David Malin, The Invisible Universe

22 03 2014
David Malin, Dust and Gas Adrift in Orion (UKS 1). Image ©Anglo-Australian Observatory; ©Anglo-Australian Observatory/Royal Observatory, Edinburgh; ©Malin/IAC/RGO; ©Malin/Pasachoff/Caltech

Dust and Gas Adrift in Orion (UKS 1). ©Anglo-Australian Observatory; ©Anglo-Australian Observatory/Royal Observatory, Edinburgh; ©Malin/IAC/RGO; ©Malin/Pasachoff/Caltech

The Invisible Universe, the lovely online exhibition of David Malin’s astrophotography at the Joseph Bellows Gallery, will be available for viewing for at least a couple more weeks. According to the gallery site, it will be viewable through April 2, 2014. This is one exhibition I wish I could view in person—there are few things more stunning than platinum-palladium prints, regardless of the subject.

David Malin was at the Anglo-Australian Observatory (now the Australian Astronomical Observatory, AAO) for twenty-six years as a photographic scientist-astronomer. If you are a fan of astrophotography, you have undoubtedly seen his most popular books, The Invisible Universe (1999) and Ancient Light (Phaidon, 2009).

The AAO owns the copyright for any of Malin’s images that required the use of the observatory’s instruments. David Malin Images manages the copyrights: follow this link for more information about photosales and reproduction rights.


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