Showing posts with label space. Show all posts
Showing posts with label space. Show all posts

9.04.2015

COSMOS!


I was really thrilled to be able to contribute to Light Grey Art Lab's group show "Cosmos." They asked 100 artists to interpret the night sky, and this is my illustration of "supernova." All the work will be displayed in the gallery complete with fiber-optics! The opening is October 30, 7-10 PM and will be on view through November 27. 

They've also turned the project into a gorgeous tarot deck, complete with gilding and presented in a lovely box set. You can pre-order the tarot deck here.

5.30.2014

Space Instruments



Tonight is the opening for Light Grey Art Lab's “Omnibus Treasury” show! Here is my collection, inspired by old NASA memorabilia and science textbooks. You can purchase the jewelry in person until July 3rd, or you can get it at LGAL's online shop RIGHT NOW.

5.19.2014

LGAL: Omnibus Treasury

I've been asked to participate in Light Grey Art Lab's latest gallery show "Omnibus Treasury"! Each artist has created components that will be made into jewelry, so wearable art! My contribution is "Space Instruments," different vehicles, satellites, and tools used in space. I'm excited to see the final product! The opening is May 30, so if you're in Minneapolis stop by and check it out! For more information, see their website here.

3.04.2010

Cosmicomics

As part of a personal project (under the guise of thesis), I've been working on illustrations inspired by Italo Calvino's Cosmicomics.

The Distance of the Moon
At one time, according to Sir George H. Darwin, the Moon was very close to the Earth. Then the tides gradually pushed her far away: the tides that the Moon herself causes in the Earth's waters, where the Earth slowly loses energy.

Without Colors
Before forming its atmosphere and its oceans, the Earth must have resembled a grey ball revolving in space. As the moon does now; where the ultraviolet rays radiated by the Sun arrive directly, all colors are destroyed, which is why the cliffs of the lunar surface, instead of being colored like Earth's, are of a dead, uniform grey. If the Earth displays a varicolored countenance, it is thanks to the atmosphere, which filters that murderous light.


Games Without End
When the galaxies become more remote, the rarefaction of the universe is compensated for by the formation of further galaxies composed of newly created matter. To maintain a stable median density of of the universe it is sufficient to create a hydrogen atom every 250 million years for 40 cubic centimeters of expanding space. (This steady state theory, as it is known, has been opposed to the other hypothesis, that the universe was born at a precise moment as the result of a gigantic explosion.)

A Sign in Space
Situated in the external zone of the Milky Way, the Sun takes about two hundred million years to make a complete revolution of the galaxy.

All At One Point
Through the calculations begun by Edwin P. Hubble, on the galaxies' velocity of recession, we can establish the moment when all the universe's matter was concentrated in a single point, before it began to expand in space.