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Eyewitness to Space

Air and Space Museum

In March 1962, James Webb, Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, suggested that artists be enlisted to document the historic effort to send the first human beings to the moon. John Walker, director of the National Gallery of Art, was among those who applauded the idea, urging that artists be encouraged "not only to record the physical appearance of the strange new world which space technology is creating, but to edit, select and probe for the inner meaning and emotional impact of events which may change the destiny of our race."

Working together, James Dean, a young artist employed by the NASA Public Affairs office, and Dr. H. Lester Cooke, curator of paintings at the National Gallery of Art, created a program that dispatched artists to NASA facilities with an invitation to paint whatever interested them. The result was an extraordinary collection of works of art proving, as one observer noted, "that America produced not only scientists and engineers capable of shaping the destiny of our age, but also artists worthy to keep them company." Transferred to the National Air and Space Museum in 1975, the NASA art collection remains one of the most important elements of what has become perhaps the world's finest collection of aerospace themed art.


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Near the Vehicle Assembly Building

Apollo 7 Ready for Launch

ASTP Personnel Meet With Soviet ASTP Officials

Cape Canaveral, Pad 14, ii

Apollo-Soyuz Test Project Meal Taste Test

Spin Out

Lifiting the First Stage in the VAB

Checking the Engines

Moving Helicopter Upon Elevator

Crawler in Purple

Down the Mississippi

Flight Deck of the Recovery Ship

Before Liftoff

Painting, Gouache on Paper

Alexei Leonov and Ron Evans

Bringing in the Boilerplate After Simex

GT-5 Carrier at Night

Top of the Stack

Apollo 14 Launch Day

Titusville

View From High in the VAB

Painting, Gouache on Paper

D-6 Experiment for Visual Acuity

VAB in the distance

Morgan Fire Rescue

Pen and Ink, Watercolor on Paper

Bicentennial Trilogy-Earth, Space, Mars

Earth, Space, Mars

Network Control Operations Display

Remembering the Space Walk

Space Age Landscape

Conté Crayon, Felt Tip Pen and Watercolor on Paper

Conté Crayon, Felt Tip Pen and Watercolor on Paper

Unfinished Monster

Two Apollo Astronauts in the LM Simulator, K.S.C.


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