Life and Work on the Moon: What Images Come to Mind?

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Aug. 23, 2007

Sonja Alexander
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1761
sonja.r.alexander@xxxxxxxx

Keith Henry
Langley Research Center, Hampton, Va.
757-864-6120/344-7211
h.k.henry@xxxxxxxx

RELEASE: 07-179

LIFE AND WORK ON THE MOON: WHAT IMAGES COME TO MIND?

HAMPTON, Va. - A new NASA contest encourages university art and design 
students to partner with science and engineering departments to 
create art representative of living and working on the moon. The goal 
is for students in the arts, science and engineering to 
collaboratively engage in NASA's mission to return humans to the moon 
by 2020, and eventually journey on to Mars and other destinations in 
the solar system.

The Advanced Planning and Partnership Office at NASA's Langley 
Research Center in Hampton, Va., is sponsoring the "Life and Work on 
the Moon" contest. Winners will receive cash prizes up to $1,000. 
Winning artwork also will be exhibited online and across the country. 


Students in architecture, industrial design, computer design, the fine 
arts and other disciplines are invited to submit entries in one of 
three categories: two-dimensional art, three-dimensional art or 
digital art. To ensure artistic concepts reflect the realities of the 
harsh lunar environment, art students are strongly encouraged to 
consult with science and engineering students and use NASA's online 
resources.

A volunteer panel of judges will represent NASA, other government 
agencies, universities, industry and the professional art community. 
Judges will evaluate artistic qualities and whether the entry depicts 
a valid scenario in the context of the lunar environment.

In sponsoring the contest, NASA hopes to encourage more collaboration 
among scientists and engineers and the artistic and creative 
communities. Such collaboration may generate new ideas for living and 
working in extra-terrestrial environments, resulting in more 
successful long-duration space missions.

Winners of the contest will be offered the opportunity to exhibit 
their work in NASA facilities and science museums. An online public 
gallery will be available through a partnership with NASA's Classroom 
of the Future, maintained by the Wheeling Jesuit University Center 
for Educational Technologies in Wheeling, W. Va., and the Christopher 
Newport University Institute for Science Education in Newport News, 
Va. Christopher Newport University will provide cash awards for top 
prizes.

Entries are due no later than December 1, 2007, and results will be 
announced in February 2008. A high school version of this contest is 
planned for the spring of 2008.

For more details about the contest, including NASA's resources about 
the moon, visit:

http://artcontest.larc.nasa.gov 

For more information about NASA and agency programs, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov

	
-end-



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