A new exhibit on display at the Dayton Art Institute pays homage to the Apollo 11 moon landing a half-century ago. The Moon Museum exhibit opened at the end of June and features some unique items.
DAI Chief Curator Jerry Smith says he鈥檚 thrilled to have the show on display in time for the 50th anniversary of the moon landing.
鈥淚鈥檝e wanted to show this [exhibit] for a long time, and so having this opportunity and doing it where it will coincide with July 20th, the anniversary date is just perfect,鈥 he says.
Front and center in the exhibit is one of a series of tiny ceramic tiles created before the Apollo 11 launch. One of the tiles is said to have been placed on the lunar module鈥檚 landing gear, which remains on the moon to this day.
Smith says the tiles were smaller than a postage stamp and created using new technologies being being developed at the time by Bell Telephone Laboratories.
The DAI鈥檚 displayed tile features drawings by several artists including conceptual artist Forrest Myers, working with Bell, John Chamberlain, David Novros, Claes Oldenburg, Robert Rauschenberg and Andy Warhol.
The tiny ceramic tile and the even smaller works of art it contains make up what鈥檚 known as 鈥淭he Moon Museum.鈥
And Smith says curators have gathered other Moon-centric works of art to display along with it in Dayton.
鈥淭his is a fabulous way to kind of enjoy and consider the achievements of the NASA landing in 1969 50 years ago, and a great way to show off some of the things from the museum's collection.鈥
Other items in the collection are a 100-year-old Japanese silk screen, a collection of Apollo 11 photos, and a stunning Ansel Adams gelatin silver print called Moonrise Hernandez New Mexico, taken in 1941.
The black-and-white photograph was created from the one and only negative of the original image and remains one of Adams鈥 most famous images.
The Moon Museum exhibit will be on display through September 8, 2019 and is part of the DAI鈥檚 鈥100 Happenings for 100 Years,鈥 as the museum celebrates its centennial in 2019.
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