The masterminds of Project Apollo: Wernher von Braun, President Kennedy, NASA’s head James Webb and top NASA officials at Cape Canaveral, NASA [Project Apollo], 16 November 1963, estimate: $1,000–1,500

Apollo was not the equivalent of an American pyramid, some idle monument to technology, but more of a Rosetta Stone, a key to unlocking dreams as yet undreamed.

Eugene Cernan, the last man on the Moon

References & Resources

References:

Piers Bizony, Moonshots: 50 Years of NASA Space Exploration Seen Through Hasselblad Cameras (Minneapolis: Voyageur Press, 2017) [cited as Bizony].

Simon Phillipson, Apollo VII-XVII (JDFS, 2016) [cited as Phillipson].

Andrew Chaikin, A Man on the Moon: Lunar Explorers (Alexandria, VA: Time-Life Books, 1999) [cited as Chaikin, A Man on the Moon].

Andrew Chaikin, Space: A History of Space Exploration in Photographs (London: Carleton Publishing Group, 2002) [cited as Chaikin, Space].

Andrew Chaikin, Voices from the Moon: Apollo Astronauts Describe Their Lunar Experiences (New York: Viking Studio, 2009) [cited as Chaikin, Voices].

Michael Collins, Carrying the Fire: An Astronaut’s Journeys (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1974) [cited as Collins].

Buzz Aldrin, with Wayne Warga, Return to Earth (New York: Random House, 1973).

Mike Constantine, Apollo: The Panoramas (moonpans.com, 2015) [cited as Constantine].

Terry Hope, Spacecam: Photographing the Final Frontier from Apollo to Hubble (Newton Abbot: Charles & David, 2005) [cited as Hope].

Robert Jacobs, ed., Apollo: Through the Eyes of the Astronauts (New York: Abrams, 2009) [cited as Jacobs].

Kevin Kelley, The Home Planet (Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1991) [cited as Kelley].

Michael Light, Full Moon (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1999) [cited as Light].

Robert Grant Mason, ed., LIFE in Space (Alexandria, VA: TIME-LIFE Books, 1983) [cited as Mason].

Beaumont Newhall, Airborne Camera: The World from the Air and Outer Space (New York: Hastings House, 1969) [cited as Newhall].

Robert Poole, Earthrise: How Man First Saw the Earth (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2008) [cited as Poole].

David Reynolds, Apollo: The Epic Journey to the Moon (New York: Harcourt Brace, 2002) [cited as Reynolds].

Ron Schick and Julia Van Haaften, The View from Space: American Astronaut Photography 1962-1972 (New York: C.N. Potter, 1988) [cited as Schick and Van Haaften].

Wally Schirra, Schirra’s Space (Boston, MA: Quinlan Press, 1988).

Davis Thomas, ed., Moon: Man’s Greatest Adventure (New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1970) [cited as Thomas].

Norman Mailer, Moonfire (Koeln: Taschen Bibliotheca Universalis, 2009) [cited as Mailer].

Andy Saunders, Apollo Remastered (London, Particular Books, September 2022) [cited as Saunders]

LIFE and National Geographic magazines.

NASA Publications:

Earth Photographs from Gemini III, IV and V, NASA SP-129, 1967 [cited as NASA SP-129].

Edgar M. Cortright, ed., Exploring Space with a Camera, NASA SP-168 [cited as Cortright].

Earth Photographs from Gemini VI through XII, NASA SP-171, 1968 [cited as NASA SP-171].

Analysis of Apollo 8: Photography and Visual Observations, NASA SP-201, 1969 [cited as NASA SP-201].

Apollo 11 Preliminary Science Report, NASA SP-214, 1970 [cited as NASA SP-214].

Oran W. Nicks, ed., This Island Earth, NASA SP-250, 1970 [cited as NASA SP-250].

Apollo 12 Preliminary Science Report, NASA SP-235, 1970 [cited as NASA SP-235].

Analysis of Apollo 10: Photography and Visual Observations, NASA SP-232, 1971 [cited as NASA SP-232].

Robert Musgrove, ed., Lunar Photographs from Apollo 8, 10, and 11, NASA SP-246, 1971 [cited as NASA SP-246].

Apollo 14 Preliminary Science Report, NASA SP-272, 1971 [cited as NASA SP-272].

Apollo 15 Preliminary Science Report, NASA SP-289, 1971 [cited as NASA SP-289].

Apollo 16 Preliminary Science Report, NASA SP-315, 1972 [cited as NASA SP-315].

Apollo 17 Preliminary Science Report, NASA SP-330, 1973 [cited as NASA SP-330].

Edgar Cortright, ed., Apollo Expeditions to the Moon, NASA SP-350, 1975 [cited as NASA SP-350].

Apollo over the Moon: A View from Orbit, NASA SP-362, 1978 [cited as NASA SP-362].

Steven Dick, ed., Remembering the Space Age, NASA SP-2008-4703, 2008 [cited as Dick].

Barton Hacker and James Grimwood, On the Shoulders of Titans, a History of Project Gemini, NASA SP-4203, 1977 [cited as NASA SP-4203].

Loyd Swenson Jr., James Grimwood and Charles Alexander, This New Ocean, a History of Project Mercury, NASA SP-4201, 1966 [cited as NASA SP-4201].

William David Compton, Where No Man Has Gone Before: A History of Apollo Lunar Exploration Missions, NASA SP-4214, 1988.


Online Sources:

Lunar and Planetary Institute.

Apollo Lunar Surface Journal (ALSJ), Eric Jones, ed. [cited as ALSJ].

Apollo Flight Journal, David Woods, ed. [cited as AFJ].

March to the Moon (scans of the original films of Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo missions made by the University of Arizona).

Apollo Image Archive, Arizona State University.

NASA JSC and other NASA-related websites.

NASA Space Science Data Coordinated Archive (NSSDCA).

United States Geological Survey (USGS).

Clouds Across The Moon - an analysis of Earth photography on Apollo by Paul White.

Levasseur, Jennifer. “Pictures by Proxy: Images of Exploration and the First Decade of Astronaut Photography at NASA.” PhD diss., George Mason University, 2014.

© All texts by Victor Martin-Malburet

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