Lunar Photographs

Maurice Loewy (mentioned on object), 1894-02-13

Scientists immediately understood the advantages of photography, for instance to study the moon. After all, the human eye tires quickly and cannot easily compare the successive observations. This process could be complicated by the great amount of time this sometimes took because of poor weather. Between 1896 and 1910 the Paris observatory published a ‘moon atlas’ with 71 large plates, three of which are on display here.

  • Artwork typephotomechanical print
  • Object numberRP-F-2005-107-398
  • Dimensionsheight 572 mm x width 482 mm, height 800 mm x width 597 mm

Identification

  • Title(s)

    Lunar Photographs

  • Object type

  • Object number

    RP-F-2005-107-398

  • Inscriptions / marks

    • annotation: ‘Grand Equatorial Coudé/ Observatoire de Paris/ PL. V/ Agrandissement 14 fois/ Diamètre Lunaire 2 m. 40’
    • date: ‘1894 13 Février 6 h. 5 (t.m. Paris)’

Creation

  • Creation

    • photographer: Maurice Loewy (mentioned on object)
    • photographer: Pierre Henri Puiseux (mentioned on object)
    • clichémaker: Fillon & Heuse (mentioned on object)
    • printer (person): Fillon & Heuse (mentioned on object), Paris
    • publisher: Observatoire de Paris (mentioned on object), Paris
  • Dating

    • 1894-02-13
    • 1896 - 1910
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Material and technique

  • Dimensions

    • height 572 mm x width 482 mm
    • height 800 mm x width 597 mm

This work is about

  • Subject

  • Place


Acquisition and rights

  • Credit line

    Purchased with the support of the BankGiro Lottery, the Paul Huf Fonds/Rijksmuseum Fonds and the Johan Huizinga Fonds/Rijksmuseum Fonds

  • Acquisition

    purchase 2005

  • Copyright


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