Celestial Works
(2022 - present)

In 2022, I embarked on an exhaustive, interdisciplinary research project regarding the celestial sphere. Using my garden as a plein air studio, I began working in photography and video for the first time, alongside drawing and works on paper, to document the sublime experiences I was witnessing through the lens of my telescope. Although darker than Brooklyn where I lived for 25 years until 2019, my local skies outside the NYC metropolitan area are Bortle Class 8-9 (light-polluted).

Jupiter & Galilean Moons, 2024

Video (no sound), 3 minutes 37 seconds

The animation presented in this video was created using photographs taken at regular intervals during an extended 7.5 hour period starting on Tuesday, December 12, 2023, 5:30pm, and finishing on Wednesday, December 13, 1:00am.

Astrophotographs

All photographs are single-shot, high-resolution images. No image stacking or heavy post-production processes are involved, al least not for now. Additional objects, as well as higher quality images of current objects, will be posted on an ongoing basis as I get better at this highly-technical process. Smaller, lower resolution images are shared here. Many more photos including time lapses are also available.

The Solar System

Messier Catalogue

The Messier objects are a set of 110 astronomical objects catalogued by the French astronomer Charles Messier in his Catalogue des Nébuleuses et des Amas d'Étoiles (Catalogue of Nebulae and Star Clusters).

New General Catalogue of Nebulae and Clusters of Stars

The Catalogue of Nebulae and Clusters of Stars (CN) is an astronomical catalogue of nebulae first published in 1786 by William Herschel, with the assistance of his sister Caroline Herschel. It was later expanded into the General Catalogue of Nebulae and Clusters of Stars (GC) by his son, John Herschel, in 1864. The CN and GC are the precursors to John Louis Emil Dreyer's New General Catalogue (NGC), compiled in 1888 and used by current astronomers.

Star Portraits

This ongoing project is dedicated to John Adams Whipple and William Bond, who together took the first photograph of a star — Vega in the constellation Lyra — on July 17, 1850. Using the 15-inch Great Refractor telescope at Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, they created a daguerreotype with a phenonomenally-long exposure time of 20 minutes.