Author Archives: FriendlyHelper

Robert McCall, Artist of the Space Age

“I think when we finally are living in space, as people will be doing soon, we’ll recognize a whole
new freedom and ease of life,” McCall was quoted as saying. “These space habitats will be more
beautiful because we will plan and condition that beauty to suit our needs. I see a future that is
very bright.

I am living in the future I dreamed about when I was a young boy, and for me it is just as bright
and wonderful as I imagined it would be. Many of the paintings in this exhibition are my current
graphic thoughts about tomorrow.

One of the joys of being an artists is the freedom to create one’s own world, and through the
use of brushes and paints, to explore that world and participate in adventures of the mind that
the real world would not possibly provide. Like the real world, these excursions of the
imagination are fraught with inaccuracies of perception — it is rare that one glimpses through
the veil of time even a hint of tomorrow’s reality nor does it seem important to me, whether
one’s perceptions are right or wrong — the pleasure is in making the predictions and
doing the work.

Today we live in a world filled with awesome possibilities, both good and bad. The rush of
technology is so rapid, to stay abreast of it has become more and more difficult. Our
understanding of the physical universe continues to grow and astonish us with its
marvelous complexity.

To be an artist in these times of explosive change is, for me, a privilege and a challenge. My goal
is to document in my drawings and paintings a small part of this changing world and to
anticipate in my work, the future that lies ahead.”

NASA’s artist-in-residence program has drawn the likes of Annie Leibovitz, Norman Rockwell and
Laurie Anderson. But if the agency had a favorite, it was the painter Robert McCall. Once
described by author Isaac Asimov as the “nearest thing to an artist in residence from outer
space,” McCall’s glorious sci-fi paintings first attracted the public’s attention in the 1960s on the
pages of LIFE, illustrating the magazine’s series on the future of space travel. Stanley Kubrick
asked McCall to paint what would become his most well-known work: “Orion Leaving Space
Station,” which shows a space vehicle darting from the lit bay of a wheel-shaped space station,
featured on the posters for the film “2001: A Space Odyssey.”

And then his opus: the six-story “The Space Mural – A Cosmic View,” greeting visitors to the
National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC. Painted over the course of eight months in
1976, McCall’s depiction of the creation of the universe leading to astronauts walking on the
Moon is seen by an estimated ten million persons each year.

His bright, positive, optimistic work captures “an impulse to take what’s possible and imagine
what could be and what if. Between the subtlety and realism of his paintings and their more
fanciful imaginations, he was drawing colorful maps for the future of science and
space exploration.”

Jasmine Johns: ‘Space’ – A tribute to ‘Arabia’ by Walter de la Mare Space

Vast are the reaches of space,
Where the dreamers propel towards infinity,
‘Mid the scintillating galaxies of stars,
Beyond the shadow of their world;
And so beloved is that verdure hearth
Suns in the cosmos rise
And cast their rays upon humanity
Bold pioneers forever gazing into eternity.

Space a Lulling symphony
In my heart, and in my seams
a constant reverb oscillating through my veins
Guiding my perceptions and facilitating my dreams;
This grand outré conception void of boundary
Resonating fiercely transcending my mind above the confines of this world
On the final cord clinging to the last note
My eyes descend reiterating this vestige of melody

It haunts me — the phantasm of space;
No beauty on earth I see
But ignited by the cadence recollects
Its loveliness to me:
Still eyes look coldly upon me,
Harsh voices whisper and say —
‘She’s crazed with the spell of Space,
And her soul has been stolen away.’

A Cinematic Love Letter to Space Exploration "The Sky is Calling Us"

From copywriter Nickolaus Sugai and interaction designer Lauren Geschke comes this poignant video poetry, a kind of love letter to NASA posing a difficult question that we as a culture and a society must answer.

We once dreamt of open sails 
and open seas
We once dreamt of new frontiers 
and new lands
Are we still a brave people?
___
Somewhere along the way 
we forgot to look up
we forgot to wonder
we forgot to imagine
we forgot to dream.
When history writes about us
what will they say?
Will they say they watched the masses huddle idly 
and weak voices whispering apathy?
Or will they say that we turned the 
question marks that loom over this 
generation into declarative periods?
A statement that shouts, “We will not
choose to sit idly while the cosmos moves on!”
The sky is indifferent. For I have never seen it cry.
It will not wait for us, so we must go to it.
Because if we ignore the cause of the sky,
who then will draw the maps of the universe? 

Comprehensive & Concise: David Gump "Deep Space Industries Sets Sights On Asteroids"

“…basically helping everyone to live off the land in space rather than hauling everything we need to up from the ground…therefore our first markets are in space markets. Asteroids contain a good deal of volatiles – water, methane, hydrocarbons – and there’s a big demand for hydrocarbons, propellants, in space. Communication satellites up in GEO orbit – it costs them ten thousand dollars a pound to bring up the propellant they need for station keeping. When that runs out they are no longer worth anything to the owners. With propellant that can be provided cheaply by our services – each extra month they can squeeze out of those satellites is five to eight million dollars per satellite. So that’s one of the first markets we intend to serve.
And as we serve a commercial growing market for propellant that’s a great benefit to NASA and their exploration programs. NASA when its planning Mars missions, ninety percent of what it has to launch from the ground is propellant – if they can just launch the hardware and tank up in orbit, they can do Mars missions sooner, and they can repeat Mars missions so they’re not just flags and footprints once and we stop going. 
We can start getting our energy from space, its clean, no pollution, no carbon build up…I’m sure everyone in Beijing would love to get their power from solar powered satellites instead of a ring of coal fired plants around a city. So that is in the longer-view: the market to bring clean abundant electricity to Earth. And so that is a trillion dollar a year enterprise to serve electrical power on Earth. 
…as we move into the larger things that actually bring back a hundred to two hundred tons of material, the market activity that will pay for that kind of thing is going to be communications satellites. I think that is the early market for asteroid material. Once you get cranking on producing propellant you can then look to doing other things: creating photovoltaic cells to increase power available in space – then, in the fullness of time, after you’re already processing the satellite for other things you’ll be able to get platinum and gold and silver in sufficient quantities to merit export back down to Earth. But our analysis is you really can’t just start up to mine asteroids for platinum group metals – the economics just do not add up.
Turning that rock into something you want to buy.”