Музей космонавтики
- Opening hours
- Mon Closed
- Tue, Wed, Fri, Sun 10:00 — 19:00
- Thu, Sat 10:00 — 21:00
ONLINE
Museum website, YouTube
27 July 2020 - 31 August 2020
On Mondays, 19:30 - 20:30 (Moscow time)
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Space Art Summer School, organized by the Museum of Cosmonautics in collaboration with ARTYPICAL, will present a public online program in July-August 2020. Creative sessions, lectures and screenings will be available to everyone who wants to get acquainted with artists and researchers combining culture and space in their practice. Meetings will be host in English.
All public talks by guests of the public program will be held on Mondays from July 27 to August 31 on the online platforms of the Cosmonautics Museum, free of charge for viewers and listeners. The curator of the Space Art Summer School is Natalia Fuchs. The co-host of the Space Art Summer School is Peter Kirn.
The film by Pavel Klushantsev is created on the border of genres, combining elements of science fiction and popular cinema. The plot is based on the life and works of the founder of theoretical cosmonautics — Konstantin Tsiolkovsky. The film clearly shows the principles of space flight. The first real space flight into space took place only 4 years after the release of the film.
Pavel Klushantsev is considered the ancestor of a unique genre that combines popular science and science fiction. He graduated from the camera department of the Leningrad Photo-Film Technical School, worked at the studios Belgoskino, Tekhfilm and Lentekhfilm. He is the author of a number of innovative technical developments in cinema, including the luminescent method of combined shooting, the camera stabilizer for aerial filming and equipment for underwater filming. Some of Klushantsev's inventions were later used by major Hollywood studios and directors, in particular by Standley Kubrick and George Lucas.
The screening is in Russian. Watch the film on live stream.
European Space Agency communication officer Marco Trovatello will present the talk “ESA and the arts: How to find and use the European Space Agency‘s data, imagery and sounds for your creative endeavours”. Not just since ESA has formally affirmed its Open Access strategy, the space agency shares large amounts of scientific and multimedia assets across its platforms. However, how to find and use them for artistic work is still not easy.
Marco Trovatello, in these days working at the ESA‘s astronaut centre in Cologne, Germany and formerly the communication strategist who introduced the agency‘s Open Access efforts, will shed some light and help to explore the treasure trove of Space science data, not leaving international partners out.
Artist Andréa Stanislav will discuss her recent and upcoming visual art projects and public art performances exploring the theme of space exploration. Andréa has been working with the topic of space exploration or over a decade through her 2-D collage works, sculpture, video installation and performance art. Her work is informed by science-fiction novels and films, images from the Hubble telescope and Russian Cosmism.
Ms. Stanislav has been working in collaboration with the Museum of Cosmonautics in Moscow on several projects since 2018 including Parade of the Planets, and Reflect - Mars. She will also discuss upcoming media installations, new work informed by Galina Balashova's designs, and human migration to Mars. Andréa Stanislav's website.