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Hi,
Something I was wondering about lately is how space art is perceived by those who are knowledgeable about astronomy and space in general. How do you perceive space art that does not accurately represent the current astronomical knowledge? Good, bad? I'm curious about this because my own space work is based mostly on imagination rather than scientific knowledge of outer space. What are your thoughts? Thanks. -- _ARTEW_ Space art http://www.art.eonworks.com/gallery/...gallery_1.html |
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On Sun, 01 Feb 2009 18:28:10 +0100, Dawid Michalczyk
wrote: Something I was wondering about lately is how space art is perceived by those who are knowledgeable about astronomy and space in general. How do you perceive space art that does not accurately represent the current astronomical knowledge? Good, bad? I'm curious about this because my own space work is based mostly on imagination rather than scientific knowledge of outer space. What are your thoughts? Thanks. Well, LOTR is one of my favorite books, but I don't mistake it for reality g. If space art represents itself as scientifically accurate, and it isn't, that's not a good thing. If it is clearly fantasy, there's nothing wrong with that. Personally, I do find it kind of jarring to see space art that has elements that are _obviously_ unreal, however. Your images aren't in that category (except for showing galaxies and nebulas as colorful, but that's an exaggeration I don't find unreasonable- grayscale skies would get kind of boring after a while). _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com |
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On Feb 1, 5:28*pm, Dawid Michalczyk wrote:
Hi, Something I was wondering about lately is how space art is perceived by those who are knowledgeable about astronomy and space in general. How do you perceive space art that does not accurately represent the current astronomical knowledge? Good, bad? I'm curious about this because my own space work is based mostly on imagination rather than scientific knowledge of outer space. What are your thoughts? Thanks. -- _ARTEW_ Space arthttp://www.art.eonworks.com/gallery/space/space_gallery_1.html William Blake got it right,empiricists draw you down to the page hence the blank celestial background - http://nibiryukov.narod.ru/nb_pinaco...aac_newton.jpg The responses here are mostly personal attacks,financial chestbeating mixed with a bit of magnification and they think this is astronomy !. The same feeling for astronomical methods and insights are present in all wothwhile and creative endeavors of humanity such as in art and music but it rare now to find people now who can bypass the novelistic junk placed before the wider population under the name of 'astronomy'. |
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![]() "Dawid Michalczyk" wrote in message k... Hi, Something I was wondering about lately is how space art is perceived by those who are knowledgeable about astronomy and space in general. How do you perceive space art that does not accurately represent the current astronomical knowledge? Good, bad? I'm curious about this because my own space work is based mostly on imagination rather than scientific knowledge of outer space. What are your thoughts? Thanks. -- _ARTEW_ Space art http://www.art.eonworks.com/gallery/...gallery_1.html My honest thought: You don't give a ****, you just want to promote your own crap. Well, you did ask... |
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Chris L Peterson wrote:
On Sun, 01 Feb 2009 18:28:10 +0100, Dawid Michalczyk wrote: Something I was wondering about lately is how space art is perceived by those who are knowledgeable about astronomy and space in general. How do you perceive space art that does not accurately represent the current astronomical knowledge? Good, bad? I'm curious about this because my own space work is based mostly on imagination rather than scientific knowledge of outer space. What are your thoughts? Thanks. Well, LOTR is one of my favorite books, but I don't mistake it for reality g. If space art represents itself as scientifically accurate, and it isn't, that's not a good thing. If it is clearly fantasy, there's nothing wrong with that. Personally, I do find it kind of jarring to see space art that has elements that are _obviously_ unreal, however. Your images aren't in that category (except for showing galaxies and nebulas as colorful, but that's an exaggeration I don't find unreasonable- grayscale skies would get kind of boring after a while). Indeed, NASA does the same thing with Hubble images - most of them are false-color, with contrast exaggerated. |
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![]() Chris L Peterson wrote: If space art represents itself as scientifically accurate, and it isn't, that's not a good thing. If it is clearly fantasy, there's nothing wrong with that. Personally, I do find it kind of jarring to see space art that has elements that are _obviously_ unreal, however. Your images aren't in that category (except for showing galaxies and nebulas as colorful, but that's an exaggeration I don't find unreasonable- grayscale skies would get kind of boring after a while). I thought the images looked very nice, especially this one: http://www.art.eonworks.com/gallery/...-200801-TH.jpg (where would space art be without Saturn?) Nicest part though was a complete lack of any dolphins or whales in the images, a thing that got way too popular a few years back: http://i152.photobucket.com/albums/s...dolphins-2.jpg http://i162.photobucket.com/albums/t...asy/Whales.jpg Pat |
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On Feb 1, 10:28*am, Dawid Michalczyk wrote:
Something I was wondering about lately is how space art is perceived by those who are knowledgeable about astronomy and space in general. How do you perceive space art that does not accurately represent the current astronomical knowledge? Good, bad? I'm curious about this because my own space work is based mostly on imagination rather than scientific knowledge of outer space. What are your thoughts? Thanks. Obviously, it is _preferable_ if space art is scientifically accurate. Thus, the space art of Chesley Bonestell, for example, is well loved because, in addition to its beauty, he was meticulous in researching the scientific knowledge available at his time. (Some of that knowledge, though, was imperfect as we now know.) There are many impressive types of space art that are not strongly dependent on scientific fact; as long as you point the lit side of any moons towards the nearest sun, and so on, there isn't that much to get wrong in many cases. And if you want to be the next Boris Vallejo instead of the next Chesley Bonestell, well, that too is a path to fame and fortune. John Savard |
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On Feb 2, 4:36*am, "Painius" wrote:
"Dawid Michalczyk" wrote in message k... Hi, Something I was wondering about lately is how space art is perceived by those who are knowledgeable about astronomy and space in general. How do you perceive space art that does not accurately represent the current astronomical knowledge? Good, bad? I'm curious about this because my own space work is based mostly on imagination rather than scientific knowledge of outer space. What are your thoughts? Thanks. -- _ARTEW_ Space art http://www.art.eonworks.com/gallery/...gallery_1.html Interesting name, "Dawid"! *It's so much like "David" that at first i thought it might be a mistake, a "typo" error. Anyway, a very important part of writing fiction, or in your case, of illustrating space, is that you have a responsibility to your readers/patrons to provide a sound basis of truth to them. *This is part of what makes any fictional work very difficult to construct. *It is in fact harder in this respect to write about or illustrate space in fiction than it is to do it in a more "documentary" style. *Truth is stranger than fiction, and when you're writing about or illustrating "facts", that's usually a lot easier than having to stick to "what is known" or "what can possibly be" when writing/illustrating fiction. You should have been advising our NASA and Apollo wizards. So yes, there is a "boundary" that a writer or artist should not "step over". However, people *love* color and contrast in art, as even the Hubble scientists recognize. *So if one provides the interesting, even fascinating, "colors" to one's art, whether it be painting or writing, AND one does not overstep the "boundary", then one can say that his or her conscience is clear. Your mainstream uses eye-candy hype all the time. Spitzer is primarily of the IR spectrum and thus pretty much offers nothing but artificial colorization and eye-candy. Most of Hubble is also eye- candy hyped because of those color/hue saturations having been so exaggerated, and their equipment upgrades will soon be offering even more so extreme eye-candy. http://spider.ipac.caltech.edu/~rebu...auwOct.ppt.pdf Having said that, one must also note that astronomy and cosmology are still hampered by limitations that restrict our total knowledge of "physical reality", so the boundary isn't always clear and precise. *There is still much room for "poetic" and "artistic" license! The continual need-to-know and otherwise excluding of evidence policy tends to cloud or cloak most everything that public funded, as well as does the topic/author stalking and systematic bashing that you clearly approve of. ~ BG |
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Dawid Michalczyk wrote:
Hi, Something I was wondering about lately is how space art is perceived by those who are knowledgeable about astronomy and space in general. How do you perceive space art that does not accurately represent the current astronomical knowledge? Good, bad? Depends on how it is portrayed within context and on the intent of the artist. Some of the more imaginitive stuff is very thought provoking, but has little place in a science textbook. Science textbooks, however, aren't the only works of value. -- Dave |
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On Feb 2, 1:32*pm, Dave Typinski wrote:
Dawid Michalczyk wrote: Hi, Something I was wondering about lately is how space art is perceived by those who are knowledgeable about astronomy and space in general. How do you perceive space art that does not accurately represent the current astronomical knowledge? Good, bad? Depends on how it is portrayed within context and on the intent of the artist. *Some of the more imaginitive stuff is very thought provoking, but has little place in a science textbook. *Science textbooks, however, aren't the only works of value. -- Dave Our science textbooks are absolutely chuck full of mainstream status quo infomercials, hype and butt loads of eye-candy as is. What parts would you like to see changed, such as for their becoming more informative and truthworthy? ~ BG |
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