Astronaut Alan Bean, who died Saturday at 86, was the fourth person to walk on the moon and the fourth person to visit Skylab — the U.S.'s first space station. But he was the first person to return from another world and make art about what he saw there. "I'd never imagined myself as an artist," Bean said in a documentary for the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. "And then I thought, you know, I am the only potential artist that's ever been anywhere but this Earth, maybe I can make a contribution in art. Maybe I can tell some stories that would be lost forever." The paintings Bean created after his retirement from NASA in 1981 were painstakingly precise recreations of his experiences in space. He often pored over photographs and interviewed colleagues to get the details exactly right. Planetary scientist Phil Metzger, who once interviewed Bean for a study on Apollo 12, recalled on Twitter that the astronaut even built a diorama of the landing site to make sure the shadows and perspective in his paintings were accurate. |
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