Space art
Space art is a general term for art emerging from knowledge and ideas associated with outer space, both as a source of inspiration and as a means for visualizing and promoting space travel. Whatever the stylistic path, the artist is generally attempting to communicate ideas somehow related to space, often including appreciation of the infinite variety and vastness which surrounds us.
The Cosmos contains many sources of visual inspiration that our growing abilities to gather and propagate has spread through the mass culture. The first photographs of the entire Earth by satellites and manned Apollo missions brought a new sense of our world as an island in empty space and promoted ideas of the essential unity of Humanity. Photographs taken by explorers on the Moon shared the experience of being on another world. When the famous 'Pillars Of Creation' Hubble Space Telescope image was released people claimed to see the face of Jesus Christ within it. Other similarly evocative Hubble photos exist, especially of Planetary Nebula. Perhaps such images provide modern audiences with fresh visions through which the religious awe invoked by the great murals in cathedrals of earlier centuries can be experienced anew.
Small art objects were carried on Apollo missions such as gold emblems and a small Fallen Astronaut figurine left on the Moon during the Apollo 15 mission. Visual observations have been recorded in drawings and commentary by earlier Cosmonauts and Astronauts of difficult to photograph phenomena such as the airglow, orbital twilight colors, and outer details of the Solar corona. An able and observant artist can record aspects of the surroundings beyond the design limitations of any particular camera system.
If and when artists finally get to live and play in zero gravity conditions as part of a hoped for migration of Humanity beyond Earth artistic expressions unknowable today will emerge. Although such dreams await substantial opportunity, early efforts by artists to have art pieces placed in space have already been accomplished with both paintings and sculpture. The first painting to be brought to Earth-orbit was a radiant study of the golden sunlight on a Soviet space station by Russian artist Andrei Sokolov, carried aboard the Soviet Mir space station in the mid 1980s.The first substantial sculpture brought to space was also carried aboard Mir, Arthur Woods' Cosmic Dancer.
Practitioners of the visual arts have for many decades explored space in their imaginations and on their easels.The vast majority of space art output has been pictorial representations of space subjects, realistically and otherwise, using painting and more recently digital media. Science Fiction magazines and picture essay magazines were a major outlet for space art, often featuring planets, space ships and dramatic alien landscapes. Chesley Bonestell and R. A. Smith were the major artists actively involved in visualizing space exploration proposals with input from experts in the infant rocketry field anxious to spread their ideas to a wider audience. A strength of particularly Bonestell's work was the attempt to portray exotic worlds with their own alien beauty, often giving us a sense of destination as much as of the technological means of getting there.
Other forms of pictorial space art bring the viewer to inner visions inspired directly or otherwise by the fruits of the expanding vision of Humanity. Some aspects of such art pay visual homage to outer space, popular ideas of life on other worlds including alien visitation visions, dream symbology, psychedelic imagery and other influences on contemporary visionary art.
Astronomical art, largely an outgrowth of the artistic standards of Bonestell, is an aspect of space art whose primary emphasis is in giving the viewer visual impressions of alien and exotic places in the Cosmos. As an Astronomical artist one should have a sense of why the lighting, sky color, even your chosen landscape surroundings appear as they do, and how a drastic change in a specific condition as on other worlds could alter the scene dramatically. One should have a reasonable 'grounding' in science, the nature of the sky and weather, and Geology for knowing the Earth as well as Astronomy for knowing the heavens. Such artists share with every other conceivable creative expression the vast arena containing what can be called Space Art.
Space Art related books
Space Art Ron Miller Starlog Magazine
Infinite Worlds Vincent Di Fate
Eyewitness to Space, from the Art Program of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (1963 to 1969).' Foreword by J. Carter Brown. Preface by Thomas O. Paine. New York: H.N. Abrams
Fire and Ice A History Of Comets in Art Roberta J. M. Olsen Walker and Company New York
Visions of Space David A. Hardy
Worlds Beyond: The Art of Chesley Bonestell Ron Miller & Frederick C. Durant, III
In the Stream of Stars: The Soviet-American Space Art Book Sokolov, Miller, ,Myagkov, Hartmann, International Association for the Astronomical Arts
Blueprint for Space Frederick I. Ordway, III & Randy Liebermann, eds
Visions of Spaceflight Images from the Ordway collection Frederick I. Ordway III Four Walls Eight Windows, New York 2000
Celestial Visitations The Art of Gilbert Williams 1979 pomegranite artbooks
Cosmic Art Ramond & Lila Piper Hawthorne Books 1975
Imagining Space Achievements*Predictions*Possibilities 1950-2050 Chronicle Books 2001
Star Struck One Thoudand Years of the art of Science and Astronomy Ronald Brashear Daniel Lewis 2001 Univ. of Washington Press
Space artists and movements
- Association of Autonomous Astronauts
- El Club de los Astronautas
- International Association of Astronomical Artists
External links
- AAA Blog
- Arts Catalyst
- Ayako Ono's Space Art (Ayako Ono is recognized by the European Space Agency)
- Astronomical and Space Art by Frank Hettick
- C-Base
- Cosmic Dancer Sculpture on the Mir Space Station
- Craosmor
- David A. Hardy's AstroArt site
- Don Davis Space Art
- Don Dixon's Space Art
- El Club de los Astronautas
- Expanding the Space
- Geostationary Banana over Texas
- Galactic Suite
- International Association of Astronomical Artists
- Iasos visionary artists gallery
- Marcel.lí Antunez Roca
- Olats
- Space art gallery of Dawid Michalczyk
- The Space Art of Mark A. Garlick
- Solar Voyager
- Space Arts
- Space on Earth Station
- The Mars Patent
- Virgo de Emotique
- Zero Gravity Arts Consortium