Department of Earth, Environmental & Planetary Sciences

Blue Moon: Lunar Orbiter Silk Cyanotype

DEEPS is proud to present our newest Lincoln Field Art Show. "Blue Moon: Lunar Orbiter Silk Cyanotype" is a student exhibition featuring a 60-foot vertical silk cyanotype, along with smaller cyanotypes, community event photos, and a video on the 1960s Lunar Orbiter Missions.

About the Exhibition

Gathered on Pembroke Field at Brown University by an open invitation, 30 Brown University community members assisted in creating this large-scale silk cyanotype. Using the sun’s ultraviolet rays to print pictures of the Moon from archival film, this piece displays photos from Lunar Orbiter 2.

The five NASA Lunar Orbiter Missions from 1966—1967 photographed 99% of the Moon to survey for the Apollo Lunar Landing sites. The photos were shot on film aboard the orbiters, developed in orbit, digitally scanned, radioed back to Earth, and projected onto 60 ft x 10 in film rolls. This silk piece was printed in one exposure for its entire length to honor the drama of this technological feat. The Lunar Orbiter film rolls’ scale and images surrounded by descriptive text mirror the format of Chinese handscrolls with their inscriptions and colophons framing landscapes, a connection alluded to with this piece’s use of silk. 

This exhibition was originally on view at the Brown Arts Institute

About the Artist

Logan Tullai leading the Lunar Orbiter cyanotype printingLogan Tullai is a member of the Brown University class of 2025, concentrating in Political Science and Economics. As an artist, he focuses on community-oriented art creation, film photography, print production, and the ways that art and science intersect. Logan is deeply interested in creating art-centered curricula for use in language learning and science education. He loves bringing people together through art and using it as a tool for broader community connection.

News from DEEPS

Lincoln Field Art Exhibition 2023

DEEPS is proud to present the Lincoln Field Art Exhibition, a Spring 2023 collaboration between the Department of Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Sciences and the PHUM 2020 Methods in Public Humanities class.
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