“Just keep telling the story,” says the director character
in Wes Anderson’s latest film, “Asteroid City,” which takes a stylized look at
mid-century America’s fascination with space and interstellar communications.
Later this year, the Lunar Codex — a vast multimedia archive telling a story of
the world’s people through creative arts — will start heading for permanent installation
on the moon aboard a series of unmanned rockets.
اضافة اعلان
The Lunar Codex is a digitized (or miniaturized) collection
of contemporary art, poetry, magazines, music, film, podcasts, and books by
30,000 artists, writers, musicians, and filmmakers from 157 countries. It’s the
brainchild of Samuel Peralta, a semiretired physicist and author in Canada with
a love of the arts and sciences.
Prints from war-torn Ukraine and poetry from countries
threatened by climate change are in the Codex, as well as more than 130 issues
of PoetsArtists magazine. Among the thousands of images are “New American
Gothic,” by Ayana Ross, the winner of the 2021 Bennett Prize for female
artists; “Emerald Girl,” a portrait in Lego bricks by Pauline Aubey; and the
aptly titled “New Moon,” a 1980 serigraph by Alex Colville. Some works were
commissioned for the project, including “The Polaris Trilogy: Poems for the
Moon,” a collection of poetry from every continent, including Antarctica.
Isaac Asimov’s
science-fiction novel “Foundation,” stored on a nickel-based NanoFiche disc
surrounded by blank discs, at the home of Samuel Peralta, a semiretired
physicist and author, in Mississauga, Ontario, July 14, 2023. Peralta created
the Lunar Codex, an archive of contemporary art, poetry, magazines, music,
film, podcasts and books by 30,000 artists, writers, musicians and filmmakers
in 157 countries, that will be headed to the moon aboard unmanned rockets.
An art collector and poet himself, Peralta, the executive
chair of the Toronto-based media and technology company Incandence, has been
reaching out to creators through gallery and publishing connections to select
the works (and get archival permissions) for free inclusion in the Codex. He
has also accepted works submitted by individual artists.
“This is the largest, most global project to launch cultural
works into space,” Peralta said in an interview. “There isn’t anything like
this anywhere.”
The Codex represents creators from a range of experiences. It
includes several pieces from Connie Karleta Sales, an artist with the
autoimmune disease neuromyelitis optica, who makes paintings using eye-gaze
technology. “Electric Joy,” one of the works, “celebrates the color and
movement of my mind,” Sales said in an email. “I might have limited use of my
physical body, but my mind is limitless. It is dancing, laughing, crying, and
loving.”
Olesya Dzhurayeva, a Ukrainian printmaker, had evacuated
Kyiv in April 2022 in the first months of the Russian attack when Peralta, who
had previously purchased some of her work, contacted her with a supportive
message. He also asked for her permission to archive images of several of her
linocuts in the Lunar Codex, and she agreed. “This project is so life-affirming
with thoughts about the future,” she wrote in an email. “This is exactly what I
needed in those first months.” A collection of her pieces are represented in
the Codex, including a series of woodcuts printed with black Ukrainian soil.
Samuel Peralta, the creator of the Lunar
Codex, a time capsule of human creativity, holds a soapstone Inuit sculpture at
his home in Mississauga, Ontario, July 14, 2023. The Lunar Codex, an archive of
contemporary art, poetry, magazines, music, film, podcasts and books by 30,000
artists, writers, musicians and filmmakers in 157 countries, will be headed to
the moon aboard unmanned rockets.
The moon has hosted earthly art for decades. “The Moon
Museum,” a tiny ceramic tile featuring line drawings by Forrest Myers, Andy
Warhol, Claes Oldenburg, Robert Rauschenberg, David Novros, and John
Chamberlain, was discreetly attached to the leg of a lunar module left on the
moon as part of the Apollo 12 mission in 1969. “Fallen Astronaut,” an aluminum
sculpture by Belgian artist Paul van Hoeydonck, was left on the lunar surface
by the Apollo 15 crew in 1971, with a plaque commemorating 14 American
astronauts and Soviet cosmonauts who died in scientific service to their
countries.
Outside the Lunar Codex project, other contemporary artists
are aiming to place solo works on the moon’s surface through commercial space
travel, including Jeff Koons and British artist Sacha Jafri. The Arch Mission
Foundation has sent Isaac Asimov’s “Foundation” trilogy and millions of Lunar
Library pages into space.
But the Lunar Codex has bigger storytelling ambitions. It’s
divided into four time capsules, with its material copied onto digital memory
cards or inscribed into nickel-based NanoFiche, a lightweight analog storage
media that can hold 150,000 laser-etched microscopic pages of text or photos on
one 8.5-by-11-inch sheet. The concept is “like the Golden Record,” Peralta
said, referring to NASA’s own cultural time capsule of audio and images stored
on a metal disc and sent into space aboard the Voyager probes in 1977. “Gold
would be incredibly heavy. Nickel wafers are much, much lighter.”
Peralta, a polymath who got his Ph.D. in physics from the
University of Wales, is the son of Filipino anthropologist/playwright Jesus T.
Peralta and abstract artist Rosario Bitanga-Peralta. He started the Lunar Codex
during the coronavirus pandemic to send his own work, including his science
fiction books, to the moon before deciding to expand the scope.
He’s been compiling content for a few years, although some
people he’s contacted haven’t taken him seriously. “I say, ‘I’d like to put
your art on the moon,’ and they think this is some sort of a scam,” he said.
His basic requirement for acceptance is that the artist or writer has been
pre-curated by having work included in an exhibition, catalog, or anthology.
One Codex capsule has already orbited the moon on NASA’s
Orion mission last year. The Codex’s other capsules are scheduled to land and
stay on the moon starting this fall through NASA’s Commercial Lunar Payload
Services program, which awards contracts to aerospace engineering companies
like Astrobotic Technology of Pittsburgh and Intuitive Machines of Houston. After
the companies create the lander modules for NASA’s equipment, they can sell any
extra room on board. Prices vary; Astrobotic charges $3,270 to ferry a
0.5-inch-by-1-inch “moon capsule” onboard one of its lunar landers.
Peralta is largely funding the cost of the payload space on
the three landers and doesn’t have a final price yet, but he said it’s been a
fraction of the cost of buying a “space tourist” ticket on a commercial rocket.
(A Virgin Galactic trip costs $450,000.)
Peralta sees the Lunar Codex as “a message in the bottle for
the future that during this time of war, pandemic and economic upheaval people
still found time to create beauty.” And, for those who want to follow its
travels, the Codex’s current launch schedule and contents of each collection
can be viewed at lunarcodex.com.
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