"Why Art in Space? = Why Space?"
by Arthur Woods - Excerpted from the Tate-in-Space discussion.
November 11, 2002
Approximately 100 years ago, at the beginning of the modernist
era and of "modern art", the avantgarde was characterized
by its confidence and optimism about the future. They held the
firm belief that the industrial age was opening many new territories
to explore and that art, in its most noble and explicit way, would
find the necessary metaphors by which a radically changing culture
could be explained. There was no sense that civilization would
ever be
threatened by the very forces that fueled their optimism. There
were no statistics about pollution, overpopulation, ozone holes,
and resource shortages to numb the senses and to counter their
optimism.
Yet, as the century progressed, modern art strived and ultimately
failed, as did religion, to provide modern humanity with spiritual
sustenance and ethical guidelines in the brave new world of the
20th century. Consequently, post modern society has become increasingly
more materialistic at the expense of the human spirit, its moral
values and of its shared vision.
If our species continues with its relentless, materialistic " business-as-usual" approach
to current human affairs, ignoring all of the obvious environmental
and political signals that are reported daily in the media until
it is too late; it is risking certain ecological collapse, appropriation
and rationalization of resources, political and cultural repression,
and the eventual crash of society under the weight of too many
people with too many problems on a planet that is too small.
Indeed,
we are already witnessing some of these undesirable
developments today - changes in the world climate, extinctions,
outbreaks of mass starvation, depletion of natural food stocks
and,
of course, terrorism and the wars over the control of finite resources
to mention only the most obvious.
It appears that the only alternative to the "business as
usual"
approach to the future being seriously discussed today can be
generally described as the "green option" which has set
forth the
seemingly impossible task of trying to change human nature by
persuading present society to retreat from a dynamic, energy
intensive, global market economy which has enabled the substantial
prosperity for the developed nations at the expense of the lesser
developed societies and of the environment.
While the husbandry of
valuable resources and the search for alternatives to fossil fuels
and nuclear power are desirable and necessary goals
that should be diligently pursued, the absence of a viable terrestrial
alternative to humanity's growing energy requirements is a major
concern for a growing population. If humanity would consequently
follow the "green" path without first "solving" the
critical energy question, it must eventually turn off the very
economic engine that is essential to maintaining today's society
and, with it, the hopes and dreams of the developing societies
that have no other economic model on which to base their future
survival. In addition there is the "greenhouse factor".
Any alternative energy resource must also be free of greenhouse
gases as the impact
of these on the climate and the environment may be as critical
as a lack of suffiecient energy.
With world population predicted to reach 8 billion or slightly
more
by 2020, neither of the above options for humanity's future are
very optimistic in the near term. The end result of the "green
option" will not be much different than that of the "business-as-usual" approach.
The stresses to the environment and to society will continue to
increase to the point of no return which will likely lead to unimaginable
acts of violence and destruction. The human species will have become
a victim of its own success and the price of that
success in the 20th century may unfortunately spell the end of
civilization as we know it in the 21st .
However, there is a third and "optimistic" option to
the above
scenarios. Called the "Space Option", it takes into account
human
nature and still offers a realistic and equitable approach to meeting
humanity's growing energy needs. The Space Option is an evolutionary
plan to significantly meet the basic and anticipated needs of all
human
societies on Earth through the utilization of extraterrestrial
resources - not for the in-situ support of science or exploration
- but rather to apply these resources and/or their products for
use on Earth at a conspicuous level.
The Space Option is
not directly focused on colonizing outer space nor about exploring
distant planets and stars per se, although these activities would
most likely and logically happen as a result. But rather, it is
about accessing and utilizing the
infinite natural resources (to some extent for hu,man purposes)
located just above our heads rather than exhausting
what
is left of the dwindling and finite resources located below our
feet.
When most people imagine "space" they automatically
assume immense emptiness and unobtainable distances. However, within
the boundaries of Earth's gravitational influence which creates
a sphere that extends 1.5 million kilometers
outwards, exists 13 million times the volume of the physical Earth
and through
it, passes some 30,000 times the amount of solar power
than which is available on the surface of our planet. Enormous
amounts of other natural resources, including the Moon, are located
inside
this 3 million kilometer sphere which defines the true dimensions
of our planet in relation to the immediate cosmos. This definition
has been referred to as "Greater
Earth".
Like the territorial
waters surrounding nations, these resources existing beyond the
atmosphere belong to the present and future inhabitants of our
planet and
could and should, in my opinion, be used for their ultimate
benefit. Therefore, the Space Option does not need to be enacted
on Mars or elsewhere in the far solar system, it can be effectively
implemented within the celestial boundaries of our planet located
outside of the biosphere. There is plenty of room there for new
ideas, new forms, new structures and new adventures.
The fundamental advantage of the "Space Option" over
the other two options is that it would provide our
ambitious species with the necessary and limitless quantities of
clean solar energy and other raw materials to keep its present
civilization comfortably going throughout the millennium while
providing the means for hope and prosperity for the developing
populations and, at the same time, its benefits would contribute
to the preservation of the environment of the home planet for future
generations. Once the infrastructure to harness its benefits is
in place, and with the resulting wealth it will create, it will
irresistible for humanity to not to go further - as I mentioned
above, the Space Option is an evolutionary plan. There is a growing
body of of scientific literature about how this can happen.
Space pioneer Krafft Ehricke stated in 1970:
"While civilization is more than a high material living
standard, it is nevertheless based on material abundance. It
does not thrive on abject poverty nor in an atmosphere of
resignation
and hopelessness. It needs vigor as well as vision. Therefore
the end objectives of solar system exploration are social
objectives in the sense that they relate to, or are dictated
by, present
and future human needs."
Discussing options for humanity implies it making a choice. Either
humanity will embrace the opportunities implicit in the Space Option to survive and thrive, or it must accept
the reality that present civilization has already reached its peak.
By ignoring the Space Option,
humanity will have turned its back on the future and will have
begun the long painful decent through its brief history, watching
its magnificent civilization crumble, piece by piece, into the
rubble and dust of a new Stone Age.
Indeed, choosing between a "Stone
Age" or a "Space Age" is
the ultimate decision that must be made by those alive on the planet
at this very moment. However, the choice has to be made soon
- it can not
be postponed.
Artists and architects of the new millennium, burdened with the
pessimistic baggage that has become the legacy of post modernity,
yet aware and convinced that human destiny on Earth is irrevocably
linked to human destiny in Space, have the unique opportunity
to passionately imagine and build a truly optimistic and
inspiring future for humanity - one that is far more compelling
than
any virtual reality so far imagined.
"spaceoptionism " , "spaceoptimism" , " spaceism" or ".............."
What should it be called? |