Alan Smith Colour UFO photo 1965

Giddierone

Senior Member.
The color photo by Alan Smith taken in 2 August, 1965. (rotated)

TulsaUFO Alan Smith bluepic35.jpg

It appears to be a photo of a detail from one of two paintings by Clovis Trouille (1889-1975).

See top left in The Red Poet (1959)
Screenshot 2025-08-04 at 00.21.31.png

or top right (I think this is a better likeness) in The Tarantella Player (1964)
Screenshot 2025-08-04 at 00.25.18.png

Links to hi-res versions here:
https://www.christies.com/en/lot/lot-6498089
https://www.christies.com/en/lot/lot-6498068

Smith's photo was printed in the Look Magazine, 1967 UFO special. [p.34]
https://archive.org/details/look-magazine-ufo-special-1967/page/34/mode/2up

Some additional references for where it has been published can be found here:
https://ufologie.patrickgross.org/htm/bluebookpics9966.htm

Questions:

  1. What method do we think Smith used?
  2. Where could he have seen these paintings?
  3. What does that motif that Trouille used mean or symbolize?
Comparison with details inset over the original Smith Photo.
1754264190640.png
 
1754288473670.png

Les Soucoupes volantes (The Flying Saucers), Painted in 1932
https://www.mutualart.com/Artwork/Les-Soucoupes-volantes/4395BE12B0490A89FF38355103125EB2

This is interesting, as the term "Flying Saucer" does not seem to have been used prior to Kenneth Arnold in 1947. The painting is titled on the back in what looks like Trouille's hand, but it also looks like it was written over an older title. Perhaps Trouille retitled it at a later date.

2025-08-03_23-34-04.jpg

https://onlineonly.christies.com/s/...en-ligne/clovis-trouille-1889-1975-119/259586
 
Last edited:
2025-08-04_00-01-13.jpg


Article:
"I didn't see a 'flying saucer,' or 'little green men.' I saw a UFO," Smith said in a 1985 interview with the Tulsa World, 20 years after his famous photo was taken.

On the night of Aug. 1, 1965, he saw a giant light flying through the sky, making what he described as a humming sound.

The next night he went outside with his family and his camera.

He clicked the shutter three times while his family watched, only to have the film developed and find no prints, Smith told the World. But he examined the negatives and found one with a speck in the corner that was enlarged and printed. It was his UFO.

"The image was clear and vivid, about the size of a dime on a 5-by-7 print," Smith said at the time.

After showing the picture to friends, an Oklahoma City newspaper learned of the photo and offered to publish Smith's UFO.

Reprint fees eventually earned him enough to pay three semesters of tuition at Northeastern State University in Tahlequah and at the University of Tulsa, Smith said in 1985.
 
We should also consider the possibility that Trouille added the UFO to all three paintings after the photo was published in 1965
I was going to say, the object doesn't really 'fit' into any of the pictures it might have been added later for some reason, although there might be some evidence of this depending on when the paintings were first exhibited.

Also note the colour is different, this could be just the film/development or he could have chosen different colours.
 
The likeness in the Red Poet is closer in shape to the one in the UFO photo, note the shape of the internal element, it is more oval in the The Tarantella player

1754292459191.png
 
Is this your personal solution?
No, but I just noticed that Trouille painted the same object in two (now three) different works. The original suggestion linking the photo to his work was made on a webpage that's apparently not online anymore. Another suggestion was that the object is a colour wheel, but this no longer seems like a good match.
 
Here's the case as it appeared in Project Blue Book.

https://archive.org/details/1965-08-6977940-Tulsa-Oklahoma-9666-/page/n7/mode/2up
You have to click through to archive.org see the other photocopied images.

Screenshot 2025-08-04 at 11.20.07.png
Screenshot 2025-08-04 at 11.19.53.png

It looks like the original image is made up of a collection of random objects photographed against a black background.
So, Trouille probably liked this "UFO" image and later added it to some of his paintings along with a bit of artistic licence.
 
It looks like the original image is made up of a collection of random objects photographed against a black background.
i think that's just someone trying to recreate the photograph. why would Alan Smith give up this photo of how he did it?
1754310341138.png


.
interesting skeptics blog, he's got some decent recreations using an old rotating color wheel in this write up too. But the interesting bit for me is:
Article:
I was still discovering in the established literature that the artist sometimes found his sources of inspiration from photographs. And this is particularly the case for the painting The Red Poet, as the following montage proves.

1754309950863.png


Could the photograph of Tulsa have also inspired him? And he would have added this detail in some of his paintings? This lead was gradually strengthened.

I tried to contact Clovis Trouille's "biographer" for more information, but he didn't answer me.
 
Could it be a crop from the Clovis Trouille painting, taken much later (decades after 1965) digitally enhanced and rotated, and then mislabeled or hoaxed as a historical photograph?
 
Could it be a crop from the Clovis Trouille painting, taken much later (decades after 1965) digitally enhanced and rotated, and then mislabeled or hoaxed as a historical photograph?
There's a picture of it in the paper from that era..

From what I can tell the 3 Trouille versions are different enough from each other and the photo that it seems most possible that Trouille added it later on to his paintings, an art expert might be able to tell from the examining the images or even the high res scans if they were later additions, outside of the UFO context 3 paintings featuring a similar motif seems like the kind of thing that would interest an art historian with an interest in the painter/movement.
 
I'm curious about the origin process for the photo. Looking at information for a "Boy Scout camera" from that era, it's a simple box camera with a flash and a cartridge of 127 color film, which would usually have been for daylight or flash use, so I'm wondering how well it could capture a light in the sky at night, and then only get a small, relatively clear "speck" in one corner of the slide. (One of the stories says Alan Smith used ASA 64 film, which is not very sensitive.)

(The story extracted from the newspaper says they saw a light August 1, then Alan Smith took the camera out the next night when the family went to watch for it again. I noticed that the story says he clicked off a few frames that night, but doesn't say they saw the light; another story says Smith clicked off a single frame while outside with his father at 1:30 a.m. on August 3. The initial prints came out blank; when he looked at the strip of negatives he saw the speck and had it blown up and reprinted. The photo appeared in the newspaper until Oct 5.)

Someone named Larry Robinson did some thinking about the image at https://midimagic.sgc-hosting.com/howituls.htm, where he points out that the pattern resembles the triangular colored panels of a rotating light used to illuminate Christmas trees as the time, so the negative could from taking a photo in front of a tree where the camera's flash-bulb failed (which was not uncommon) and didn't illuminate the subject.
 
I think the blog @deirdre linked to explains it well. I'd thought the colour wheel explanation was incorrect but when you see that at least one of the paintings didn't have the UFO in earlier releases it makes sense that the artist likely added them all later to comment on the UFO hype/story (although I haven't seen the unaltered versions of the other two paintings yet).

From the above mentioned blog in #23
1754335701105.png

LIFE magazine also printed the picture [1 April—April fools?—1966 p.27] and included Alan Smith's tall tale about how he encountered the UFO in the sky, pulsating and making a high-whining sound that gave him the "creeps".

https://books.google.co.uk/books?id...EAHYLGPOoQ6AF6BAgIEAM#v=onepage&q=ufo&f=false
 
We should also consider the possibility that Trouille added the UFO to all three paintings after the photo was published in 1965
This painting is listed as being painted between 1949 and 1963 (rather a long time span, but I've known artists who kept altering paintings for forty years or more). He was certainly still painting after 1965, when he was in his seventies.
IMG_3333.jpeg
 
Just noticed this thread and have to jump in. I saw something that looked like the object in the photo back in '68. it went from the SW towards my location (93 Bunnell St., New Britain, CT, USA) until it changed direction and headed E without changing its orientation and disappeared below the treeline. No sound was heard. It was not fast, must have taken a minute or two for the whole sighting. At first I thought it was a small private plane coming in to Robertson Airfield in Plainville but as I said there was no sound. I was 14 at the time and had been into amateur astronomy for several years (still have my telescope though dinged a bit by my kids decades ago).

All that being said I never reported it anywhere and believed (still do) that it was a hoax by someone who had seen that photo, it got a lot of coverage at the time. But I don't know how it could have been done.
 
This is interesting, as the term "Flying Saucer" does not seem to have been used prior to Kenneth Arnold in 1947. The painting is titled on the back in what looks like Trouille's hand, but it also looks like it was written over an older title. Perhaps Trouille retitled it at a later date.

View attachment 82795
https://onlineonly.christies.com/s/...en-ligne/clovis-trouille-1889-1975-119/259586

The old title is partly legible.

Contrast boosted:
1754641676605.png


Looks like Le ______aire.

I wonder if it would be possible to find any references to the painting before it was renamed?
 
https://skepticversustheflyingsaucers.blogspot.com/2016/05/la-photographie-dovni-de-tulsa-smith.html

External Quote:

This detail is not included in the work as reproduced in the 1965 catalogue. In other words, as we strongly suspect, it was the artist who was inspired by the so-called Tulsa photograph, and not the other way around...
It's unfortunately not mentioned in the blog but one might reasonably expect the old name to be in the catalogue, if it were renamed after/during the addition of the UFO image.

https://www.abebooks.co.uk/Clovis-Trouille-Jean-Marc-Campagne-J-J-Pauvert/31667616575/bd

There's a fun lovecraftian feel to this investigation, old books containing previous versions of paintings by obscure French artists..
 
Just noticed this thread and have to jump in. I saw something that looked like the object in the photo back in '68. it went from the SW towards my location (93 Bunnell St., New Britain, CT, USA) until it changed direction and headed E without changing its orientation and disappeared below the treeline. No sound was heard. It was not fast, must have taken a minute or two for the whole sighting. At first I thought it was a small private plane coming in to Robertson Airfield in Plainville but as I said there was no sound. I was 14 at the time and had been into amateur astronomy for several years (still have my telescope though dinged a bit by my kids decades ago).

All that being said I never reported it anywhere and believed (still do) that it was a hoax by someone who had seen that photo, it got a lot of coverage at the time. But I don't know how it could have been done.
That should read 'went straight west', shouldn't write when tired.
 
Summary of the Alan Smith UFO photo solution:


Smith's camera - A "Boy Scout Camera"
il_1588xN.4408224801_53e4.webp


The flashholder with door open
il_1588xN.4360839884_2548.webp



Or it may have looked like this
il_fullxfull.5608262772_cnwi.png


A variant of the Imperial Satellite
s-l1600 (1).webp
s-l1600 (2).webp


A very simple plastic body camera. Fixed focus (probably plastic) wide angle lens with a large depth of field. Most of the time your photos would be in acceptable focus.

Two f-stops: "Color" and "B&W." The color film and B&W film you were supposed to use had a different ASA. That little switch was a casual amateur-friendly way of changing the aperture - the f-stop. But exposure was very iffy. You'd often get negatives that were over or under-exposed.

A single shutter speed. Probably 1/60; which is suitable for flash photography. So the aperture was probably pretty small on both settings to allow for daylight illumination. That would also help with depth of field. Taking photos in dim light with no flash is not possible.

The flash bulbs themselves were reliable. The flashholder was usually not a problem. The big reason why the flash would fail is a weak battery. Batteries in 1964 were flabby.

Another big one was just forgetting to put a fresh flashbulb in.


127 film
https://www.lomography.com/magazine/349528-the-life-and-death-of-127-film
127 film was first created by Kodak in 1912 for their new Vest Pocket Camera (pictured above right). This was a folding camera that, as you can probably guess from the name, would fit comfortably in the vest pocket of the user. For this reason 127 film was also often referred to as Vest Pocket film.

... in the 1950s 127 film experienced a revival with the release of many cheap and easy to use cameras such as the Kodak Brownie 127.

Imperial was another camera brand that made many of these cameras similar to the Kodak Brownie, with plastic lenses and fixed apertures, the most well known being the Imperial Satellite.

Like 120, it's a paperback film and the cameras that used it produced negatives that were 4x4cm, giving 12 images on a roll, 4x6cm (8 images), or 4x3cm (16 images).
Not a cartridge film like the Kodak Instamatic used.
2015_04_08_012_Kodak_Instamatic_50.jpg




The timeline

In December of 1964, Smith took some pictures during the Christmas season. At least one of these photos included an aluminum Christmas tree in the frame. They were a big fad from about 1958 to the mid '60s. (Mentioned in A Charlie Brown Christmas.)

These trees typically had a color wheel that would illuminate the tree. The tree would sparkle because you'd get specular reflections off the shiny surface of the "needles."

Screenshot-62.png

1950s-vintage-photo-of-a-girl-in-a-novelty-1950s-skirt-hanging-decorations-on-the-aluminum-chr...jpg


1960s-Aluminum-Christmas-trees-for-sale-as-seen-in-a-1962-Sears-Christmas-Catalog-.png


Some of the Christmas season frames came out. One of the frames didn't come out, because the flash failed because of a weak battery or Smith, being a kid, forgot to put a fresh flash bulb in the holder.

The color film sat in the camera for a long time. That was common.


Forward in time to August 1965

Perhaps the greatest UFO flap of all time in the U.S. happened in 1965 to 1966. Many people were looking at bright scintillating stars and bright planets.

Smith was in his backyard looking at a bright scintillating star and he attempted to take photos. This of course was way beyond the ability of the camera and film.

https://midimagic.sgc-hosting.com/howituls.htm
The photo processing company had not printed the UFO photos (most of which showed nothing), but one negative with an object in the corner was found to have not been printed. The photo, cropped, is reproduced at right. The UFO was not in the center of the photo, but was down in the lower right corner (see below).

A contact print of a negative strip was printed in a UFO book, purporting to show that the UFO photo was between Christmas photos. But Alan says that the roll of film was new, and that the strip containing the photo was cut apart when he had it printed again, so he wouldn't be charged for all 4 pictures (indicating not a lot of money available). If it was cut apart, where did the book author get the strip? (I am trying to track down this book again.)
I think Smith was fudging this. The strip was in original condition. He wanted to "save" his UFO photo.



As fate would have it, this period photo I found on the Internet is a very good example of what Smith's Christmas tree photo would have looked like if the flashbulb had worked.

Christmas Tree.png

ufo tulsa.png


It's clear that the tree was in a dark room. The fixed shutter speed and aperture setting was meant to capture daylight scenes. The illumination from a flashbulb at a few feet from the subject would also be adequate.

The Kodacolor film was incapable of capturing the dim light in this situation. The color wheel was the only source of light bright enough to show up at all on the negative. Only the light shining directly from the bulb shows on the negative. The rest of the color wheel is not visible.

Yes, the Christmas tree would have been illuminated by the color wheel. But the specular reflections would mostly have headed back toward the light source, not toward the camera.

Also, not all Aluminum trees were silvery. Some were anodized in different colors, including a "natural" dark green color.

And, although most aluminum trees came with color wheels, these wheels were sold separately and not all trees they were aimed at were aluminum.

And there may have been no tree at all. Maybe someone was just pointing it at the wall and ceiling. Or long shot, perhaps outdoors.

Lastly, and the one I favor. The owner may have put in a dim bulb. 25 watt? 15 watt?



Important to note that the axle for this particular color wheel was above the light fixture. The wheel was not centered on the light bulb. I think that has caused some confusion.
Christmas Tree.png
1950s-vintage-photo-of-a-girl-in-a-novelty-1950s-skirt-hanging-decorations-on-the-aluminum-chr...jpg


The light bulb illuminates a portion of the color wheel. That illuminated area is circular. The edges are curved. The light has spread out a bit. The circular area of illumination on the filters is bigger than the rim of the light fixture.

It's unclear whether the bulb was the usual household pear shaped kind or a floodlight type. Probably a pear shaped. Doesn't matter. The illuminated area would be circular in either case. And bigger than the rim of the fixture.

This cropped image shows pretty well what I'm talking about.
Wheel Klose.png






I've added arrows to this photo from the Larry Robinson article. The purple points to the rim of the light fixture.

The green arrow points to the edge of the illuminated portion of the filter. This edge is neither a spoke nor the outside rim of the wheel.

tulsa 102.png


The color wheel is a short distance from the light source. The light has spread out a bit. Part of the wheel is illuminated, and that area is circular with curved edges, and bigger than the rim of the light fixture.

The green arrow points to the curved edge of the separation point between the directly illuminated area of the filter and the darker area of the filter that was not directly illuminated. The darker area was not bright enough to show up on the negative.

This filter (blue or green) is partitioned by the rim of the light fixture.

The other filter is also partitioned by the this rim, but less noticeably.

The other filter is either red or yellow. It's hard to tell. We have to remember that this is a color print from a dim negative. Then it's been digitized, messed with, and uploaded to the Internet. The color balance is going to be off.

But... if these filters are blue and yellow, which I think likely, the Smith photo matches really well to the wheel in that period photo I found.

Christmas Tree K.png
tulsa 104.png


The order of the filters is the same - blue and yellow. And the wheel is even in the same position. Another quirk of fate in this quirky case.


This time the red arrows point to the rim of the color wheel.
White - the spoke of the wheel between the filters
Yellow - the rim of the light fixture
tulsa 103.png




Wheel Klose.png
tulsa 104.png

We even see spots of light leaking through the ventilation holes on the light fixture.

I consider this UFO photo fully explained and busted. And it's pretty clear that the French fellow just added those images in later, because he had a George Lucas like itch to keep fiddling with his paintings and found the Smith UFO image intriguing.


This was probably not a hoax. A coincidence and a series of naïve assumptions led a 14 year old kid to really believe he had a genuine UFO photo.

Later, he started to dig in his heels and change the story as needed against disconfirming evidence. That's where it gets smelly.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top