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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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Kennedy Space Center Headquarters

A collection of paintings and models

Launch Area with Crane

As Man Soars

Sun Through Girders

View of Launch Sites on the Cape

Waiting for the Aegena to be Launched

Entrance to Cape Kennedy

Prior to Launch of Uprated Saturn

Nurse and Secretary to the Astronauts

Success: Orion Returns

Piles

Moving Giant

Wide Load

The Tyco Tiger

Cape Kennedy: View of Launch Pads

Skylab Launch Complex

Painting, Watercolor on Paper

Head of Astronaut

Man's Incredible Journey

Lunar Confrontation

Vehicle and Helicopter on Launch Pad

Viking Lander-Martin Marietta

Apollo 15 NASA Artist at Work, VAB

Apollo 11

Last Check

Lunar Module

The Tracking Room

The Canaveral Squares

Friday at the 'Mousetrap'

Apollo Simulator

The Glass Bank

Construction at Merritt Island

Vehicle Assembly Building -The Bottom Section of One Door

TV Catches the Circus Atmosphere. Apollo 17


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