![]() It all started when John Glenn walked into a store in Cocoa Beach, Florida, at the start of the 1960s. This was the dreamlike climax of a love affair between Nasa’s astronauts and photography – a passion that altered human consciousness for ever. It was, after all, no casual afterthought that Armstrong was standing there in the airless lunar day with a camera in his heavily gloved hands. How, they ask, could this have been possible? But, instead of wasting our time on that, we should ask how Apollo 11 added artistic genius to all its other achievements. The photographs that the pair took during their 21 hours and 36 minutes on Earth’s satellite from 20 to 21 July 1969 are so astonishingly good that their very quality has, perversely, become one of the arguments used by conspiracy theorists who believe the landings were faked. It’s as if the moon’s surface has overwhelmed Aldrin’s face, or even become it. It is a portrait of humanity evolving before our eyes into something new and extraordinary. (His suit is genderless: the Apollo astronauts wore spacesuits made by the bra company Playtex, and their urine-proof underwear was adapted from a girdle.) In losing his selfhood, Aldrin becomes each one of us. Photograph: AFP/GettyĪldrin has become everyman – and everywoman. ‘A thrilling swirl of land, water and cloud’ … Earthrise by Apollo 8’s William Anders. The photographer has incorporated the making of the image into the image, to tell the story of something new in the universe: two human beings looking at each other across the dusty surface of an alien world. Meanwhile, reflected and warped by the helmet, the other horizon stretches away behind Armstrong. ![]() Behind Aldrin, the moon’s bright surface recedes to a blue horizon against the black void of space. Yet these reflective qualities are part of what makes this such a powerful, complex image, one in which we can see two lunar horizons. This effacement of Aldrin came about because Apollo astronauts wore visors lined with gold to protect their eyes from sunlight. His features and flesh are hidden inside a thickly padded white spacesuit, its visor reflecting the tiny figure of Armstrong himself, beside the gold-coloured legs of the lunar lander. His name was Neil Armstrong and his astonishing act of creativity is a photograph of his Apollo 11 crewmate Buzz Aldrin standing on the Sea of Tranquillity on the moon. From there, an observer during an eclipse would see all of Earth's sunrises and sunsets at once.Fifty years ago this week, a former navy pilot created one of the most revolutionary artistic masterpieces of the 20th century, one we have yet to fully assimilate. This is because the only remaining sunlight reaching the Moon at that point is from around the edges of the Earth, as seen from the Moon's surface. Learn more in our special eclipses section.ĭuring some stages of a lunar eclipse, the Moon can appear reddish. ![]()
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