NASA to debut 50th anniversary art book
WASHINGTON, Sept. 8 (UPI) -- The U.S space agency says it
will celebrate its 50th anniversary next month by releasing
"NASA/ART -- 50 years of Exploration."
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration says the
book is a historic collection of nearly 50 years of space-inspired
art work.
In 1962, four years after NASA was founded, Administrator
James Webb established the NASA Art Program to commission pieces
from prominent artists that would illustrate and interpret the space
agency's missions.
Since that time, such artists as Robert Rauschenberg, Norman
Rockwell, James Wyeth, Nam June Paik, Patti LaBelle, William Wegman,
Mike and Doug Starn and Annie Leibovitz have participated in the
project.
"Through the NASA Art Program, artists have been given an
inside glimpse into the missions and programs which make up the
space agency," said Bert Ulrich, the program's curator at NASA
headquarters in Washington. "Through their imaginations, artists
have shared an entirely new interpretation of the NASA story with
the public."
The new book, co-written by James Dean and Ulrich, presents
150 full color illustrations with essays by astronaut Michael
Collins, curator Tom Crouch and novelist Ray Bradbury. The book,
published by Harry N. Abrams Inc. of New York, will be available in
October.
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