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Go on a photographic journey through space next year in a stunning new exhibition by Michael Benson at the Natural History Museum, running from 22 January 2016 - 15 May 2016.
Go on a photographic journey through space next year in a stunning new exhibition by Michael Benson at the Natural History Museum, running from 22 January 2016 - 15 May 2016.
These 77 composite images by artist, curator and writer Michael Benson represent a joining together of art and science: raw data provided by NASA and ESA missions has been painstakingly processed and assembled for public display. This exhibition will explore the beauty of our Solar System and demonstrate that the visual legacy of six decades of space exploration constitutes a visually stunning, important chapter in the history of photography.
Museum researchers have partnered with Benson to bring additional science content in the new show. An audio guide complements the striking visuals with insights into the work of leading Museum scientists such as Dr Joe Michalski, who is investigating the geological processes that shaped Mars to better understand the early life of our own planet.
Michael Benson comments, “In the past 60 years, an audacious, utterly consequential story has unfolded. Combining rocket science with the innate human drive to explore, after millennia of speculation about the planets, the first expeditions to the solar system’s far-flung worlds have taken place. Through the agency of a small squadron of increasingly sophisticated robotic spacecraft, we’ve seen Earth dwindle to the size of a pearl, and then a pixel, as we voyaged far beyond any place ever directly visited by human beings.
He continues: “As a result, the archipelago of planets within which the Earth turns has become tangibly, vividly real. Otherworlds is a retrospective survey of an entire genre of photography and an overview of the solar system’s quite dazzling diversity of landscapes.”
Understanding how these landscapes were formed is a part of the Museum’s planetary science research, using our celestial neighbours to understand the early formation of Earth, how the solar system first began and what life is like on other planets. Researchers refer to the Museum’s world-leading collection of 2000 meteorites in their work, and contribute to remote-sensing research with colleagues at NASA and ESA, including the current Rosetta mission.
“We are delighted to be working in partnership with Michael Benson to bring these images to London, reframing how we see our Solar System,” says Sir Michael Dixon, Director of the Natural History Museum. “These images are not only works of art, they are also created from the very same data that Museum scientists use to understand the 4.5 billion year history of our solar system, our planet and life on it.”
Buy tickets online at www.nhm.ac.uk/otherworlds from 25 September 2015.
Ends
Notes for editors
For further information, please contact the Natural History Museum Press Office
Tel: 020 7942 5654
Email: press@nhm.ac.uk (not for publication)
Download images: https://nhm.box.com/s/qr6mxyoiuvmo577rl7o0ybpmedjr6zsp (please contact the Press Office for password)