Full
Moon: Apollo Mission Photographs of the Lunar Landscape,
an exhibition of rarely seen photographic prints from NASA's
Apollo missions to the moon, guest curated by artist and landscape
photographer Michael Light, is on view at the American Museum
of Natural History's Rose Center for Earth and Space. Full Moon
presents over 75 photographic images of impressive scale and
quality, creating a fresh understanding of some of the century's
most dramatic events in space exploration. The exhibition
conveys the impressive nature of the Apollo journeys and the
moon's vastness.
Full
Moon inaugurated new exhibition space in the Museum's
acclaimed Frederick Phineas and Sandra Priest Rose Center
for Earth and Space when the exhibition opened in March 2000. The exhibition's stunning images are
closely related to the scientific content of this recently
opened innovative exhibition, research, and educational facility.
Full
Moon comes to the Museum after receiving international
acclaim in London, Amsterdam, Madrid, and the San Francisco
Museum of Modern Art, and is accompanied by Light's photographic
book, FULL MOON, released in seven languages
worldwide.
Inspired
by desert landscape photographs he shot in the American Southwest,
California-based artist Michael Light turned his attention
to the moon's topography in 1996, gaining access to the film
masters from NASA's image archives of the 1967-1972 Apollo
missions. Over the next four years, Light carefully selected
powerful images from the over 32,000 photographs taken by
the astronauts on the journeys to the moon. Using digital
scanning techniques to retain the original quality of the
masters, Light then worked with the digital image files for
over a year in order to create exhibition-quality prints of
unusually high resolution and large format.
Full
Moon is divided into three principal sections, "The
Voyage," "In Orbit Around the Moon," and "The Lunar Surface,"
that give earthbound viewers a sense of the astronauts' experiences
and create a deeper appreciation for the grandeur of the Apollo
missions and of the moon itself.
In "The
Voyage," Light's images reveal the nature of the journey to
the moon. The astronauts and their spacecraft are seen traveling
away from Earth, and a number of images record the Earth as
it is seen from space.
"In Orbit
Around the Moon" reveals how stunning the lunar surface appeared
to NASA's astronauts as they gazed over a cratered moonscape
from a viewpoint closer than any humans had experienced before.
"The Lunar
Surface" includes images taken by astronauts standing on the
moon's surface, revealing an unknown world the way the astronauts
saw itdesolate and bizarre, yet strangely beautiful.
As Light indicates, the Apollo photographs "radically change
the way humans conceive of themselves in the universe. We
thought Apollo was about going to the moonand it certainly
wasbut its most enduring legacies are also all about
the Earth."
The Rose
Center setting provides scientific background about the moon's
formation and existence, enriching the viewer's experience
of Light's photographs. In the Gottesman Hall of Planet Earth
and on the Heilbrunn Cosmic Pathway, for example, panels explain
how the moon formed four and a half billion years ago and
a bronze moon model allows visitors to see and feel in three
dimensions the lunar surface depicted in the prints. Lastly,
by stepping on the digital scale beside the moon model, visitors
can gain an appreciation of the weight change experienced
by the astronauts as they walked on the moon.
This exhibition celebrating the pioneering spirit of the Apollo space missions is made possible through the generous support of Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson.