人類初の宇宙「自撮り」、月面着陸の瞬間...NASAの未公開写真がオークションに【画像】

オークションでは、オルドリンの写真のほか、宇宙飛行士が撮影した写真の数々が登場する。
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1946年10月24日、世界が初めて目にした宇宙からの写真は、地球の65マイル上空から我々の小さな惑星をとらえた1枚だった。この象徴的な写真を撮ったアーティストはV-2ロケットだ。1.5秒ごとに1コマの画像を記録するようプログラムされており、打ち上げのわずか数分後には、フィルムを地球に持ち帰った。

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クライド・ホリデー撮影、宇宙から撮影された初めての写真 1946年10月24日

この写真は、2015年2月に開かれるオークションの目玉となる1枚だ。このオークションにはこれまでに撮られた有名な天体写真が出品される。 『地球から月へ:宇宙への最初の旅をとらえたNASAのビンテージ写真』のタイトルで開かれるオークション (それに合わせてアンティークを取り扱うギャラリー「マレット・アンティークス」で開催されている展覧会) では、これまでの宇宙計画で撮影された600枚の写真が公開される。その内容は、アポロ11号の月着陸船に搭乗した宇宙飛行士バズ・オルドリンが撮影した、初めての宇宙での「自撮り」、宇宙から見る日食をとらえた抽象的な写真、月面のパノラマにいたるまで実にさまざまだ。

中でも印象的なのは、1969年、アポロ11号宇宙飛行士ニール・アームストロングが初めて月面に降り立った年のものだ。NASAが驚くほど鮮明な写真を発見したのは、アームストロングが初めて月面に立った人間として英雄になってから20年後のことだった。 彼が月着陸船の近くに立っている写真は、同じアポロ11号の乗組員オルドリンが撮影したものだ。しかしその後、この写真はヒューストンの保管庫にしまい込まれた。その写真の存在が明らかになるまで、NASAは、月面をとらえた写真といえばテレビカメラと16ミリの動画撮影カメラが撮影したピンボケの写真しかないと信じていた。

オークションでは、オルドリンの写真のほか、宇宙飛行士が撮影した写真の数々が登場する。撮影したのは、初めて宇宙にカメラを持っていったジョン・グレン、月面を歩いた最後の宇宙飛行士ユージン・サーナン、1965年に宇宙遊泳を行い、ジェミニ4号に乗船した時の記録を残したエドワード・ホワイトといった飛行士たちだ。「ブルームズベリー・オークション」の写真部門代表サラ・ホイーラー氏によると、こうした写真は宇宙飛行の黄金時代だけでなく、フィルム写真の黄金時代を映し出すものでもある。

何しろ、これらの写真は古いコダックフィルムで撮影後まもなく現像されたものだ。推定落札額はおよそ300〜10000ポンド (5万5000〜183万円) の幅になると考えられている。

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ハリソン・シュミット撮影, アポロ17号の宇宙飛行士ユージン・サーナンのポートレイト 1972年12月

「信じられないことですが、今回オークションにかけられる多くの写真は、何十年も公開されることはありませんでした。NASAの写真アーカイブがデジタル化したデータをオンラインで公開し始めて、ようやく私たちの目に触れるようになったのです」。ホイーラー氏は記者声明でこのように説明した。「とりわけ、アポロの乗組員が実際に月面に降り立ち、月世界を探索して撮ったパノラマのモザイク写真は、長らく知られることがありませんでした。 これらの見事な写真は、ハッセルブラッド社のカメラで撮られた1枚1枚を、NASAの科学者たちが局内での使用のために組み合わせたのです。このようなものがオークションにかけられたことはこれまでにありません 」

マレット・アンティークスで公開されている『地球から月へ』のコレクションから一部をご覧いただきたい。写真は2月26日ロンドンのブルームズベリー・オークションで競売に掛けられる。

バズ・オルドリン、初の宇宙での自撮り写真、ジェミニ12号、1966年11月
ユージン・サーナン撮影、ハリソン・シュミットとアメリカ国旗の上に浮かぶ地球、アポロ17号、第1回船外活動、1972年12月
発射、アポロ16号、1972年4月
ジェームス・マクディヴィット撮影、アメリカ人初の宇宙遊泳、ニューメキシコ上空にてエドワード・ホワイトの船外活動、ジェミニ4号、1965年6月3日
エドガー・ミッチェル撮影、アラン・シェパードとアメリカ国旗、アポロ14号、1971年2月
ウィリアム・アンダース撮影、人類が初めて目にした「地球の出」、アポロ8号、1968年12月
月の裏側を写した初の高画質写真
地球、1969年7月11日
ウォルター・カニンガム、フロリダ半島、東を望む、アポロ7号、1968年10月
バズ・オルドリン撮影、月面に立つニール・アームストロングをとらえた唯一の鮮明な写真、アポロ11号、1969年7月
ユージン・サーナン撮影、怒ったワニ、ジェミニ9号、1966年6月
ピート・コンラッド撮影、アラン・ビーンとバイザーに映った撮影者、アポロ12号、第2回船外活動、1969年11月
ウォルター・シラー撮影、 船内にて宇宙飛行士ウォルター・カニンガム、アポロ7号、1968年10月
ジェームズ・アーウィン撮影、月面で見つけたものを撮影するデイヴィッド・スコットをとらえたパノラマ、標高1万1500フィート(約3.5キロ)のハドリー・デルタ山中腹300フィート(約91メートル)、第6ステーション、アポロ15号、第2回船外活動、1971年8月
ジェームズ・アーウィン撮影、月面で見つけたものを撮影するデイヴィッド・スコットをとらえたパノラマ、標高11500フィートのハドリー・デルタ山中腹300フィート、第6ステーション、アポロ15号、第2回船外活動、1971年8月
月着陸船近くのALSEP (アポロ月面実験装置) とデイヴィッド・スコット、第8ステーション、第2回船外活動
アル・ワーデン撮影、望遠による斜めのパノラマ、月の裏側のパスツールクレーター北の縁、37周、アポロ15号、1971年8月
望遠パノラマ写真、メンデレーエフ・クレーターの底と西の縁、アポロ10号、1969年5月
Architecture Of The Future
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\n\nThe rendering won an international competition associated with a new public park in the area last year, and the project is currently under construction. “The construction with the intersecting connections is based on the principal of the Möbius ring,” states Michel Schreinemachers on the NEXT website. “On the other hand it refers to a Chinese knot that comes from an ancient decorative Chinese folk art,” John van de Water adds.
(credit:(Photo courtesy of NEXT Architects))
Indoor Parks(02 of12)
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\n\nThe park will feature four landscape typologies -- tundra, steppe, forest and wetland, integrating augmented micro-climates that will enable the park to function as a public space throughout Russia’s extreme winters. Essentially, the quasi-indoor environments will involve regulated temperatures, controlled wind and simulated daylight that encourage 24/7, year-round park pleasure. As Diller Scofidio +Renfro aptly put it, \"Zaryadye Park will embody the past and the future simultaneously.\"
Invisible Architecture(03 of12)
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nvisible architecture is the calling card of science fiction design, and we\'re happy to report that architects of today are on the case. Of course, there\'s South Korea\'s in-the-works, LED-clad Infinity Tower. CNN reported in 2013 that \"the invisibility illusion will be achieved with a high-tech LED facade system that uses a series of cameras that will send real-time images onto the building\'s reflective surface.\"\n
\n\nBut there\'s also the shorter, less flashy structure (pictured above) designed by New York-based architecture firm stpmj. The parallelogram-shaped barn would be made of wood and sheeted with mirror film, at a cost of $5,000. The idea is to \"blur the perceptual boundary\" between object and setting, according to a statement sent by the architects to The Huffington Post earlier this year. We have to say we\'re impressed with architects\' ability to push the boundaries of what invisible really means.
(credit:(Photo courtesy of stpmj))
Natural Disaster-Proof Forts(04 of12)
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For his series \"Dauphin Island,\" artist Dionisio González designed dreamlike, futuristic forts made from iron and concrete, fusing the role of artist with that of architect, engineer and urban planner. The peculiar edifices -- the hybrid of a beach house, a bunker and a space ship -- were designed with the residents of Dauphin Island in mind. Located off the coast of Alabama in the Gulf of Mexico, the tiny landmass is known for experiencing perpetual and catastrophic hurricanes. When a storm hits the small island of around 1,200 people, it often washes away much of the coastline, leaving residents to rebuild their homes again and again.
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Sweaters for Skyscrapers(05 of12)
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\n\nWe learned about the project, dubbed EXO-BURJ, in 2014. The strange, sock-like covering would wrap around the entire building, from spire to ground level, in a \"super-lightweight, reflective and semi-transparent fabric material,\" according to a description by the Dubai-based think tank, OP-EN. The temporary \"sweater\" would reflect the expansive urban scenes around it, turning the Burj Khalifa into a massive mirror in the vein of Christo and Jeanne-Claude.
(credit:(Photo courtesy of OP-EN))
Green Power Plants(06 of12)
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What is there to do with an outdated, eyesore of a power plant in the future? Why not give the sprawling facilities a green makeover, one that would serve two functions: to beautify the structure and provide a new way of dealing with CO2 emissions.
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(credit:(Photo courtesy of AZPA))
Compostable Towers(07 of12)
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Earlier this year, the Museum of Modern Art and MoMA PS1 selected The Living’s “circular tower of organic and reflective bricks” -- called \"Hy-Fi\" -- as the winner of the Young Architects Program’s (YAP) 15th edition. The temporary structure will be built using a new method of bio-design incorporating entirely organic material.\n\nAs Arch Daily reported back in February, the tower will involve \"the unique stacking of two new materials: Ecovative-manufactured organic bricks, made from corn stalks and specially-developed living root structures; and reflective bricks, designed by 3M, that were used as growing trays for the organic bricks before being implemented into the structure.\"\n\nBonus: According to MoMA\'s site, Hy-Fi will is the first sizable structure to claim near-zero carbon emissions in its construction process and represents a 100% compostable design. “Recurring to the latest developments in biotech, it reinvents the most basic component of architecture -- the brick -- as both a material of the future and a classic trigger for open-ended design possibilities.\" (credit:(Photo courtesy of The Living))
Floating Pools(08 of12)
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It\'s hard not to love this New York design project from Family and PlayLab, which plans to bring a giant filtration system to the murky waters between Manhattan and Brooklyn. The project would take the shape of a 164-foot long floating pool set to take shape in 2016 -- if all funding efforts go as planned. If there are swimming pools in our future, let them look like this.
\n\nIn a statement released at the end of 2013, pool masterminds Archie Lee Coates IV, Dong-Ping Wong and Jeff Franklin announced they are beginning construction on Float Lab, an experimental version of the planned 164-foot +POOL. They raised the funds for the smaller pool (35 feet by 35 feet, to be exact) through their last Kickstarter endeavor. With a launch date planned for this summer, the mini pool will put the team\'s filtration membranes to the test in real-river conditions.
\n\n\"We dont think about using the river recreationally at all,\" Coates explained in a previous interview with Huff Post. \"So as an architect you think, \'What if we could change that or propose an idea that could change that?\' We decided to pitch [+Pool] to the world. We just had no idea the response we would get.\"
Inflatable Concert Halls(09 of12)
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From the outside it resembles a giant, plushy purple jelly bean, and on the inside it looks more like a glowing, colored seashell. But this balloon-like form is actually the world\'s first inflatable concert hall, entitled \"Ark Nova.\" Iconic British sculptor Anish Kapoor and Japanese architect Arata Isozaki teamed up to create the structure, meant to tour through areas of Japan affected by the 2011 earthquake and tsunami. It\'s a novel idea that could make for an innovative design strategy in many other fields.
\n\n\"I am honored to have been asked to design Ark Nova for the Tohoku area,\" Kapoor states on the Ark Nova site. \"The structure defines a space for community and for music in which color and form enclose. I hope that the devastation can be overcome by creativity. Music can give solace and bring community together and in so doing can help us to see we are not alone.\"
Wooden Skyscrapers(10 of12)
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While wooden skyscrapers might not be as sensational as the previously mentioned rotating tower, the idea of building 34 wooden stories on on top of the other is pretty astonishing.
\n\nAnd it might become a reality if Scandinavian practice C.F. Møller and DinnellJohansson -- 2013\'s winners of the HSB Stockholm architectural competition -- follow through with their rendering for the world\'s tallest wooden skyscraper. The design (pictured above) is one of three ”ultra-modern residential high-rises” planned for Stockholm’s city center in 2023, but the catch is, only one of these proposals will actually be built.
Sponge Parks(11 of12)
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It\'s no secret that New York\'s Gowanus Canal is a breeding ground for toxic waste, polluted runoff, and raw sewage that\'s -- rather unfortunately -- been dumped directly into the area\'s bodies of water. But a little project known as \"Sponge Park\" is hoping to transform the Brooklyn locale into a cleaner, properly filtered sanctuary -- and provide a model for future urban design.
\n\nThe Gowanus Canal Conservancy and the landscape architecture firm dlandstudio announced in the summer of 2013 that they plan to employ a system of landscape buffers and remediation wetlands to slow, absorb, and filter Gowanus\' polluted sewer runoff before it reaches the canal. So, not only will the Sponge Park turn 11.4 acres of contaminated fields into a pleasant waterfront arena, it will provide a means of absorbing harmful pollutants that continue to ooze into the industrial battlefield.
\n\n\"In a process called phytoremediation, specially selected plants metabolize pollutants and heavy metals present in the contaminated water,\" the American Society of Landscape Architects explains on its website. \"Dirty water from the combined sewer system is captured in underground storage tanks and slowly released into the landscape.\"
Sci-Fi Skylines(12 of12)
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In 2014, Chinese architecture firm MAD unveiled renderings of Chaoyang Park Plaza, a center of skyscrapers, office blocks and public spaces meant to mimic the appearance of mountains, hills and lakes depicted in Chinese landscape paintings. The complex is now under construction in Beijing, and will result in an expansive sky line seemingly ripped from the pages of a futuristic novel.\n\n\"By transforming features of Chinese classical landscape painting, such as lakes, springs, forests, creeks, valleys, and stones, into modern \'city landscapes,\' the urban space creates a balance between high urban density and natural landscape,\" MAD writes on its website. \"The forms of the buildings echo what is found in natural landscapes, and re-introduces nature to the urban realm.\"\n\nLucky for Beijing, the innovative skyline is already under construction. (credit:(Photo courtesy MAD))

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