We adopt a view that suggests that many problems of image restoration are probably geometric in character and admit the following initial linear formulation: The original

is a vector known a priori to belong to a linear subspace

of a parent Hilbert space

, but all that is available to the observer is its image

, the projection of

onto a known linear subspace

(also in

). 1) Find necessary and sufficient conditions under which

is uniquely determined by

and 2) find necessary and sufficient conditions for the stable linear reconstruction of

from

in the face of noise. (In the later case, the reconstruction problem is said to be completely posed.) The answers torn out to be remarkably simple. a)

is uniquely determined by

iff

and the orthogonal complement of

have only the zero vector in common. b) The reconstruction problem is completely posed iff the angle between

and the orthogonal complement of

, is greater than zero. (All angles lie in the first quadrant.) c) In the absence of noise, there exists in both cases a) and b) an effective recursive algorithm for the recovery of

employing only the operations of projection onto

and projection onto the orthogonal complement of

These operations define the necessary instrumentation.