A Tale of Two Moons: Peter Lik’s Photographs Called Out by Science

A Tale of Two Moons: Peter Lik’s Photographs Called Out by Science

For me and many photographers that I know, compositing and post-processing is fine, even needed in many cases. The thing that we all seem to get wrapped around the axle about is when a fellow artist is not entirely forthcoming about how a work was produced.

Let’s get a few things on the table from the start. First, I am a fan of Peter Lik and his photography. He is a master marketer and probably the most successful photographer of our era as measured by sales. What’s more, my guess is that there aren’t too many people who write about him who actually put their money where their mouth is: I am the proud owner of #175/950 of Lik’s “Solace.” Second, as a photographer and an artist, I have absolutely no issue with composited or processed images. With many landscape and nightscape photographs, compositing is a necessity given the dynamic range, depth of field, and a whole host of other challenges in capturing the scene entirely in-camera. Most photographers are aware that even the great Ansel Adams did quite a bit of post-processing of his work. He is notorious for spending a full day in the dark room to produce one photograph. Yes, photography purists might say that it is only real if everything is done in-camera, and that’s OK too. 

So, what is the fuss all about? Well, a few days ago the Fstoppers gang (Lee Morris, Patrick Hall, David Strauss, and Mike Kelley) did a video segment called “How Fake Is This Photo by Peter Lik?” where they discussed whether a new image released by the photographer was real or not. The photograph in question is called “Moonlit Dreams” and features a large, very sharp rendition of a nearly full moon (a few days past full) rising behind a cliff with trees. The bulk of the conversation centered on issues such as dynamic range, lighting, depth of field, size of the moon, location of clouds, and if this is possibly the same moon used in another Lik photograph, “Bella Luna.” With both photographs, there is definitely an issue with clouds appearing to be behind the moon, I’m going to set that aside for the argument’s sake. 

Before discussing the realness of “Moonlit Dreams,” I’d like to attempt to put to rest conversations still lingering from 2012 about whether Lik’s “Bella Luna” is a composite or not. In a nutshell: it must be a composite. Again, being a composite is fine and dandy for many photographers and customers too. Except, here’s what Lik has said about capturing that photograph (paraphrased):

This shot has eluded me my entire photographic career. I searched for days to line up this classic tree with the moon. The golden sphere slowly rose in front of me. I pressed the shutter, a feeling I'll never forget. The moon, tree, and earth. 

In his commentary, he continues to have us believe that the photograph is entirely composed and shot in his camera. How can we tell with 100 percent certainty that the image is a composite? Because science; it has everything to do with physics, not photography. You see, it is physically impossible to have the north pole of the rising moon at the very top, as it is in this photograph, for any picture taken in Kodachrome Basin, Utah. Or, said another way, the terminator shadow cannot be perpendicular to the horizon at the latitude of Kodachrome Basin when the moon is just rising. The physics of its orbit around Earth do not allow it to appear that way. In reality, the only possible way for the moon to be in this orientation when it is rising is if the picture were taken north of Utah, and I’m not just talking about Wyoming. It would have to be shot well above the arctic circle.

Three consecutive month views from early 2018 of approximately the same phase of the moon in Lik's "Bella Luna" as it would appear at 10-degrees above the horizon from southern Utah. You can see the shadow is on the top right and the moon's North Pole is to the top left. Source: Starry Night Pro.

Now we can move on to the more recent image, “Moonlit Dreams,” and its authenticity. There are certainly other things going on in the shot that might lead you to believe it is a composite. Most notably, in my opinion, is the fact that there is no way to achieve the level of sharpness of the moon at the altitude shown in the photograph. Every photon of sunlight being reflected by the moon is also being greatly refracted as it passes through Earth’s atmosphere on its way to the camera’s sensor. At that low altitude, the photons would be traveling through a lot of it. Add to that the fact that a long focal length lens must have been used. Those optics would serve to magnify all of that roiling refracted light and help to create a relatively blurry final image. Once again, I’d like to back burner all of that and focus on the physics of the moon’s orbit around Earth.

Everyone reading this is mostly familiar with the notion that the moon goes through phases: new, waxing crescent, first quarter, waning gibbous, full, etcetera. With all of the supermoon hype by the media, you are probably also aware that the moon gets larger and smaller from our point of view. This is caused by the moon’s orbit being elliptical in shape, giving it a closest approach (perigee) and farthest approach (apogee). At closest approach you likely have heard that it can appear to be up to 14 percent larger than farthest; that’s the supermoon.

But wait, there’s more. Besides the phases and size, the moon also has a wobble, called libration. Libration has to do with the variable speed of the moon along its elliptical orbit combined with the fixed rotation speed of the moon itself. The specifics aren’t extremely important, the effect is what’s relevant. That is, at certain times during its orbit, we can actually see around to sides of the moon that we wouldn’t see if libration didn’t take place. Instead of seeing just 50 percent of the face of the moon, we can actually see about 59 percent of the face of the moon over time.

But wait, there’s even more. In addition to the phases, the size, and the wobble, there is also a roll. That’s right, on top of all the other movements, the face of the moon will also appear to roll left and right. If you want to see all of this in action, NASA has created a great website illustrating it with a cool movie. What does it have to do with Lik’s “Moonlit Dreams” photograph? In short, because of all of these movements, it would be extremely unlikely to capture the exact same face of the moon in two separate shots at different times and in different locations. Yet, Lik’s two photographs, “Bella Luna” and “Moonlit Dreams,” show exactly the same face of the moon (when corrected for scaling distortion) proving that it is the same image of the moon in both pictures. The odds of this happening by chance are probably something like winning the lottery, getting hit by lightning, and solving global warming all in the same day. Planning for such an alignment would also be next to impossible. Even if he were able to calculate the exact moment when the moon would appear the same, it would have to also be taken with a precision measured in seconds for the two images to line up like these do.

Move the slider above to see just how perfectly the moons line up, after being corrected for scale differences in the images, between Lik's "Bella Luna" and "Moonlit Dreams."

As if all of this weren’t enough evidence, here’s another thing to noodle on. In “Moonlit Dreams,” the moon is tack sharp. For the level of sharpness, the edge of the moon is unrealistically smooth and round. As a nightscape photographer, I have traveled to the top of Mauna Kea in Hawaii with an 8,000mm lens (a telescope actually) to capture sharp lunar images. What you quickly realize with ultra-sharp images of the moon is that you can also make out mountains and craters on the limb, or edge. Sometimes you can even see mountain peaks that are around the limb of the moon. For example, below is one of my lunar photographs illustrating how this looks. In the bottom right blown up inset, some of the ridges you see are actually from the distant part of Mare Orientale, a large crater on the western border of the near side and far side of the moon. Lik’s photograph, by comparison, shows a clean, anti-aliased (i.e., smoothed) edge to the moon that definitely should not appear so tidy given the overall sharpness.

With sharp lunar photographs, the edge of the moon should appear bumpy due to mountains and craters. Lik's photographs show the moon's edge appearing round and smooth.

Here's the bottom line: I don't believe that the moon in either of Lik's photographs was there when the picture was taken. I am not saying there couldn't be a moon in his raw images, it just is not the moon we see in the final works. I also believe that the image of the moon used in both photographs is the same. In "Bella Luna" it has been scaled and blurred a bit to fit with the composition. In "Moonlit Dreams" it has had the shadows brightened to make the moon appear full. One telltale sign of this is that the moon seems "flat" in that region, a common mistake when shadow areas have been pulled up too high in post-processing. The other giveaway is that the edge of the shadows in the craters on the right side of the moon match the shadows in the craters in "Bella Luna," except for the small oversight that a full moon should not have any shadows in the craters.

At the end of the day, photography is an art form and there certainly are many interpretations about what is right or wrong and good or bad. I believe what the folks are asking for from Lik and his associates is for them to speak the truth about the work, whatever that truth may be. Nothing more and nothing less.

Steve Cullen's picture

Steve Cullen is a photographer and videographer based in the Pacific Northwest. He's a professional wanderer and night sky nerd trying to capture the spirit of the places he explores through his nightscape, landscape, and aerial work.

Log in or register to post comments
106 Comments
Previous comments

When I saw Bella Luna years ago in Vegas, I wondered how could one get so many stars in the background with moon so bright and low in the sky ?

So I just stopped into the LIK Gallery today here in Key West and what do I spy???? Promo for the MOON.

The sales associate was bragging about how it’s almost sold out already. She even bragged about Bella Luna, even though I called her out on it being the same damn moon in both images! So how in the hell could it all be done in-camera.

She goes on to state that it’s in the artist notes of how it was done, but they do not tell anybody about it or you can only read the notes if you purchase. She also said Peter is VERY upfront on his photos. I challenged her on the difference between an in-camera photo and digital art. She goes on to say that she feels like it’s just a bunch a disgruntled photographers who aren’t as talented as Peter, creating a bunch of drama. I guess NASA is a bunch of untalented people then.

Being a good marketer does not make you a good photographer. Being someone who lies to people about how an image is composed, created, just shows your lack of care for the art form.If you create a composite, tell people its a composite. Don't say that its all done in camera with one shot, because the entire photographic community will call you out, and in this case NASA will too!

The Peter Lik Corp treats their employees like 💩. Key West is a VERY SMALL town, so I have many professional relationships and personal friendships with people affiliated with the LIK Corp. I've heard A LOT about their practices. My friend sold art for their Key West gallery for 12 years, until a week before Christmas when they fired him because his numbers were down, which they're notoriously known to do. No severance package or any exit benefits whatsoever after he sold millions for them. He took his life 3 weeks later.

Apparently they didn't get the memo we had a CAT 4 hurricane in September and EVERY business in the Keys was down 25% or more.

LIK Corp does not have a favorable reputation in the gallery industry. Art consultants deal with their awful treatment because the marketing of the "art" is so good that there is an opportunity to make big $$$ selling it. Terrible. We call them Peter Lik-ers, lol

#DontBeAPeterLIKer

#DontBeALIK

#DontGetLIKed

Very good article.There's nothing wrong with pushing the limits in post, but compositing in landscape photos - particularly swapping skies - is unethical in my view if the Photoshop work is not revealed by the photographer. I'm only talking about landscape or nature photos. "Fine art" is fair game.

LOL. The Artnet/ NY Times article was another great example “FAKE NEWS.”

Many galleries from London, NY and around the world will raise pricing on limited edition photos, lithographs, bronze and glass reproductions. It is industry standard. There is no “scheme.”

Pretty UNEDUCATED writing. Artistts. set their own pricing in art galleries. If the demand is there and collectors are buying at that price, that is the market.

They don’t call Artnet who works for the secondary market cartel of Sothebys and Christies and ask them what they should charge. LOL.

I don’t know where this urben legend of Lik not using composites or photoshop ever started.

He uses composites and photoshop from time to time. No big deal.

All part of the art of photography. Why do you keep passing on false information?

It isn't urban legend and isn't false information. Until recently, Lik was adamant that his shots were all composed in-camera. He and his staff in the galleries now will admit that shots are composited, if you ask. They certainly don't offer it up though (I just visited 3 of his galleries in the past 2 weeks so I know this first-hand). It isn't a big deal, except people who purchase his work (me included) want to know what they're buying. This article isn't as much about that as it is that he actually used the same Moon image in both "Bella Luna" and "Moonlit Dreams", which is kind of odd (and Lik's people don't admit that).