Coastal landscape of the Seal Rock, including the Giant Camera / Camera Obscura with partial view of Cliff House. San Francisco, CA, USA


This tiny museum also known as the ‘Giant Camera’ is on the grounds of the historic Cliff House and features a working camera obscura, which reflects images of the beach front outside. It also houses a small collection of holograms. The technology for the camera obscura is ancient and was popularized starting in the Renaissance, when artists used the technique to draw from life. The name means ‘dark chamber’ in Latin. The technique is simple: a darkened room, box, or tent is fixed with a small opening to allow in light. As in a pinhole camera, an image of objects opposite the opening is projected upside-down onto the surface opposite. A lens is used to right the image. Originally part of the amusement park Playland at the Beach, the San Francisco Camera Obscura was built in the 1940s by Floyd Jennings. In this installation, a rotating lens mounted in the roof projects a 360 degree image down onto a 6 foot parabolic focusing table. The Camera was nearly shut down twice: once following the closing of Playland at the Beach in the 1970s and again in 1999 when the Cliff House was renovated. Public support has kept it open, and in 2001 it was added to the National Register of Historic Places and saved from destruction.


Size: 6012px × 4028px
Location: Ocean Beach, San Francisco, CA, USA
Photo credit: © Ida Pap / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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