Today, representations of Mars, both real and artistic, are so much different and with the advent of digital media, its possible to visualize even small details on the surface at my leisure.
I wonder how it must be to see the developments in space exploration as a child now, with nothing left to the imagination and maps, charts and videos of the remote world available at the touch of a button. As a boy, I was amazed at how books showed the surface of Mars and proposed the existence of 'canals' on its mysterious surface.
Other, less well known artists populated the raft of space books available in the sixties with images based on photographs taken with terrestrial telescopes, or used Schiaparelli's 1862 map as a rough guide or presented Percival Lowell's wild theories about canals.
Lowells three books are available as pdf's here:
https://archive.org/details/marsasabodeoflif00loweuoft/page/108/mode/2up
In the 1950's, prior to any successful space probe launch, artists were even more extravagant in their visions, such as these lavishly romantic paintings in the Collins 'Timothy's Space Book', a quaint series of books in which the young boy is shown the wonders of air and space travel by his dad, replete with suit, trilby and pipe.
Watch Perseverance landing this evening (19.00 gmt onwards ) on social media, tv and Youtube, and I wonder if the full significance of the amazing achievement will dawn on generations of children today, or might it just be glossed over as the latest in a long line of technological achievements designed to extend mans footprint on the world ? I for one, will be watching in some fashion, but in the back of my mind, I can still retain the wonder and amazement of being able to 'see' the surface of a world which glitters faintly in the light of dawn and wonder if in my own lifetime, humans will actually visit and be able to wipe the dust off their robotic precursors who paved the way to the mysterious red planet.
yay! Touchdown!
ReplyDeleteHow cool was that!
ReplyDeleteAnd soon the first pictures .... hopefully!
ReplyDeleteits a god awful small affair ... not really, its a huge event!
ReplyDeleteYou're not excited at all, are you Woodsy ?
ReplyDeleteMe? no! ha ha
ReplyDelete