A View from the Balloon at its Greatest Elevation
Description:
The Spectator implied by this design "is supposed to be in the Car of the Balloon, suspended above the Center of the View." From this vantage point, he/she looks down on a vast "Amphitheatre or white Floor of Clouds" (iv) which curves away from the balloon, until it merges with the horizon. Through "this white Floor," "a vast Assemblage of Thunder-Clouds" are rising, in splendid Majesty and awful Grandeur." They are arranged in concentric circles (with the balloon at their centre), which in turn are distributed, at "great and unequal Distances" from each other, until clouds and circles are lost in the distance (54).
At the centre of this amazing display, through an "Opening" in the clouds about two miles wide, the city of Chester can be seen, flanked by the River Dee, although both have been radically transformed—the former seems "blue"; the latter "red"; and the town's buildings have "no apparent Height." Yet the effect is not displeasing. As Thomas Baldwin reports, "the Whole had a beautiful and rich Look; not like a Model, but a coloured Map."
Completing the prospect visible from the balloon, the distance that divides it from the "white Floor of Clouds" (about four miles, according to Baldwin) is evoked by the thick light-blue ring, apparently rising from the horizon, that almost touches each of the margins of the design—this is what the spectator sees as he/she "hangs in the Center, and looks horizontally round, in the azure Sky."
As we gaze at this "Balloon Prospect," the view it represents seems to float at the centre of a flat, featureless, darkly-coloured expanse, which is in turn loosely framed by a heavy and then a light black line. The flat-expanse might at first recall a cardboard overlay, of the type used to frame expensive prints, with a large circular hole removed from its centre so that the design itself can be seen. But in the visual logic of the image we are considering, this "overlay" represents the balloon floating above the observer, which, like the upper intercept in a panorama rotunda, determines the upper limit of his/her aerial vision.
Copyright:
Copyright 2009, Department of Special Collections, Memorial Library, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI
Location:
Accession Number:
Thordarson T 203
Height (in centimeters):
13
Width (in centimeters):
13
Printing Context
"A View from the Balloon at its Greatest Elevation" was included (facing page 58) in Thomas Baldwin's Airopaidia: Containing the Narrative of a Balloon Excursion from Chester, the eighth of September, 1785, taken from Minutes made during the Voyage . . . (Chester: Printed for the Author, 1786).Associated Events
Thomas Baldwin's "Balloon Excursion from Chester, on the eighth of September, 1785." Baldwin had earlier been unable to fund by subscription the construction of a balloon (Thébaud-Sorger 47). On this occasion he was assisted by Lunardi, who provided the balloon, prepared it for flight, and was on hand for the ascent from Chester.Associated Places
Chester, Cheshire, England (on the River Dee)—where Baldwin's "Balloon Excursion" began.Associated Texts
The image is one of four full-page designs included in Thomas Baldwin's Airopaidia (1786), which when seen together compose a visual narrative that explores the dimensions and some of the implications of aerial views.Subject
In this "View from the Balloon at its Greatest Elevation," the town of Chester (where Baldwin's aerial voyage began) and the River Dee can be glimpsed far below us, through an opening in the clouds. They seem no more substantial than marks on a coloured map, although in this case most of the map has vanished. The surface of the earth, still a significant presence in "A Balloon Prospect from above the Clouds," has now been almost entirely eclipsed by the aerial world, which forms the first of this design's three primary subjects.Theme
The circular nature of the print was intended to mimic the experience of viewing the earth from a great height.Significance
As one of the two earliest pictorial-views taken from the car of a balloon—the other is Baldwin's "A Balloon Prospect from Above the Clouds"—the primary significance of this image derives from its pioneering attempt to record the forms (cloudscapes) of the aerial world and the pressure they exert on commonplace aesthetic and conceptual categories. As this suggests, "View from the Balloon at its Greatest Elevation" is strongly influenced by eighteenth-century empiricism, most obviously in the emphasis it places on the balloonist/explorer's experience.Function
This image functions as a documentary record of the aerial environment above Chester, seen by Baldwin during his balloon journey from Chester to Rixton Moss, and as an illustration of the textual account of this journey provided in Airopaidia. In both contexts, it functions as a case study of the hyper-sublime and of the limits of conventional aesthetic and conceptual categories. As a plate in Airopaidia, it completes the visual narrative begun by "The Balloon Over Helsbye Hill in Cheshire"and "A Balloon Prospect from above the Clouds."Bibliography
Burke, Edmund. A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful. The Early Writings, vol. 1 of The Writings and Speeches of Edmund Burke. Ed. T. O. McLoughlin and James T. Boulton. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997. 185-320.Long Title
"A View from the Balloon at its Greatest elevation" Publish'd May 1st. 1786, by T. Baldwin[,] Chester, [included in] Airopaidia: Containing the Narrative of a Balloon Excursion from Chester, the eighth of September, 1785, taken from Minutes made during the Voyage: Hints on the Improvement of Balloons and Mode of Inflation by Steam: Means to Prevent their Descent over Water: Occasional Enquiries into the State of the Atmosphere, favouring their Direction: With various Philosophical Observations and Conjectures. To which is subjoined, Menstruation of Heights by the Barometer, made Plain: With extensive Tables. The Whole serving as an Introduction to Aerial Navigation: with a copious Index. By Thomas Baldwin, Esq. A.M. Chester: Printed for the author, by J. Fletcher; and sold by W. Lowndes, No. 77, Fleet-Street, London; J. Poole, Chester; and other Booksellers, 1786.Engraver:
Image Date:
5 January 1786