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[Apollo 9] OUTER-SPACE VIEW OF DAVID SCOTT TAKING PHOTOGRAPHS FROM THE SPACECRAFT HATCH Russell Schweickart, 3-13 March 1969 image 1
[Apollo 9] OUTER-SPACE VIEW OF DAVID SCOTT TAKING PHOTOGRAPHS FROM THE SPACECRAFT HATCH Russell Schweickart, 3-13 March 1969 image 2
Lot 11

[Apollo 9] OUTER-SPACE VIEW OF DAVID SCOTT TAKING PHOTOGRAPHS FROM THE SPACECRAFT HATCH
Russell Schweickart, 3-13 March 1969

14 – 28 April 2025, 12:00 CEST
Paris, Avenue Hoche

Sold for €3,072 inc. premium

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[Apollo 9] OUTER-SPACE VIEW OF DAVID SCOTT TAKING PHOTOGRAPHS FROM THE SPACECRAFT HATCH

Russell Schweickart, 3-13 March 1969

Printed 1969.

Vintage chromogenic print on fibre-based Kodak paper [NASA image AS9-20-3069].
Numbered "NASA AS9-20-3069" in black in the top margin, with "A KODAK PAPER" watermark on the reverse (issued by NASA Manned Spacecraft Centre, Houston, Texas).

20.3 x 25.4 cm. (8 x 10 in.)

Historical context
Russell Schweickart captured this famous photograph of the first two-man EVA in NASA's space program, showing David Scott's stand-up EVA in the open hatch of the Command Module Gumdrop as it remained docked with the Lunar Module Spider in Earth orbit.
Schweickart took this image with the Hasselblad Super Wide camera and its 38mm lens, while performing his own spacewalk, standing on Spider's front porch with his feet secured in the gold-painted foot restraints known as "Golden Slippers." In the open hatch of Gumdrop, Scott is also photographing Schweickart with his Hasselblad camera.
"I took this shot of Dave Scott taking a picture of me at the beginning of my EVA on Apollo 9. It captures just a bit of the fantastic beauty of the Earth juxtaposed against the infinite black of space. In the foreground is that amazing combination of human and machine that is enabling us to emerge into the universe out of the womb of Earth."

—Russell Schweickart (Jacobs, p. 42)

Footnotes

The first-ever two-man EVA had been conducted just two months earlier by Soviet cosmonauts Khrunov and Yeliseyev, who performed a spacecraft transfer between Soyuz 5 and Soyuz 4 in January 1969.

Literature
Apollo expeditions to the Moon, Cortright, ed. (NASA SP-350), p. 186

Watch more
CLICK HERE: APOLLO 9 Earth Orbit EVA Dual View (Stabilized, Speed Corrected)

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