NASA Art And Design Contestants Create Multi-Media Visions Of Lunar Life

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July 06, 2010

Michael Braukus 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1979 
michael.j.braukus@xxxxxxxx 

Sasha Congiu 
Langley Research Center, Hampton, Va. 
757-864-5506 / 757-817-8383 
sasha.r.congiu@xxxxxxxx   


RELEASE: 10-158

NASA ART AND DESIGN CONTESTANTS CREATE MULTI-MEDIA VISIONS OF LUNAR LIFE

WASHINGTON -- NASA has selected the winners in the 2010 Life and Work 
on the Moon Art and Design Contest from more than 200 international 
student entries. 

Participants envisioned an imaginative lunar lifestyle through various 
artistic media. Entries were accepted in many categories, including 
music, video, two-dimensional, three-dimensional and digital art. For 
the first time, poetry and short stories were accepted in a 
literature category. 

"Offering students the opportunity to express themselves through art 
allows us to reach out to people who otherwise might not be able to 
participate in our program of exploration," said Jerry Hartman, 
education lead for the Exploration Systems Mission Directorate at 
NASA Headquarters in Washington. "Plus, the young people come up with 
a lot of cool stuff." 

Dalton Mills, a student at Central High School in La Crosse, Wis., was 
the overall winner for his video and animation entry, "Moonshot." He 
was inspired by NASA documentaries, other artists, science and 
physics classes. 

"Three-D art is a hobby of mine," Mills said. "In the future, I would 
like to pursue engineering and physics and freelance my artwork." 

A panel of scientists, professional artists and educators from the 
U.S. and other nations judged student submissions. The judges based 
their reviews on three elements: the artist's statement -- which 
described the student's inspiration; the artistic media they chose 
and why -- showing creativity and artistic expression; and the 
validity of the created situation based on the moon's harsh 
conditions. 

Jim Plaxco has judged the contest for three years and runs his own 
digital art gallery website called Artsnova. "What I found most 
rewarding about the experience was having the opportunity to review 
the art, think about its meaning, admire its quality and read the 
artist's words about their intent and inspiration," he said. 

Mitchell Peterson of Sheridan College in Sheridan, Wyo., won the 
college division. He created a graphite and color pencil drawing 
accompanied by original music called "Beyond the Atmosphere." He also 
included a variety of voice and other sound bites in his music, 
including clips from the Apollo lunar missions and from the movie, 
"It's a Wonderful Life." 

Brennan Barrington, a student at Licking Heights High School in 
Pataskala, Texas, won the high school division. Barrington wrote a 
short story called "Helium 3" that was inspired by Jack London's 
story, "To Build a Fire." "It was tricky to get all the details of 
gravity, how the dust moves, and things that like, but I got it 
done," Barrington said. 

The contest is sponsored by NASA's Exploration Systems Mission 
Directorate and is managed by Christopher Newport University, Newport 
News, Va. More than 40 entries came from non-U.S. locations including 
Bermuda, China, Columbia, Czech Republic, Georgia, India, Italy, 
Pakistan, Poland, Slovakia, Thailand, United Kingdom and Venezuela. 

The top cash award was $1,000 with smaller prizes for the top finisher 
in each category. Top non-U.S. students received an engraved plaque 
to acknowledge their achievement. The winning entries will be 
displayed digitally in NASA and museum locations across the country. 
Details about a new contest will be announced in September. 

For gallery viewing of winning entries, visit: 


http://artcontest.cet.edu 


For information about NASA research and exploration programs, visit: 


http://www.nasa.gov   

	
-end-



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