Neil Armstrong on the Moon, Red Number Photograph
Lot closes
July 15, 02:49 PM GMT
Estimate
25,000 - 40,000 USD
Starting Bid
20,000 USD
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Lot Details
Description
[APOLLO 11]
THE OꦇNLY FULL BODY PHOTOGRAPH OF THE FI𒆙RST MAN ON THE MOON
Chromogenic color photograph, July 21, 1969, 8 x 10 inches (204 x 254 mm), NASA number printed in red "AS11-40-5886," "A KODAK PAPER" watꩲermark on verso.
Photograph of Neil Armstronꦿg packing the bulk sample on the Modularized Equipment Stowage Assembly (MESA🧔) table during the first ever lunar extravehicular activity (EVA) taken by LMP BUZZ ALDRIN on the lunar surface.
THE ONLY FULL-BODY PHOTOGRAPH OF ARMSTRONG ON THE MOON, ONE OF T✃HE RAREST FROM APOLLO 11
This photograph, taken by the 70mm Hasselblad camera🎃, captures Armstrong packin🅘g the bulk sample on the Modularized Equipment Stowage Assembly (MESA) table during the first ever moonwalk.
It was long believed that Buzz Aldrin captured no photographs of Armstrong on the Moon. Post mission, the Public Affairs division of NASA examined the newly developed 70mm and motion picture film looking for a press-worthy image of the first man on the Moon and they wondered if a still image of Armstrong on the Moon existed. The head of Public Affairs at Manned Space Flight Center (now Johnson Spacꦚe Center) Brian Duff called Armstrong, who was still quarantined in the Lunar Receiving Laboratory. Duff recalled the conversation years later:
Duff: "Neil, this is Brian. 🌟When did you give the camera to Buzz?"
Armstrong: "I never did."
Duff: "Thanks."
At this point the team went with the now classic "Visor Shot" of Buzz Aldrin and it was assumed that Aldrin never had the 70mm Hasselblad camera and took no pictures. In fact, Duff misunderstood Armstrong's very precise answer. Armstrong was never intended to hand the camera♕ to Aldrin. The flight plan specified that Armstrong leave the camera on the MESA and Aldrin would pick it up when ready. Aldrin did indeed use the Hasselblad during the EVA. Images 5876-5900; 🥀5904-5926 on Magazine S (40) were all shot by Aldrin. Two British researchers, H.J.P. Arnold and Keith Wilson, independently realized this fact. Wilson, after confirming with Neil Armstrong, was the first to publish his findings in the August 1987 issue of the magazine Spaceflight.
It was about 18 years post-mission that it was 🤡finally determined that Armstrong is featured in AS11-40-5886 and, consequentꩲly, very few NASA "red number" photographs of this image were issued.
Literature:
Jones, Eric M. Apollo 11 Lunar Surface Journal: AS11-40-5886. 2019.