2346/​6060

[Apollo 4] The first color photograph of the whole Planet Earth. NASA, 9 November 1967. Printed 1967. Vintage chromogenic print on fiber-based Kodak paper [NASA image AS4–1-580]. 20.3×25.4 cm (8×10 in), with NASA caption and “A Kodak Paper” watermarks on the verso, numbered “MSC AS4–1-580” in red top margin (NASA Manned Spacecraft Center, Houston, Texas).

Literature: The Last Whole Earth Catalog, June 1971, cover; Exploring Space with a Camera (NASA SP-168), Cortright, ed., pg. 199.

This image provided a new perspective on our Home: for the first time humans could admire a color photograph of their whole planet floating in the dark void of space. The photographic mission of Apollo 4 was the acquisition and return of the highest altitude color imagery ever made of the Earth, thanks to the first test launch of the Saturn V rocket, the giant space vehicle designed for the Moon landings. Until then the highest altitude color photographs of the Earth had been recorded by the Gemini XI crew using the rocket on their Agena target vehicle to raise their apogee to 741 nautical miles (1,373 km), the highest Earth orbit ever reached by a crewed spacecraft. On November 9, 1967 the Apollo 4 (Spacecraft 017/Saturn 501) unmanned test flight made two orbits of the Earth before the third stage booster fired to send the capsule out in a vast ellipse peaking at 9,767 nautical miles, as a test of the translunar motors and of the high speed entry required of a manned flight returning from the Moon. A 70mm Maurer 220 G camera was programmed to look out a window, and took this fantastic photograph of the Earth from near “high apogee”, as the Apollo 4 spacecraft, still attached to the S-IVB (third) stage, was orbiting Earth at an altitude of 9,544 miles. The Earth (including Coastal Brazil, Atlantic Ocean, West Africa, Antarctica, looking west) is seen in a beautiful crescent. “This is a sight astronauts will see on the way to the Moon,” remarked at the time Samuel Phillips, Director of the Apollo Program, NASA (Cortright, p. 198). Today, Apollo 4’s ghostly image of the Earth’s globe, pale and breathing, like a child in the womb awaiting its first human witness, has a peculiar fascination (Poole, pp. 86–87).

Condition

Please notice: Additional illustrative material shown in connection with the photograph offered is not included in the lot.

Some haze to glossy surface near right margin only visile at angle, otherwise glossy print in excellent condition.

Auction

Space, 15 November 2023

Category
Estimate

20,000–30,000 DKK

Price realised

Not sold