ESA has teamed up with eight art schools around Europe and challenged their students to produce art inspired by Artemis, lunar exploration and the European Service Module that will provide the power, propulsion, water and air for the astronauts on board.
Students made 24 artworks that we will showcase on the Orion blog over the coming months. Using a variety of techniques and from many different cultural backgrounds, the artists have thought about what human spaceflight to the Moon and beyond signifies.
This artwork was made by Martin Braun from the Hochschule Darmstadt in Germany.
"The artwork I submitted started by focusing on the Orion-European Service Module to show where we are going to be and what we will have achieved in the future, but the mission doesn’t stop there. ESA is pushing forward to not just bring humans back to the Moon. It’s a project that is looking for new challenges like travelling to Mars. The artwork is trying to express this future vision and what humans will achieve."
As the only place that humans have seen with their own eyes throughout history, our Moon features heavily in world cultures. The Artemis programme, itself named after the ancient Greek goddess of the Moon, will take humans back to our natural satellite and, in doing so, will become memorialised in popular culture.
All the artworks are available on ESA's Orion blog with interviews with the artists.