Outer Space and Popular Culture: Influences and Interrelations, Part 2
In: Southern Space Studies
Intro -- Contents -- 1 Being the Alien: The Space Pierrots and Circus Spaces of David Bowie, Klaus Nomi and Michael Jackson -- 1.1 David Bowie: Lost in Clown Space? -- 1.2 Singing Astral Pop Songs for Earthlings: Klaus Nomi, the Futuristic RoboPierrot -- 1.3 Out of This World: Michael Jackson, the Male Barbarella? -- 1.4 The Space Oddities of Bowie, Nomi and Jackson-and Chimeric Clowns -- 2 When Art Was Science -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 The First Space Artists -- 2.2.1 Leonardo Da Vinci -- 2.2.2 Galileo Galilei -- 2.3 A Polymathic Legacy -- 2.4 The Creative Imperative -- 2.4.1 Johannes Kepler -- 2.4.2 Max Planck -- 2.4.3 Albert Einstein -- 2.4.4 Richard Feynman -- 2.5 Common Ground -- 2.5.1 Frank Joseph Malina -- 2.5.2 Stephen Wilson -- 2.6 The Art/Sci Dichotomy Demystified -- 2.6.1 Robert and Michèle Root-Bernstein -- 2.6.2 The Education of a Polymathic Nation -- 2.6.3 From STEM to STEAM -- 2.6.4 The Role Models of STEAM -- 2.6.5 The Sustainability of STEAM -- 2.6.6 Ushering in an Art/Sci Culture -- 2.7 The Creative Imperative and The Polymathic Legacy -- 2.8 A Culture of Transdisciplinary Collaboration -- 2.9 The Polymathic Lifestyle Quiz -- 2.10 The Creative Arts Agenda -- 2.11 Conclusion -- 3 The Limitless Horizons of Space Art -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 A Brief History in Time -- 3.3 The Polymathic Forerunners -- 3.3.1 James Hall Nasmyth, Engineer/Artist/Astronomer -- 3.3.2 Thomas Simeon Scriven Bolton, Artist/Illustrator/Astronomer -- 3.3.3 Lucian Rudaux, Artist/Illustrator/Astronomer/Writer -- 3.3.4 Chesley Knight Bonestell, Architect/Astronomer/Artist -- 3.3.5 Ralph Andrew Smith, Engineer/Artist/British Interplanetary Society President -- 3.4 Amaze, Inspire, Instruct: The Purpose of Space Art -- 3.4.1 Categories of Space Art -- 3.4.2 Art on Earth Viewed from Space -- 3.5 Art Viewed in Space and in Zero Gravity -- 3.6 Art Made in Space.