January 31, 2023
Perceptions
Originally published March 9, 2013
drawing by Phil Morgan, U.K.
Every time before I publish a drawing I argue with myself about it. Drawings such as Phil's classic depiction
of Lassell above have a romantic, even avocative appeal, tying us to the only effective way before about 20-30 years ago to capture lunar details. But now even relatively small telescopes can capture CCD images that
show more detail, more accurately than the best drawings. Artists, and that is what astronomy sketchers are,
select what to show and perhaps without even thinking about it leave out features that aren't critical to the story
they are telling with pencil, pen and ink. An image of the Lassell area with similar illumination (and sadly with
a defect of display that I haven't been able to fix) provides a more trustworthy documentation. The text I write
each night for LPODs tries to explain the geologic processes displayed in an image but I wouldn't trust a drawing enough to base an interpretation on it. The fine art world faced a similar problem 100 years ago. Photography
could then capture any scene more precisely than any drawing. Perhaps that was one reason why cubism and
other interpretive artistic styles developed. But painting persisted and today's art galleries are far more full of
paintings than of photographs. Paintings, and astronomical sketches, provide a unique human perspective of a
piece of the world, or in this case another world. As an explainer of science I want a depiction of a scene that
hasn't been filtered through another brain, another perception. But when I use a drawing for an LPOD I am like
a visitor to an art gallery, interested, perhaps even fascinated, by how another person perceives the world.
Chuck Wood
Technical Details
Feb 18, 2013, 18:20 to 18:45 UT. 305 Newtonian x 400.
Related Links
Rükl plate 54
21st Century Atlas chart 16.
Yesterday's LPOD: 50 Year Uncertainty
Tomorrow's LPOD: Geo Textbook
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