Abstract :
This article places the famous images of Johannes Hevelius’s instruments in his
Machina Coelestis (1673) in the context of Hevelius’s contested cometary observations and his
debate with Hooke over telescopic sights. Seen thus, the images promote a crafted vision of
Hevelius’s astronomical practice and skills, constituting a careful self-presentation to his distant
professional network and a claim as to which instrumental techniques guarantee accurate
observations. Reviewing the reception of the images, the article explores how visual rhetoric
may be invoked and challenged in the context of controversy, and suggests renewed analytical
attention to the role of laboratory imagery in instrumental cultures in the history of science.