World's first pop-art satellite headed to space

Advertisement
By Associated Press | Updated: 12 August 2013 17:01 IST
If aliens ever target Earth, Jon Gibson and Amanda White are counting on them having an appreciation for pop art and a sense of humor.

The duo created an elaborate, Andy Warhol-like design that has been etched into a satellite's panel, transforming the spacecraft into a replica of an oversized electrical charging device.

"If someone is going to invade our planet, presumably they're going to come in some sort of electronic, electricity-powered ship," Gibson notes whimsically. "Maybe this will make them stop for a moment and say, These guys are nice. We're not going to destroy their planet.'"

At the very least, it will give them the opportunity to pause briefly and check out what may be the world's first orbiting work of art.

Advertisement

Of the 1,000 or so functioning satellites that race around Earth every day, there isn't one he knows of that also doubles as art, says veteran satellite builder Craig Clark, who runs the Scotland-based company preparing to launch this one from Kazakhstan on Oct. 29.

"No one else is crazy enough," the CEO of Clyde Space Ltd. said during a recent phone interview from his office in Glasgow.

In building the small satellite that will monitor atmospheric conditions and send back photos and other information from 373 miles above Earth, he turned to Gibson and White and their popular iam8bit gallery in Los Angeles.

Advertisement

Their previous works include such esoteric efforts as overseeing a performance-art, paint-by-numbers project in 2010 that had 20,000 people affixing 2-inch-by-2-inch pixels to a wall to create a splashy, colorful mural for a conference of video game developers. A film of their efforts now resides in an art museum in Denver.

"Hopefully, by doing some kind of quirky things like this we'll get some kids interested in space. Rather than going on to doing war, they can do something that helps change the world and makes it a better place," said Clark, who received a Member of the British Empire medal for his work this year from Queen Elizabeth.

Advertisement

After some brainstorming, Gibson and White decided they wanted to do something directly related to space travel.

Using Computer Generated Imagery to make the satellite look like an electrical charger circling Earth turned out to be pretty easy. Putting such a design on a 2-pound, shoebox-sized gizmo filled with wires, antennas, sensors, solar panels and other sensitive equipment proved far more challenging.

Advertisement

First, something that would stand up to the wear and tear of being fired into space, then orbiting the Earth at 17,000 mph for 25 years had to be used. And it couldn't be paint, either, which would deteriorate over time and give off gas that could fog the satellite's camera.

So the images of computer buttons and a USB port, along with the words, "Greetings Beleaguered Space Traveler. Welcome to the Universe's First Celestial Charging Station," had to be etched right onto the satellite's side.

That limited the use of color to the orange, black and white that the satellite's panels really look like.

Still, Gibson and White managed to come up with a splashy, colorful and surprisingly realistic looking charger; one with white buttons and a USB port contained on a bright, meticulously detailed orange background.

Unfortunately, it's unlikely anybody on Earth will ever see the work once it enters orbit.

It's etched onto the side of the satellite that will be pointing heavenward, Clark said, and even if it wasn't, tracking something the size of a loaf of bread at that speed would be no easy task.

"But we'll take plenty of pictures before we launch it," he said with a laugh.

Whether the result will be absolutely the world's first orbiting space work is open to some debate.

Harvard astrophysicist Jonathan McDowell notes that American Alan Bean, the fourth person to walk on the moon, is an accomplished painter. So is Russian Alexey Leonov, the first person to walk in space. Either might have doodled while they were up there.

He also noted that a South Korean artist's home-built satellite was launched in February. There was no artful design attached to it, but it did contain lights that were supposed to illuminate in a colorful, artful pattern.

Unfortunately, from what space watchers can see, those lights don't appear to have ever come on since it left Earth.

 

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

Further reading: pop art satellite, satellite
Advertisement
Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Vivo X300 Series Confirmed to Debut With OriginOS 6, Thickness Revealed
  2. HMD Touch 4G Launched in India With 3.2-Inch Display: Price, Features
  3. Nothing Brings Call Recording to Its Smartphones, But There's a Catch
  4. Amazon Diwali Sale 2025: Top Discounts on Samsung Phones Under Rs. 35,000
  5. HMD Pulse 2 Pro Design Leaked, Could Sport a 50-Megapixel Selfie Camera
  6. Oppo Find X9 Series Could Feature These Displays, Cameras
  1. Honor Magic 8 Pro Allegedly Leaked in White Colourway Ahead of Launch in China
  2. Realme 15 Pro Game of Thrones Edition Launching Today: Know Price in India, Features and Specifications
  3. NASA’s Juno Probe Faces Silence as Mission Ends Amid Government Shutdown
  4. Perseverance Spots Possible Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Over Martian Sky
  5. Tiny Asteroid 2025 TF Zooms Past Earth Undetected, Closer Than Satellites
  6. A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms OTT Release Revealed: Everything We Know About the Game of Thrones Prequel
  7. RBI to Introduce Pilot for Deposit Tokenisation Using CBDC Layer: Report
  8. Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 Open Beta Extended by a Day Till October 9
  9. MeitY's IndiaAI Mission Taps Five Projects to Drive Safe, Trusted AI in the Country
  10. FIFA World Cup Ticket NFTs Face Swiss Gambling Supervisory Authority’s Scrutiny
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.