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Space. The Final (Art) Frontier / Florida

By Darin Miller

Published: September 1, 2008
Florida— When NASA opened its doors to artists in 1962, it had no trouble attracting names as diverse as Norman Rockwell and Andy Warhol. William Wegman’s Weimaraner in a space suit owes its existence to the NASA Art Program, as does a lithograph (about human curiosity) by Robert Rauschenberg. When humans got our first glimpse of the dark side of the moon in 1968, Robert McCall painted a small Apollo against a cratered landscape. As part of the celebrations for NASA’s 50th anniversary this fall, the Smithsonian has organized a traveling exhibition of 73 works created for the program. It’s no trip to outer space—but perhaps they’re saving that for the centennial.

 

NASA Art: Art League of Bonita Springs; October 25–January 17, 2009; sites.si.edu.

  "Space. The Final (Art) Frontier" originally appeared in the Fall 2008 issue of Culture+Travel. For a complete list of articles from this issue available on ARTINFO, see Culture+Travel's Fall 2008 Table of Contents.

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