OU Libraries logo

An Artful Observation of the Cosmos

Jan 21, 2016 - Apr 3, 2016

In the Starry Messenger (1610), Galileo reported his discovery of four satellites of Jupiter and mountains on the Moon. These sensational telescopic discoveries would have been impossible were it not for Galileo’s training and experience in Renaissance art. Galileo’s scientific discoveries occurred in the context of an artistic culture which possessed sophisticated mathematical techniques for drawing with linear perspective and understanding of light and shadow. 

Exhibit At A Glance

1. Galileo and the Telescope

In the Starry Messenger (1610), Galileo published the first observations of the heavens made with the telescope. His report caused a sensation, as he claimed to discover mountains on the Moon, vast numbers of previously undetected stars and four satellites of Jupiter. The planet Jupiter moves through the heavens without leaving its satellites behind. The Earth and Moon both have mountains, seas, atmospheres, and both shine by reflected light. All of these discoveries might suggest that the Earth is also a wandering planet.


Galileo, Starry Messenger (Sidereus nuncius). Venice, 1610
Giorgio Vasari , The Works of Giorgio Vasari, vol. 1 (Le opere). Florence, 1878-85
Giorgio Vasari , The Works of Giorgio Vasari, vol. 2 (Le opere). Florence, 1878-85
Giorgio Vasari , The Works of Giorgio Vasari, vol. 3 (Le opere). Florence, 1878-85
Giorgio Vasari , The Works of Giorgio Vasari, vol. 4 (Le opere). Florence, 1878-85
Giorgio Vasari , The Works of Giorgio Vasari, vol. 5 (Le opere). Florence, 1878-85
Giorgio Vasari , The Works of Giorgio Vasari, vol. 6 (Le opere). Florence, 1878-85
Giorgio Vasari , The Works of Giorgio Vasari, vol. 7 (Le opere). Florence, 1878-85
Giorgio Vasari , The Works of Giorgio Vasari, vol. 8 (Le opere). Florence, 1878-85
Galileo Telescope replica. ,

3. The Moon and the Telescope

Galileo’s Starry Messenger (1610) set off the 17th-century race for the Moon – not a race to for flight, but a race to map its surface. To stare directly at the Full Moon is blinding at night; surface detail is entirely washed out, thus, to map the Moon, one must examine the “shadow line” night by night as it passes across the face of the Moon.  Light moves back and forth, first one way and then the other, casting shadows in both directions at opposite phases.  The lunar map gradually emerges as a composite representation of many individual topographical studies.


Johann Hevelius, Map of the Moon (Selenographia). Gdansk, 1647
Francesco Fontana, New Celestial and Terrestrial Observations (Novae coelestium terrestriumq[ue] rerum observationes). Naples, 1646
William Gilbert, New Philosophy, about our World beneath the Moon (De mundo nostro sublunari philosophia nova). Amsterdam, 1651
James Nasmyth, The Moon (Der Mond). Leipzig, 1876
Chérubin d’ Orléans, The Optics of the Eye (La Dioptrique Oculair). Paris, 1671

4. The Sky at Night

The wonder of the sky at night is common to science and to art. From the Renaissance to the dawn of the modern age, art and science fuse together in the representation of the stars and constellations. These star maps combined state-of-the-art scientific observation of the cosmos with artistic and cultural representations of the sky at night.


Catherine Whitwell, An Astronomical Catechism. London, 1818
Hyginus, Astronomical Poem (Poeticon astronomicon). Venice, 1485
Joseph J. von Littrow, Atlas of the Starry Heavens (Atlas des Gestirnten Himmels). Stuttgart, 1839
John Flamsteed, Celestial Atlas, 1729 (Atlas coelestis). London, 1729
Vincenzo Coronelli, Celestial Globe Gores ( ). Paris, 1693; reprint ca. 1800
Essays of the Members of the Academy of Gelati (Prose de’ Signori Accademici Gelati). Bologna, 1671
Abu Ma'shar, Introduction to Astronomy, 1489 (Introductorium in astronomiam). Augsburg, 1489
Johann Bode, Map of the Heavens (Uranographia). Berlin, 1801
Johann Bayer, Measuring the Heavens (Uranometria ). Ulm, 1661
Alessandro Piccolomini, On the Fixed Stars (De le Stelle Fisse). Venice, 1540
Johann Kepler, On the New Star in the Foot of the Serpent Handler (De stella nova in pede serpentarii). Prague, 1606
Nicolaus Copernicus, On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres, 1566 (De revolutionibus orbium coelestium). Basel, 1566
Stanislaw Lubieniecki, Theater of Comets (Theatrum cometicum). Amsterdam, 1666-68
Ptolemy, Works, Ptolemy (Opera). Basel, 1541
Johann Hevelius, The Firmament of King Sobiesci, or Map of the Heavens (Firmamentum Sobiescianum sive Uranographia). Gdansk, 1690
Jehoshaphat Aspin, Urania's Mirror with A Familiar Treatise on Astronomy. London, 1825
Heinrich Scherer, A Geographical Map of the Terraqueous Globe (Typus totius orbis terraquei geographice). Munich, 1700
Johann Hevelius, Preliminary Discourse for Astronomy (Prodromus astronomiae). Gdansk, 1690

Explore the Topic

Supplemental resources for a rich educational experience
 

Galileo’s Telescope
Learn more about Galileo's telescope.
Drawing Instruments
Learn more about the evolution of drawing instruments.
Optical Toys and Anamorphoses
Learn more about the historical developemnt of optical toys and anamorphoses.
Galileo's World Exhibit Guide
iBook companion to the Galileo's World exhibition
Galileo's World Podcast
This series features conversations with experts in diverse fields on Galileo's World.