Photographie Lunaire: Copernic-Képler-Aristarique

Cleveland Museum of Art

Photographie Lunaire: Copernic-Képler-Aristarique

Maurice Loewy
Date
1896
Medium
photogravure (heliogravure)
Culture
France, 19th century
Department
Photography
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

This plate is from a deluxe 12-volume atlas of the moon created by astronomers Maurice Loewy and Pierre Henri Puiseaux. The atlas remained the most accurate reference of the moon’s surface until the age of space travel. The duo captured thousands of images at the Paris Observatory through a telescope that Loewy invented. It was equipped with a mechanism that tracked the moon’s movements during the exposures. Given weather conditions, they were only able to photograph 50 to 60 nights per year; the project thus took 15 years to complete and contained nearly 100 large-scale photogravures.

The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.

Get printable QR codes

Open QR codes for this object page and the museum record. They stay collapsed until needed.

Open this page
See at Cleveland Museum of Art

Related across collections

Semantically similar works from Cleveland Museum of Art and other institutions.