Since 1963, more than eight hundred spacecraft have been launched
into geosynchronous orbit, forming a man-made ring of satellites around
the Earth. These satellites are destined to become one of the
longest-lasting artifacts of human civilization, quietly floating
through space long after every trace of humanity has disappeared from
the planet.
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image credit: http://creativetime.org/projects/the-last-pictures/the-pictures/ |
Trevor Paglen’s The Last Pictures is a project that marks
one of these spacecraft with a visual record of our contemporary
historical moment. Paglen spent five years interviewing scientists,
artists, anthropologists, and philosophers to consider what such a
cultural mark should be. Working with materials scientists at
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Paglen developed an artifact
designed to last billions of years—an ultra-archival disc, micro-etched
with one hundred photographs and encased in a gold-plated shell. In Fall
2012, the communications satellite EchoStar XVI will launch into
geostationary orbit with the disc mounted to its anti-earth deck. While
the satellite’s broadcast images are as fleeting as the light-speed
radio waves they travel on, The Last Pictures will remain in outer space slowly circling the Earth until the Earth itself is no more.
source: http://creativetime.org/projects/the-last-pictures/
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