05.02.2013 Views

Remembering the Space Age. - Black Vault Radio Network (BVRN)

Remembering the Space Age. - Black Vault Radio Network (BVRN)

Remembering the Space Age. - Black Vault Radio Network (BVRN)

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

336 reMeMberING <strong>the</strong> SpaCe aGe<br />

of apollo, Skylab, and <strong>the</strong> initial emergence of <strong>the</strong> <strong>Space</strong> Shuttle program may<br />

never be known. What small in-roads of photographic documentation that have<br />

been made during <strong>the</strong> shuttle era may be considered a foreshadowing of what<br />

may be documented in <strong>the</strong> coming 50 years of american space exploration.<br />

It is tantalizing to consider that if project apollo had had a combination<br />

of landscape and documentary photographers interpreting <strong>the</strong> scope and<br />

scale of this program from 1962 through 1975 (much like <strong>the</strong> photography<br />

that was directed and managed by <strong>the</strong> government supported farm Securities<br />

administration or fSa in <strong>the</strong> 1930s), <strong>the</strong> aes<strong>the</strong>tic range would have been<br />

invaluable to space historians and <strong>the</strong> public alike. perhaps, <strong>the</strong> creation and<br />

implementation of a modestly funded artist and writers program (likened<br />

to some extent to <strong>the</strong> National Science foundation’s “antarctic Writers and<br />

artists” program) can be considered. Such a program could be an extension<br />

of NaSa’s educational outreach, its history ofce and even <strong>the</strong> Smithsonian’s<br />

National air and <strong>Space</strong> Museum (NaSM). In combination with <strong>the</strong> research<br />

and curatorial needs of both NaSa and <strong>the</strong> NaSM, such a program could<br />

contribute to <strong>the</strong> direction of how space exploration photography is curated<br />

and documented. <strong>the</strong>se eforts could also result in a foundation of relevant<br />

photographic documentation, and at <strong>the</strong> same time, identify iconic imagery<br />

from o<strong>the</strong>r space fairing nations like eSa, russia, China, Japan, and India. all<br />

of which, of course, would contribute to an understanding of space exploration<br />

and its history on a worldwide level.<br />

<strong>the</strong> necessity for planning and implementing a methodology of research<br />

and archiving becomes evident. It can result in an emerging visual literacy that<br />

is in sync with <strong>the</strong> proactive photographic documentation of <strong>the</strong> american<br />

space program over <strong>the</strong> next 50 years. Such a methodology would need to<br />

memorialize not just <strong>the</strong> intended scientifc, technical and day-to-day recordkeeping,<br />

but an aes<strong>the</strong>tic that embraces <strong>the</strong> essential labor force responsible for<br />

actualizing <strong>the</strong> next 50 years of human and robotic space exploration. from<br />

this a more salient visual literacy emerges which broadens and deepens <strong>the</strong><br />

understanding of human exploration.<br />

Ix. epILOGUe<br />

as brecht wondered about <strong>the</strong> Chinese masons and <strong>the</strong> Great Wall, I<br />

wonder about <strong>the</strong> photographic documentation of what remains of <strong>the</strong> <strong>Space</strong><br />

Shuttle and ISS programs, and <strong>the</strong> visual evidence that both historians and<br />

curators will be able to examine, publish, and exhibit in <strong>the</strong> decades to come. I<br />

embrace a photographic approach whose framework encompasses <strong>the</strong> discovery<br />

of <strong>the</strong> past and <strong>the</strong> documentation and interpretation of <strong>the</strong> present in context<br />

to <strong>the</strong> evolving history of both photography and space exploration. I liken<br />

this approach to my poetic journey when walking through richard Serra’s<br />

Sequence—a vast sculpture consisting of a series of connected 13-foot high

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!