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- N A S A A R T P R O G R A M
-
- For more than 25 years NASA has conducted an active art program,
- through which it documents major activities of America's aerospace
- program. The idea of using art to help document NASA's effort
- originated with James E. Webb, NASA Administrator from 1961 to 1968.
- Mr. Webb believed that "important events can be interpreted by artists
- to give a unique insight into significant aspects of our
- history-making advance into space."
-
- Mr. Webb's words have since been borne out. Artists' visions and
- interpretations of aeronautics and space have appeared in large and
- small museums and galleries around the world. Artworks have been
- reproduced in books, magazines, newspapers, motion pictures, and have
- been shown on television.
-
- The artists who have so generously participated in the program have
- provided NASA with a historic record of achievements and have given
- the public a new and fuller understanding of U.S. aerospace
- advancements.
-
- Artists have ranged from traditionalists, such as Paul Calle, Peter
- Hurd, Robert McCall and James Wyeth, to modernists such as Robert
- Rauschenberg and Lamar Dodd. NASA has tried to provide artists with
- every possible view and experience of subjects and events. It has
- brought artists to the Kennedy Space Center as astronauts suited up
- for flights into space, and to the Johnson Space Center's Mission
- Control as astronauts landed on and surveyed the Moon's surface. NASA
- has allowed artists to pilot Lunar Module simulators and to be aboard
- recovery ships when astronauts returned to Earth.
-
- THE ARTIST AND THE SPACE SHUTTLE
-
- Artistic documentation has become a NASA tradition. On April 12, 1981,
- a team of artists from all over the United States, commissioned by
- NASA, gathered at the Kennedy Space Center to record the first flight
- of the Space Shuttle COLUMBIA. A second team of artists viewed and
- recorded COLUMBIA's first landing in the Mojave Desert 2 days, 6
- hours, and 21 minutes later.
-
- The enthusiasm artists have for the Space Shuttle is reflected in
- their drawings and paintings. Wilson Hurley, on his way home from the
- first Shuttle launch, summed up his feelings in a letter to NASA:
-
- "The launch is the most exciting event I have witnessed in
- my life, and it will probably take me years to assimilate
- my feelings to where I can produce paintings that come
- close to the thrill it gave me."
-
- Wilson Hurley's work and the many other drawings and paintings in this
- portion of the NASA collection provide a unique interpretive record of
- a new era in space transportation.
-
- The artwork produced for the Space Shuttle collection represents a
- wide range of techniques and styles, from very realistic to abstract
- images and impressions. However, to the viewer, each painting is an
- intimate human record for future generations to view the exciting
- moments of the Space Shuttle story.
-
- A UNIQUE ARCHIVE OF TALENT
-
- Artists have also been commissioned to depict test flights of
- experimental aircraft, space science satellites, deep space probes,
- and tracking and data transmission systems. They have also given the
- world its first conceptual glimpses of future space efforts, such as
- the National Aero-Space Plane and the Space Station Freedom.
-
- Besides documenting the space effort, these works of art stand on
- their own merits. NASA commissions both the skill and imagination of
- an artist. The products they create become part of a unique archive
- that permanently records both the artist's talent and his or her
- perception of space achievements.
-
- When NASA invites an artist to join its program, the invitation
- includes a request for each guest artist to donate one piece to the
- archive. This has allowed the collection to grow in size. Today, both
- its historical breadth and artistic perspective is impressive.
-
- Dr. H. Lester Cooke, former curator of painting at the National
- Gallery of Art, who guided the NASA Art Program during the Apollo
- Saturn lunar missions, has said of the NASA collection:
-
- "In the long run the truth seen by an artist is more
- meaningful than any other type of record...future
- generations will realize that we have not only the
- scientists and engineers capable of shaping the
- destiny of our age but artists worthy to keep them
- company."
-
- Ray Bradbury has perhaps best summed up the importance of the NASA Art
- Program:
-
- "As a shining illustration of the metaphor of NASA,
- capturing symbolically the essence of human
- inspiration, which lies as much at the heart of a
- billion-dollar spacecraft as it does at the heart
- of the world's most sublime artistic expressions."
-
-
-
- For more information about the
- NASA Art Program, write:
-
- Robert Schulman, Director
- NASA Art Program, Code LP
- NASA Headquarters
- Washington DC 20546
-
-
- ---
- NASA, VISIONS OF FLIGHT, NASA Art Program
-
-