art communication technology photo photographer amateur snapshot astronaut space apollo moon lost alone family memory tourist
✖ Via NASA History Division: Apollo 16 Lunar Surface Journal, Image Library, photo AS16-117-18841 (OF300) taken by astronaut Charles M. Duke on April 23, 1972 during the last EVA for Apollo 16 mission. [Hi-Res]

“HE WAS A TOURIST, a quarter-million miles from home. And like any traveler, he wanted to bring home a special memory.

So Apollo16 astronaut Charles M. Duke Jr. came up with a plan. Several months before his scheduled 1972 mission to the moon, Duke receveid permission from NASA to leave behind a family photograph. The picture—of Duke, wife Dorothy, and sons Charles III and Thomas—was taken by a friend in the Dukes’ Houston, Texas, backyard several week before the April 16 liftoff.

Astronaut Duke was given intensive photography training prior to the mission. He was taught about f-stops, exposure, and learned how to operate a custom Hasselblad camera. He took thousands of practice pictures and hundreds on the moon. But he never considered himself much of a photographer. “Just a point-and-shoot man,” he said decades later.

In the final hour of the final day of his three-day visit to the moon, Duke took out the shrink-wrapped family snapshot and gingerly placed it on the lunar surface, near the crater Descartes. It was a gift, his message to whoever might one day stumble upon it. He then took a snapshot of a snapshot. Evidence. A memory.” (Who We Were by Michael Williams, Richard Cahan and Nicholas Osborn, Chicago Cityfiles Press, 2008, p. 238).

Actually, he took at least three snaphotd : AS16-117-18839, AS16-117-18840 and AS16-117-18841, though the last one is clearly the best shot.

Previously on Skandalon: Apollo, Nicholas Osborn.



• Jan 10, 2010 link notes  [via] tagged: art  communication  technology  photo  photographer  amateur  snapshot  astronaut  space  Apollo  moon  lost  alone  family  memory  tourist 
art photo color vintage santa christmas store marchandise retro
✖ Via Square America: “1953”, A Visit from St. Nick (A Roughly Chronological Arrangement of Some 60 Photos of Santa from 1918 to 1984)

Nicholas Osborn is the founder of SquareAmerica.com: “Square America is a site dedicated to preserving and displaying vintage snapshots from the first 3/4s of the 20th Century. Not only do these photographs contain a wealth of primary source information on how life was lived they also constitute a shadow history of photography, one too often ignored by museums and art galleries. Or at least that’s what I tell people- more accurately, the site is a catalog of my obsession with vintage photographs. For the last eight years or so I’ve spent countless hours digging through boxes of old snapshots at flea markets (mostly here in Chicago and in NYC) and too much money buying photos on eBay.” (read more) Follow his blog. Consider buying his book.

Previously on Skandalon



• Dec 25, 2009 link notes  [via] tagged: art  photo  color  vintage  Santa  Christmas  store  marchandise  retro 

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