KEYHOLE IMPROVED CRYSTAL from Glacier Point (Optical Reconnaissance Satelltte; USA 186)

Trevor Paglen American
2008
Not on view
Trained as a geographer, Paglen is an artist who plots the topography of a new global and celestial space—the "black world" of covert military operations. Examples of his subjects include the supposed sites used for the extraordinary rendition of prisoners, which he shoots with specially designed cameras from up to forty miles away, and the network of private planes used to transport them under the radar. This image shows the ghostly white streak of an American reconnaissance satellite bisecting star trails above Yosemite's Half Dome, a rock formation photographed in the 1860s by the photographer Carleton Watkins when the West was still being explored. In order to track such spacecraft, Paglen uses a database created by amateur astronomers who were trained by the U.S. government to search the skies for Soviet sputniks but continued their hobby after the end of the Cold War by tracking our own satellites. In this work, the artist brings into one composition two historically disparate moments in geographic and celestial colonization.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: KEYHOLE IMPROVED CRYSTAL from Glacier Point (Optical Reconnaissance Satelltte; USA 186)
  • Artist: Trevor Paglen (American, born Maryland 1974)
  • Date: 2008
  • Medium: Chromogenic print
  • Dimensions: Image: 95.3 x 76.2 cm (37 1/2 x 30 in.)
    Frame: 96.5 × 77.5 cm (38 × 30 1/2 in.)
  • Classification: Photographs
  • Credit Line: Purchase, Vital Projects Fund Inc. Gift, through Joyce and Robert Menschel, 2011
  • Object Number: 2011.77
  • Curatorial Department: Photographs

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